
Kinda tuff for folk living in the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man
Just try and find a location in the Channel Islands or on the Isle of Man with any product based on Tele Atlas maps.
TomTom has put a €1.8bn cash bid on the table for Tele Atlas, the company that supplies map data to the sat nav firm's 10 million GPS devices. The idea is that social-networking type information can be integrated into the mapping data to create a more dynamic service for TomTom users. TomTom chief executive officer Harold …
What has this to do with social networking? TomTom can integrate whatever they want with their maps, they don't need to control the data collection process for that...
Seems like an interesting move, but if TomTom do annoy other companies that use Tele Atlas as their data provider, we could end up with having all maps based on NavTeq, the only other real competitor...
Not so much social networking, more like direct control of a critical supplier, a supplier who also used to be important to anyone who might fancy competing with TomTom.
Borrow €1.6M to finance a €1.8M bid? Gotta love this highly leveraged capitalism (or perhaps not, if you're a first time buyer trying to buy a house in most parts of the UK).
Would rather pay for one with OS mapping when I am no longer able to remember a route identified from a Landranger or Memory Map. Less chance of landing in the drink, flying off a cliff, thumping down a farm track much to the farm workers attention or ending up at totally the wrong golf course... if I played golf.
"Borrow €1.6M to finance a €1.8M bid? Gotta love this highly leveraged capitalism (or perhaps not, if you're a first time buyer trying to buy a house in most parts of the UK)."
Or in California, where people were putting down $50K for a $2.2M house, then getting an interest only loan. Of course, you can now buy that house for about $1.5M at the foreclosure auction, if you've got cash.
Did the author mean social networking or social engineering. "Okay, on the Garmin map, Main St ends right about here."
I'm happy to supply feedback on map errors, and have done so on a couple of occasions -- one of which involved tomtom directing my car over the footbridge that crosses a railway line.
However, those updates seem to be taking a long long time to find their way back to my tom tom. Though I ocasionally collect updates from the tomtom web site, its not obvious whether anybody is actually updating the maps to incorporate user-submitted updates.