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Originally Posted by binand This is possibly because you plan on the computer. If you plan on the mobile device, it actually takes into account not just these variables, but also realtime traffic conditions. ... |

Yeah, right!
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Originally Posted by binand ... Google understands the PITA that KR Puram interchange is. :-) ... As a matter of fact, Google's realtime traffic condition update is a boon to even the seasoned driver on Bangalore roads ... |

You seem to know more about Google Maps than even Google does!
What you gave are perfect examples of the funny routing it does. Yes, it recognizes one-ways, but otherwise GM is blind as a bat. It, or for that matter any other Navigation company, *would be* - since they are not the ones that measure traffic in real time. They CAN'T, because they don't have the infrastructure for it. Nor will they ever invest in it anytime, as there is no way of recovering that investment.
* All agencies tap into the traffic advisories put out by the Traffic Management Centre in a city. Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore etc. have it. The traffic monitoring is done by *people* sitting in front of monitors that get feeds from cameras mounted at major traffic junctions
* These systems have been around for the last 30 years or more (in India maybe last 10 years). Earlier, the advisories were sent by telex to local police stations if local intervention was required
* Then came the radio based messaging / announcements. Any RDS capable HU (or it's HD Radio equivalent) in a car can display this. Garmin units use the same on the road. Google uses the network equivalent of the same centrally in other countries. Unfortunately none of the Indian cities with TMC have this operational yet (IIRC). Bangalore experimented with this a few years back, but it is not operational. Currently TMCs go over Police Radio to alert the local cops.
One has to remember though that this is available only in places which have a centralized TMC. In smaller locations without TMC, one gets a real time visual update as soon as one reaches near a heavy traffic point.
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Originally Posted by binand ... You can. Both on the old Google Maps, and on the new (beta) one. ... |
Nope - didn't find it anywhere in the iOS version!
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Originally Posted by binand ... source PoI data from OSM - others will surely follow suit. ... |
Sure, they have to keep updating - otherwise users won't find any value in their 'product'.
ALL the vendors have crowd-sourced PoI data. If you happen to see the PoI DB of MMI and Satguide maps you will be horrified with the content. Satguide, and possibly MMI too, have relied on data from
Google Earth DB - with the obvious howlers: there are a few hundred PoIs marked "My Home"!!!

Initially, even Google did that - till they realized their folly.
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Originally Posted by binand ... The difference between the MMI/Garmin type PND and Google/Bing/Nokia type mobile ... this difference will surely become a problem for the PND vendors. |
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Originally Posted by binand Yes, I am aware of Smartphone Link. ...
My original point was about the PND having (free) data connectivity of its own. |
* Surmise / assumption, not reality
* Nokia uses stored Mapquest / Nokia maps, which is the 'father' of many other maps. Google, Yahoo and Bing are online versions. And all of them use the same basic maps - whether online, desktop or mobile
* All of them hook on to the TMC announcement system either over radio or over internet
* Google / Bing / Yahoo are information aggregators, so they just hook on to as many information sources as possible, without validating that information
* Garmin, Tomtom et al are Maps & Navigation unit suppliers - traffic information is an add on
* Even in the US & Germany, people take Traffic Information with a pinch of salt. Kinetics (q.v. traffic jams and kinetics) explains the mathematics, but to put it simply: by the time one arrives at a choking point announced by the TMC, one finds traffic free flowing!