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If I Were a Realtor
And yes, BrightKite, you may be finished - unless you got that BlackBerry app out yet!
Also, I think it has amazing implications for news media. With local newspapers in trouble - this poses interesting possibilities.
Indeed, Brightkite/Plazes etc..., be on notice.
I hope iPhone support for Latitude comes faster than Mac support for Chrome.
Sorry but I do not see the advantages other than having another cool app on my mobile. I'm probably not being imaginative but there is no real value yet to be found. This technology has a "coolness" factor to it, but that will wear off as we start using this. Location Based services have been around for a long time. If we get past the "Hey I can watch my friends", or the idea that Retail can spam the hell out of me to bring me an offer when I walk by the store, we currently do not have a clue yet how to make this useful.
As for your story telling or friends annotation example. That will surely be valuable to a specific group of people. But for mainstream users to start changing their daily habits and incorporate this service more value will have to be found.The First Use experience is simply not valuable enough at this point.
We tend to get excited over new technology and Google releasing great things, but forget that the rest of the world doesn't care at this point. The simple question at this point would be if a user would be willing to pay to get access to such a service. I doubt it in its current form.
This could be the start of something new, but that is up to the market to decide. For now, it is just another cool app.
Google wants people to integrate their tools into other services, create mashups, become the underlying mesh of a connected web. Why? Because they (a) collect tremendous amounts of information about who people are and what they do, and (b) gain more and more places to serve ads and transaction facilitation opportunities. Oh, and, what better way to jump beyond Facebook Connect than to put their OpenID status, Google Friend Connect and OpenSocial platform to a demonstrably/powerful good use?
* Sales team uses this to show positions at a larger event like CES in Las Vegas.
* Nonprofit builds a map of elderly people who opt in for friendly companion visits.
* Library uses it to annotate historical markers out in the public space.
* Runners use it to mark favorite paths or trailheads.
* Fundraisers or politicians use it to map out a campaign trail.
I could keep listing these, but it's 2:23AM and it's your turn to stretch your head.
I do not consider myself a futurist or an early adopter. My passion lies with First Use. I follow and think about new technologies and I can get excited over the capabilities. But for mass adoption it boils down to a simple question :
Is a user willing to put in the effort to learn about this new technology and incorporate it in his current habits?
The answer to this is that we need a whole lot of perceived value before this will happen. The examples you provide may become true at some point, but right now there isn't any clear indication that it will be the case. The market will decide. I write bout First use a lot, and didn't want to plug a post on it here, but this one fits the topic so to say.
http://vanelsas.wordpress.com/2009/02/04/just-b...
Sleep well :-)
Some of the items Chris points out @ 2:21 AM can already be accomplished with your own Google maps.
I'm curious to see where it goes (other than my wife wanting to track me) and I've begun playing to see what I might be able to fold into my daily activities.
Having said that, the latitude website has some issue and the software would not download to my Blackberry. Perhaps they have missed a few things?
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Aside from the fact you can track people down with this and use it as a big brother tool I think this is a very neat service because you can map out certain locations and landmarks as well as find out where your business partners are at.
A few reflections about this (partly inspired by your post) http://tinyurl.com/thehare
http://planetlotus.org/438fb4
I definitely agree, Google getting in the game is a big deal, but I don't see them killing off everything else yet.
It's a "jump to conclusions mat!'-Office Space
http://planetlotus.org/44cb04