Google owns us all -- Free Google Maps Navigation

mb

Lifer
Jun 27, 2004
10,233
2
71
Originally posted by: SunnyD
Doesn't Garmin or someone own patents on Turn-by-Turn though?

I'm not sure but their shareholders better hope so!
 

geno

Lifer
Dec 26, 1999
25,074
4
0
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.
 

jonny13

Senior member
Feb 16, 2002
440
4
81
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
 

ChaoZ

Diamond Member
Apr 5, 2000
8,906
1
0
Originally posted by: geno
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.

Is this a serious question?
 

PokerGuy

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
13,650
201
101
Originally posted by: geno
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.

Unless there is an anti-trust issue, yes, it's perfectly legal.
 

Aharami

Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
21,205
165
106
way cool but will have to get unlimited data plan for this. that might negate any cost savings over a dedicated GPS device
 

her209

No Lifer
Oct 11, 2000
56,336
11
0
Originally posted by: geno
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.
Of course its legal. That's like asking "Is it legal for Intel to use profits from their chip business to fund their SSD and graphics business?"

EDIT: Although, Intel doesn't offer their SSDs and graphics for free.
 

Deeko

Lifer
Jun 16, 2000
30,213
12
81
Originally posted by: geno
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.

If that weren't legal, Android itself wouldn't be legal.
 

mb

Lifer
Jun 27, 2004
10,233
2
71
Originally posted by: ChaoZ
Originally posted by: geno
My question is, is this legal? Can they use funds from one side of their business to completely crush competitors by offering 100% of what they do for absolutely free? This is coming from a G1 owner who would love nothing more than free turn by turn.

Is this a serious question?

I think he is referring to dumping but that doesn't apply to this case.
 

NFS4

No Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
72,636
47
91
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.


Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.
 

ViviTheMage

Lifer
Dec 12, 2002
36,189
87
91
madgenius.com
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.


Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.

very cool!
 

Kalmah

Diamond Member
Oct 2, 2003
3,692
1
76
Originally posted by: Aharami
way cool but will have to get unlimited data plan for this. that might negate any cost savings over a dedicated GPS device

That's what I was thinking. Unless you already use an unlimited data plan, you pretty much have to add an extra $30+ to your cell bill a month.

If I didn't have to worry about stuff such as ping for online gaming, I'd probably not be using a landline internet and just use unlimited data with my cell.


edit: woa, I just got un-timewarped. I was timewarped.. and moved back. I don't think my flux capacitor is getting 1.21 jiggawatts.
 

jonny13

Senior member
Feb 16, 2002
440
4
81
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.


Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.

Ooops, missed that part. I stand corrected, Google will own this market soon.
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
Bring on the google overlords.... $49.95 for a TomTom map upgrade of only a quarter section of the U.S.
 

SunnyD

Belgian Waffler
Jan 2, 2001
32,675
146
106
www.neftastic.com
Originally posted by: jonny13
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.


Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.

Ooops, missed that part. I stand corrected, Google will own this market soon.

But if you stray from your intended route, you're fucked. I don't see this as a replacement for a stand-alone GPS product, considering you basically need a constant connection to make it 100% functional. That connection means a cell phone subscription - so much for it being free.
 

txrandom

Diamond Member
Aug 15, 2004
3,773
0
71
Eventually Google will provide every service we need. But since it no longer receives advertising revenue from lack of companies, it will quickly go out of business. That's when the end of the world will start.