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How to Use Apple Maps on the Web
How to Use Apple Maps on the Web

WIRED

time13-05-2025

  • WIRED

How to Use Apple Maps on the Web

Apple's mapping platform is no longer exclusively for Apple devices. A pared-down version runs in your browser; here's how to use it. Photo-Illustration:The boundaries of Apple's walled garden aren't as well defined as they used to be; Apple Maps is the latest app to break out. It has taken a while—the app launched in 2012—but you can now use Apple Maps on the web. You can load it up in a browser on Windows PCs, Macs, iPads, and even in an Android phone's mobile browser. Right now, the Apple Maps web app has a beta label attached to it, which means it's a work in progress. Expect more features and better performance over time. (You can't yet sign in with your Apple ID, for example.) You also need a compatible browser, and that means Safari, Chrome, Edge, or Firefox. Despite its beta status, there's already a lot you can do with Apple Maps on the web, including looking up places, getting directions to specific places, and accessing guides to popular cities and other destinations. Map Basics Apple Maps on the web can give you a wealth of information about places. Courtesy of David Nield We don't yet have the ability to sign into Apple Maps on the web, so you'll be starting fresh every time you open it in your browser, and you will not see links to your past searches or your saved places, for example. Click the arrow icon (in the top right) to jump to your current location, based on what location your browser is reporting. The map icon just above the arrow lets you choose the map view: Standard, Satellite, or a Hybrid combination of the two. There's also a compass icon just below. Click and drag on the compass to change the orientation of the map, or click once to go back to the default (where north is directly up). In the lower right corner you've got zoom controls, and you can also zoom in and out by pinching your touchscreen or trackpad or by using the scroll wheel on your mouse. There's a navigation pane on the left you can show and hide using the icon in the very top left corner, and this gets you access to the key three parts of Apple Maps on the web: Search, Guides, and Directions. Search is simple enough: Just type in what you're looking for. You'll also see quick links to find restaurants, bars, gas stations, and other destinations in the map area you're currently looking at. With some of the larger and more well known cities in the world, an information panel pops up with more details about the place. This might include photos of landmarks as well as historical information pulled from Wikipedia. Major roads and sights worth seeing will be labeled on the map with these city overviews. Click on any label on the map for more details—the business hours or the contact details for a coffee shop, for example. Depending on what's selected, you might see photos of the place and reviews left by other people. (These reviews are typically sourced from other websites, such as Tripadvisor.) To share a place with someone else, click the share icon at the top of the info panel (the arrow and square), and you can pick a contact or app. Directions and Guides Use the linked guides to find out more about a place. Courtesy of David Nield Whenever you've got a place selected on the map, you get a Directions link you can click on. The next panel prompts you for a starting location—click inside the box and enter a start point, or choose My Location—and you can switch between driving and walking directions at the top. (Cycling and public transit directions aren't yet supported.) As usual with Apple Maps, you sometimes get a choice of routes, which may include the fastest route as well as a suggested route, which is typically the most fuel efficient or the easiest to navigate. Use the Now and Avoid dropdown menus to change your departure time and avoid tolls and freeways, if you need to, and click on any route for more information. Unless you're propping up your laptop on your car's dashboard (which we don't recommend), you're not going to be using Apple Maps on the web for the actual turn-by-turn navigation, so there's no way to actually start working your way through these directions. You can also get to the same interface via the Directions link on the side panel rather than selecting a destination first. As with the dedicated Apple Maps apps for iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, you can access a series of travel guides on the web. Click Guides on the side panel to start searching. These are sourced from all over the internet and cover all kinds of topics—from the best ancient wonders of the world to the best acoustic music spots in London. You can drill down by location or by topic, like music or sports for example. You can also find guides for many larger cities just by searching for them on the map. The guides will appear in the information card that pops up; featured guides will appear first, and you can click More to see a bigger selection. It's a great way of exploring a new (or old) place, though the number of places covered by guides remains limited.

Inside a Google Street View Car: A Celebrity on Wheels
Inside a Google Street View Car: A Celebrity on Wheels

New York Times

time13-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • New York Times

Inside a Google Street View Car: A Celebrity on Wheels

The online job posting was cryptic. A driver was needed, that much Joe McCallen knew. The mission? That was secret. When he stepped inside the tricked out Honda HR-V — outfitted with a nine-foot turret on the roof, a customized screen covering the center console and a back seat filled with computers — Mr. McCallen realized he was helping Google map every corner of the world. In his Google Street View car, Mr. McCallen has driven 100,000 miles in three years, patrolling Midwest and East Coast roads. He drives from just after sunrise to just before sunset, while cameras on the roof take photos that get spliced together into panoramic images. Because of him and countless other drivers, anyone in the world can log onto Google Maps and travel virtually along 12 million miles of roads in 110 countries. It's the closest thing humans have to teleportation. 'I love doing it,' Mr. McCallen, 63, of Tampa Bay, said. 'The places you go to, the people you see. Stuff you just can't write.' When he accepted a lucrative severance package from an asset management role in his 50s, he took a couple years off. Then he tried out a few other finance jobs. But he wanted to do something completely different. Driving for Google, he has stopped for moose, seen an unexpected showing of the Northern Lights in Maine and struck up deep conversations with strangers at rural diners. On a Friday morning in March, Mr. McCallen let a reporter tag along for a ride through a 30-block area in the West Village. Nearly every pedestrian who walked by took photos, waved, pointed or nodded at the car like they had just seen a minor celebrity. (Not Justin Bieber or Rihanna level. More similar to that time I saw Josh Hutcherson in FiDi; an 'isn't that that guy from that thing?' double take.) The first Street View model, which launched in 2007, was cobbled together into a bulky black top hat-like fixture and strapped onto a van and driven around Mountain View, Calif. Engineers fixed bugs and solved hardware errors with makeshift fixes straight out of the television show 'Silicon Valley.' To prevent condensation from building up in the cameras, drivers covered their cameras with socks at night, Ethan Russell, a senior director of Google Maps, said. Some drivers forgot to take the socks off the next morning and traveled for hours with the camera only capturing a cotton-polyester blend. Eighteen years later, Street View is no longer relying on socks. Planes with Google's cameras on the bottom are flying overhead. Satellites assist. People are able to submit their own images to Street View, essentially turning anyone with a smartphone into a Street View driver. Street View cameras have captured Machu Picchu, the Great Barrier Reef and Antarctica. Google's sleek new camera model will allow any car with a roof rack to become a Street View car. The cars will no longer need to be transported overseas. Looking to the future, Mr. Russell and his team are focused on expanding Street View's capabilities with artificial intelligence, which has long helped blur faces, license plates and addresses on the platform. Soon, information from a business's storefront (such as its hours or its phone number) could be gleaned from Street View images and then appear in search engine results. There are a couple drawbacks to the experience. Street View has faced privacy concerns. Drivers constantly stress about overpasses that threaten to clip the nine-foot-tall ostrich neck on their roof; 'Arrested Development' got that right. And Mr. McCallen gets flipped off a lot. On that warm Friday morning, Mr. McCallen dropped us off by the sidewalk and sped off to map his designated 30 blocks of the West Village. After that, he would drive back down to Florida to continue his quest to map the world. Mr. McCallen plans to sign up for another year working for Street View. 'For now, it's perfect,' he said. 'I'm flexible, and so I just go with the flow.'

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