Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

C2 provides technology services and consultation to businesses and individuals.

T (818) 584 6021
Email: [email protected]

C2 Technology Partners, Inc.
26500 Agoura Rd, Ste 102-576, Calabasas, CA 91302

Open in Google Maps
QUESTIONS? CALL: 818-584-6021
  • HOME
  • BLOG
  • SERVICES
    • Encryption
    • Backups
  • ABOUT
    • SMS Opt-In Form
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
FREECONSULT

Google Maps Hack Shuts Down Restaurant

  • 0
admin
Wednesday, 09 July 2014 / Published in Woo on Tech
Warning

For finding things, it’s hard to beat Google, whether it be concept, place or thing. If you are looking for a local business using Google Maps, that information is provided by another Google platform called “Places”, which consists of listings provided by business owners and “crowdsourcing”, which can either be a boon or bane to your business, especially if you were unaware that your business even has a Places listing. A restaurant owner in Virginia found out the hard way how impactful the internet can be, despite the low tech way he ran his business. The Serbian Crown only discovered that it had a Google Places listing after it was on a rapid decline in weekend receipts that eventually led to its closure. After months of struggling to find out why, the owner received a call from a regular who asked why they were closed on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. They weren’t, but Google’s search results said they were. The owner hired a consultant to take control of the places listing and correct the information, but the damage was already done.

What this means for you:

It’s unclear whether the misinformation found in the above Google Places listing was a mistake entered by an anonymous visitor just trying to be helpful, or deliberate sabotage by a competitor. Though the Serbian Crown’s owner alleges the latter and has sued Google for creating a platform that enables this sort of sabotage, Google has dismissed the claim as meritless. Anyone who has done any work managing a brand online, especially through Yelp, can understand how the Serbian Crown’s downfall could be wrought. The restaurant spent months walking around unaware with the equivalent of a “Kick me” sign stuck to its back. As more and more people get their information from the Internet, how your business appears online matters immensely, regardless of what service you perform, and it’s essentially impossible for any organization with a public-facing element to remain invisible or “off the grid.” If you don’t actively maintain an online presence, it’s still important to regularly search for your organization online to see what the internet has to say about it.

brandingbusiness directorycrowdsourcingGooglemapsonlineplacessabotagesocial mediayelp

New Apple Maps Needs Better Directions

  • 0
admin
Friday, 21 September 2012 / Published in Woo on Tech
maps_gallery_1[1].jpg

It would seem that Apple’s new Maps application introduced with iOS 6 on Sept 19 has had a bit of a rough start. As one might expect, the technology media rakes in the clicks with glee when the industry’s golden child stumbles, and reports are already coming in of the new app’s misguided attempts at navigation. Gizmodo’s Kyle Wagner reminds Apple fans that comparing the new app to the reigning heavyweight champ, Google Maps, is perhaps not the fair, given Google has had years to amass and refine the billions of points of data that are required to present an accurrate picture of our world.

Given this, critics still rightly point out that Apple’s open feud with Google in other areas (namely Android vs. iPhone and Siri vs. Google Now) has amounted to Apple taking out its frustration on its customers by replacing the highly functional Google Maps with it’s own, still very beta, version of Maps.

What this means to you:

If you rely heavily on your iPhone for navigation, you can continue using Google Maps as a native app as long as you don’t upgrade to iOS 6. If you’ve bought an iPhone 5, you can use Google Maps through the phone’s browser, though it’s definitely a lot less elegant and usable in this fashion. It may be many months, if not years, before Apple’s Map app can match Google turn for turn, and let’s face it, Google isn’t standing still at this point. It’s unclear whether Google will create an app store version of it’s Maps application for future download on the iPhone, and even less clear whether it will even make it through Apple’s strict and sometimes arbitrary approval process.

app storeAppleGoogleios 6iPhonemapsnavigation

Recent Posts

  • Misleading Signs

    How to live in a Post-Truth World

    In 2016, the Oxford Dictionary named “pos...
  • two ceramic smiling poop emojis on a white background

    Scatological Devolution

    [Warning: there is some slightly foul language ...
  • Can you tell the difference?

    I’ve been working in tech long enough to rememb...
  • The invisible algorithm bubble

    Most of you have known about this aspect of Int...
  • Security is about to get even more complicated

    We’ve discussed in previous blogs how tec...

Archives

  • GET SOCIAL
Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

© 2016 All rights reserved.

TOP