benndragon (
brynndragon) wrote2011-04-09 06:32 am
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This is not a feature, Google
You know how, when you make a typo in Google and it auto-redirects, it actively tells you it is doing so ("Showing results for $new_search. Search instead for $original_search")?
Google Maps does not tell you it is redirecting. At all.
It will gladly give you a completely different town than the one you asked for, and the only warning it has done so is giving the new town in tiny font underneath the street name, the same as if that's what you'd typed in. There wasn't even a "Did you mean. . . ?", much less a "Showing $different_town" or a "Could not find $original_address".
This is how I ended up in Brookline last night, having asked to go to Brighton. I am not the only person who had that problem either.
(I'd tell Google about this problem, but my Google-fu fails to tell me how to do so. Ironically enough.)
ETA: An example of this behavior: 52 Brook Street Brighton, MA 02135 - try copy-pastaing that address into Google Maps and you'll see what I'm talking about.
Google Maps does not tell you it is redirecting. At all.
It will gladly give you a completely different town than the one you asked for, and the only warning it has done so is giving the new town in tiny font underneath the street name, the same as if that's what you'd typed in. There wasn't even a "Did you mean. . . ?", much less a "Showing $different_town" or a "Could not find $original_address".
This is how I ended up in Brookline last night, having asked to go to Brighton. I am not the only person who had that problem either.
(I'd tell Google about this problem, but my Google-fu fails to tell me how to do so. Ironically enough.)
ETA: An example of this behavior: 52 Brook Street Brighton, MA 02135 - try copy-pastaing that address into Google Maps and you'll see what I'm talking about.
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[1] The matching could be a little fuzzy but not too fuzzy. For example, if you ask for "25 First St" and it gives "25 1st St" or vice-versa, it probably shouldn't warn. There are other cases where it would probably have to warn even when the address is perfectly right, e.g. if you say "Chestnut Hill" and the address is in Newton, Brookline, or Boston but within the right boundaries.
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But the thing that gets me is they've solved this exact problem with Search already, and it's far, fr less important there than it is with Maps - extra mouse clicks are not the same as driving across town. Apparently no one in their Cambridge office goes to Brighton. . .
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Question: I noticed that there is a Brooks Street in Brighton; I can't easily find a Brook Street. Could that have been the problem?
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Well I've been to Hastings
And I've been to Brighton
I've been to Eastbourne too
So what, so what...
:-)
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(When I type my address for driving directions into Google Maps, it auto-fills it with Cambridge, England ever time. Even though I'm driving to somewhere in Massachusetts. Their mapping algorithms in general need work. . .)
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Gear Icon in upper right hand corner -> Map Help -> One of the several links about problems. Of course, when I was reading through those links, it called my attention to the very small "report a problem" link in the bottom right hand corner of the original map. There's a feature request option mention somewhere along the help path too.
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ETA: BTW, Suggest a Feature only lets you select from a pre-existing list. Again, rather misleading. They need to hire an English major over there.
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[1] It did offer me alternatives in this case but its best guess is really, I think, not even plausible
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I'm still confused why no one in their Cambridge office has ever beaten them about the head for this though.
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I know that as enhanced 911 (a feature that automatically gives the 911 dispatcher the street address of the calling phone - which of course gets all kinds of messed with by the fact that increasingly people don't have landlines and address-locating mobile phones is somewhat iffy business even when the phone contains a GPS receiver... but I digress) was being implemented in the 1990s, states and municipalities were strongly encouraged to do the following two things:
- Develop electronic databases that accurately reflect the physical location of every address on every street
- Change street names as necessary so there would be no duplicate street names in the same municipality
Boston has probably done the former quite well by now but the latter seems like an "ain't never gonna happen."
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Instead, I'm fascinated by thie analysis of exactly how New England tends to confuse Google... and the back of my mind is sort of chuckling a bit and thinking, "Heh, yeah, I suppose that could be sort of confusing for an outsider..."
Say, do people around there still rely on those fabulous ABC Map and Road Atlases?
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Many gas stations do indeed still have those maps, I just haven't had the need to grab one since my car was stolen last year and there wasn't a nearby gas station when we got to the wrong place. I should get one soon though :).