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Apple Maps in iOS 6: What you need to know (FAQ)

iOS 6 is just a day old, but users are griping about Apple's new homegrown apps. CNET tells you what's happening and how it affects you.

Kent German Former senior managing editor / features
Kent was a senior managing editor at CNET News. A veteran of CNET since 2003, he reviewed the first iPhone and worked in both the London and San Francisco offices. When not working, he's planning his next vacation, walking his dog or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
Josh Lowensohn Former Senior Writer
Josh Lowensohn joined CNET in 2006 and now covers Apple. Before that, Josh wrote about everything from new Web start-ups, to remote-controlled robots that watch your house. Prior to joining CNET, Josh covered breaking video game news, as well as reviewing game software. His current console favorite is the Xbox 360.
Kent German
Josh Lowensohn
8 min read
Welcome to Apple's maps Screenshot by Kent German/CNET

It's only been a day since iOS 6 went live, but the world has sounded with a Greek chorus of complaints over the new Maps app made by Apple.

In case you don't already know, iOS 6 makes a big change in your iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch's mapping features. It removes the Google Maps app that you've long used and replaces it with Apple's home-baked mapping service. At first, you may not notice the change since the app's icon, and much of the interface looks almost the same. Once you try to use it, though, you'll see differences straightaway.

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In our initial anecdotal testing for CNET's iPhone 5 and iOS 6 reviews, we noticed both good and bad points. On the upside, we welcomed the new turn-by-turn directions and the 3D flyover feature was lovely. Yet, we also found that search results weren't quite as robust and transit directions weren't an option at all.

It was a decent effort for a first pass, but now that Apple Maps are being crowd-tested by millions of new iOS 6 users around the world, problems are becoming more apparent. Put simply: there's plenty of icing, but the cake ain't finished baking. So where does that leave existing iOS users who want to upgrade to iOS 6 -- and prospective iPhone 5 buyers who will get it by default? In this FAQ, CNET will tell you everything that you need to know.

When accurate, the 3D maps are amazing. Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Q: What does the new Maps app add that the old Google app did not?

A: Most importantly, turn-by-turn directions. Up until now, you had to reply on third-party apps for that feature. Some are free, but the better ones could cost up to $40 or more. And as Android users will tell you, it's been a free integrated feature on their phones for years. So that's a big plus.

For iPhone 4S, iPhone 5, and the new iPad, iOS 6 also adds 3D views and a flyover feature (with the latter it's like you're zooming over a city in a low-flying airplane). Both features are more entertaining than useful, but they pack a pretty big wow factor, at least for the first few minutes (see below).

Other little touches include the capability to physically reorient the map with two fingers and see reviews of points of interest.

Q: What does the new Maps app lose compared with the old one?

A: The number one thing is Google's database. Apple Maps sources its location information from Yelp, which so far is less reliable than Google's offering. For example, in his iPhone 5 review, CNET's Scott Stein found that a search for coffee showed him only Starbucks and not a locally owned shop across the street. Also, a search for Mac repair did not turn up a business that has always showed on Google Maps. This issue should get better, but for now it's pretty bad. Losing Google's database also means you lose Street View.

Also, you totally lose mass transit directions, which always existed on Google Maps. Though there is a button with a tiny bus icon, it shows only a list of third-party transit apps (so why include the button at all?). If you already own such an app it will appear at the top of the list, and when pressed, kick you out to that app. Otherwise, you'll be directed to the iTunes App Store to download a title. That's not really helpful for a few reasons.

First off, switching to a third-party app for transit directions takes you out of the mapping feature. That means a lot of switching back and forth between the transit instructions and the map of the surrounding area (Google Maps had it all on one screen). Also, the third-party apps don't always tell how to get to the transit stop and then on to your final destination. Again, Google Maps told you the whole story.

Granted, only people who take transit will care about this feature. But the point is that Apple has removed a useful feature that you formerly got for free. Some of the third-party options are great, and they may even be better than Google Maps, but you now have to jump through an extra hoop. And more importantly, some of those other apps will cost you.

Q: Can I go back to the old Maps app?

A: Sort of. At this point, a real Google Maps app like you used to have is not available.

With Apple Maps comes turn-by-turn navigation Screenshot by Kent German/CNET

But as Matt Elliott explains here, you can point your iPhone's browser to maps.google.com and get that same mapping information, complete with business listings, directions, public transit data, and even bike routes. What you're missing is street view and use of the compass to help direct you.

Q: What do I lose with maps.google.com compared with the old Google-powered maps app in iOS 5?

A: Since it's not an actual app, it will be a much different experience than what you had before. The interface is changed, though not negatively so, and the performance will depend on the speed of your connection. Of course, that was also the case with Google's app, but the browser is a different feature so performance will vary.

You also lose a fair number of features including Siri integration, a compass feature, address book integration, and Street View.

Q: Are Apple's turn-by-turn directions accurate?

A: In initial testing, they're reliable. Scott used the feature on an iPhone 5 in Long Island, New York, and had a good experience. And when Jason Parker and Jaymar Cabebe put Apple Maps against Google Maps on an Android phone, they didn't notice any significant problems either. They had some issues -- for example, Apple Maps misplaced them by a few blocks and it directed them to a different place at our first destination -- but it did the job. We're going to keep testing, though, and remember that Jason and Jaymar tested in San Francisco, in the backyard of Google and Apple and one of the most mapped cities on Earth. Your experience may be different. Indeed, coverage outside of the United States is worse.

Q: Where is Apple getting its actual map data?

A: Apple's maps come mostly from longtime GPS player TomTom, which also supplies some apps to Google. Still, some maps lack the detail we had on iOS 5 and some landmarks are misplaced or not labeled correctly. See our slideshow and CNET UK's comparison for more examples.

Talk about a bumpy landing. theamazingios6maps.tumblr

Q: Any problems with the 3D or satellite views?

A: Even after one day, we've seen an abundance of screenshots showing quirky things like a roller coaster Manhattan Bridge or a pockmarked Toronto airport. These mistakes won't affect your navigation, and we remember the occasional crazy satellite image from Google Maps, but some of the mistakes are pretty hilarious.

Also, we noticed that Apple's satellite maps weren't as current as some Google images. For example, though some freeway ramps around CNET's offices in San Francisco were removed more than a year ago, Apple still shows them in place. Google does not.

Q: Is Apple Maps really as bad as people are saying?

A: It depends on what you value. If mass transit directions or Google Street View are must-haves, this a downgrade. Ditto for contextual local searches.

On the other hand, you now have turn-by-turn directions, which was never an integrated option on the iPhone before. And the properly 3D-mapped cityscapes are stunning -- again, if you live in a location that's mapped well.

Q: Has Apple said anything about this?

A: Without admitting to any issues, Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller told us the feature is still being improved:

"Customers around the world are upgrading to iOS 6 with over 200 new features including Apple Maps, our first map service. We are excited to offer this service with innovative new features like Flyover and Siri integration, and free turn by turn navigation. We launched this new map service knowing that it is a major initiative and we are just getting started with it. We are continuously improving it, and as Maps is a cloud-based solution, the more people use it, the better it will get. We're also working with developers to integrate some of the amazing transit apps in the App Store into iOS Maps. We appreciate all of the customer feedback and are working hard to make the customer experience even better."

Q: Why did Apple make this change?

A: Apple has a long history of parting ways with software partners that are also competitors, sometimes with products that are not quite as full-featured or polished as what came before. One example of that: Apple designing its own browser, Safari, to replace Microsoft's Internet Explorer in 2003.

At the time Microsoft had 90 percent share of the browser market, and a very mature piece of software with IE. Apple came in with its own offering, which to be sure was quite fast and pretty, but missing many features that competing browsers had -- including compatibility with Windows. Safari is now cross-platform, and has about 4.9 percent of desktop market share and 66.2 percent of mobile browser market share according to Net Marketshare.


A satellite view of New York City Screenshot by Kent German/CNET

With regard to maps, Apple actually showed its cards when putting out an FAQ on how it uses location on iOS as part of a security snafu last year. The company said it was collecting traffic data "to build a crowd-sourced traffic database with the goal of providing iPhone users an improved traffic service in the next couple of years." That statement came with the assumption that Apple would be replacing that very same data from Google, and perhaps other features that it was using in the maps app.

A story in the Wall Street Journal, published earlier this year, painted Apple and Google as warring behind the scenes, with Apple worried about the user data it would have to fork over in exchange for the back-end technology, and Google dissatisfied with the amount of control it had over the look and feel of the application.

What we know now is that Apple very clearly didn't give Google much time to get its own replacement Maps application ready to go based on the fact that it was not available when iOS 6 went live some three months after its debut.

Q: The big question: Will a dedicated Google Maps app be coming to iOS?

A: That depends on Google submitting an app and Apple approving it. The recent approval of standalone YouTube app (the former integrated app also disappeared with iOS 6) is a positive sign, but we'll have to wait and see.

If we do get it, Apple will have to double down on making its app competitive, particularly if Google's offering brings things that were missing from its Android counterpart like turn-by-turn directions and offline maps.

If not, Android will be able to gloat until Apple invests considerable time, effort, and money in upgrading its Map data and feature set.

CNET Executive Editor John Falcone contributed to this story.

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