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I primarily use Apple Maps over Google Maps mainly because of the integration that Apple has implemented in their software and how easy it works with CarPlay

Apple Maps has definitely come a long way since 2012 and with all of the new features like flyover and detailed airport, stadium and mall map information, it seems as though Google is the one playing catch up at this point but competition is definitely the best thing for consumers and I’m glad to have both Google and Apple competing with regards to Maps
Same, with my BMW Apple Maps shows directions/pictures into my heads up display which is really nice. Google Maps doesn't do that unfortunately.

However - I don't understand why I can never find anything I am searching for on Apple Maps. It literally is impossible and very cumbersome for me. I always search for my destination on Google Maps and then copy/paste that address into Apple Maps. Wish I didn't have to do that.
 
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iPhone users are increasingly finding reasons to choose Apple Maps over Google Maps, with some customers commending its clear public transport directions and visually appealing design.

apple-maps-3d-feature.jpg

That's according to anecdotal reports collected by The Wall Street Journal (paywalled). While Apple Maps comes preinstalled on all iPhones, the overwhelming majority of iPhones in the U.S. have Google Maps downloaded as an alternative, according to Canalys.

But that hasn't stopped some users becoming particularly impressed by how far Apple's transit route information has come. The app is often recommended by users for its cleaner view versus the more cluttered design of Google Maps.

For example, Jane Natoli, a Google Maps "power user" told WSJ she finds herself using Apple Maps more in her everyday life after her iPhone prompted her to use it in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The app knew she was at the airport and offered recommendations for shops and restaurants in her terminal. It had clearer information that was easier to interact with than Google Maps, said the 42-year-old.
A recent graduate from Georgia Tech shared a similar sentiment. At night while driving, she said she finds that the roads are easier to look at on Apple Maps, and there are fewer points of interest cluttering her view. "Apple's really good at making things look pretty," she told the outlet.

Apple Maps launched in 2012 and was quickly criticized for having incomplete and inaccurate mapping data, which led some iPhone users on dangerous routes. Apple CEO Tim Cook offered a rare public apology for the frustration it caused customers, and then iOS chief Scott Forstall was ousted just one month later.

Since then, Apple has made significant improvements to Apple Maps, building in new features and correcting lingering errors. Real-time traffic information and navigation options for pedestrians were added to Maps in 2013, which is also the same year Maps was extended to OS X. In 2015, Maps was updated with "Nearby," a feature that offers up local points of interest and transit directions in a handful of cities.

In early 2020, Apple completed a complete overhaul of its maps in the United States, featuring significantly greater detail including updated building massing, parks, sports field, pools, and more. A new Look Around feature in select cities is similar to Google's Street View, and the updated maps have been rolling out to more countries in the time since. In iOS 17, coming in the fall, users will be able to download maps for offline use in Apple Maps – something Google Maps users have been able to do now for quite some time.

Praise for Apple's offering isn't by any means universal. One user told WSJ she was frequently led astray by Apple Maps as she walks around Boston, while another user said his experience with Apple Maps via CarPlay had often added time on to his commute by taking him through neighborhoods with stop signs in an effort to avoid gridlock.

Apple Maps still gets a bad rap among some users, but Apple's continued efforts to improve the app appear to have helped reverse some of those opinions. "Maps has come a long way, and people have noticed," Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software, said during WWDC in June. Are you more or less likely to use Apple Maps these days? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: Apple Maps Gradually Winning Over Google Maps Users, Report Suggests


iPhone users are increasingly finding reasons to choose Apple Maps over Google Maps, with some customers commending its clear public transport directions and visually appealing design.

apple-maps-3d-feature.jpg

That's according to anecdotal reports collected by The Wall Street Journal (paywalled). While Apple Maps comes preinstalled on all iPhones, the overwhelming majority of iPhones in the U.S. have Google Maps downloaded as an alternative, according to Canalys.

But that hasn't stopped some users becoming particularly impressed by how far Apple's transit route information has come. The app is often recommended by users for its cleaner view versus the more cluttered design of Google Maps.

For example, Jane Natoli, a Google Maps "power user" told WSJ she finds herself using Apple Maps more in her everyday life after her iPhone prompted her to use it in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The app knew she was at the airport and offered recommendations for shops and restaurants in her terminal. It had clearer information that was easier to interact with than Google Maps, said the 42-year-old.
A recent graduate from Georgia Tech shared a similar sentiment. At night while driving, she said she finds that the roads are easier to look at on Apple Maps, and there are fewer points of interest cluttering her view. "Apple's really good at making things look pretty," she told the outlet.

Apple Maps launched in 2012 and was quickly criticized for having incomplete and inaccurate mapping data, which led some iPhone users on dangerous routes. Apple CEO Tim Cook offered a rare public apology for the frustration it caused customers, and then iOS chief Scott Forstall was ousted just one month later.

Since then, Apple has made significant improvements to Apple Maps, building in new features and correcting lingering errors. Real-time traffic information and navigation options for pedestrians were added to Maps in 2013, which is also the same year Maps was extended to OS X. In 2015, Maps was updated with "Nearby," a feature that offers up local points of interest and transit directions in a handful of cities.

In early 2020, Apple completed a complete overhaul of its maps in the United States, featuring significantly greater detail including updated building massing, parks, sports field, pools, and more. A new Look Around feature in select cities is similar to Google's Street View, and the updated maps have been rolling out to more countries in the time since. In iOS 17, coming in the fall, users will be able to download maps for offline use in Apple Maps – something Google Maps users have been able to do now for quite some time.

Praise for Apple's offering isn't by any means universal. One user told WSJ she was frequently led astray by Apple Maps as she walks around Boston, while another user said his experience with Apple Maps via CarPlay had often added time on to his commute by taking him through neighborhoods with stop signs in an effort to avoid gridlock.

Apple Maps still gets a bad rap among some users, but Apple's continued efforts to improve the app appear to have helped reverse some of those opinions. "Maps has come a long way, and people have noticed," Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software, said during WWDC in June. Are you more or less likely to use Apple Maps these days? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: Apple Maps Gradually Winning Over Google Maps Users, Report Suggests
Personally waze is the best option. I personally like the style and it announces red light cameras, speed traps, construction, and much more. It’s so much easier to report a road issue. Google maps has the best review system and doesn’t make me download yelp to see photos. Apple Maps UI is nice and Apple Watch integration is cool but I wouldn’t use it over waze.
 
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I still use google maps but I admit that Apple Maps have really come a long way since first release. Nothing really keeps me using google aside from habit as well as a whole slew of favorites that I have saved within.
 
I've switched to Apple Maps over 3 years ago. Indeed it has gotten better over time. I do often still use Google Maps because my wife out of habit would always set up navigation for me with Google Maps instead of Apple Maps.

I don't need navigation in California where I've grown up and lived for many years and I've found that either Apple Maps or Google Maps works fine for me. Now that I live in Northern Virginia, I find that I often get lost when using Google Maps trying to navigate the confusing junctions of D.C. where I need to successively follow a series of 3-4 instructions within 15 seconds. Whereas somehow, Apple Maps is able to preemptively lead me to the correct lanes and avoid having to frantically switch 3 lanes last minute (like I see many others do on the road).

I've also found that Apple Maps' ETA are pretty spot on whether in California or DMV area, whereas Google Maps seems to offer better ETAs, only for me to later be disappointed and that I arrived late (maybe Google expected me to weave through the common cars).

Finally, I think it's because I use an iPhone SE, but Google Maps doesn't display the nice red white & blue interstate logos and so I often realize too late that I was supposed to exit a junction into an interstate. I think though I did see the interstate symbol on somebody else's larger phones so maybe I'm just being punished by Google for using a small display.
 


iPhone users are increasingly finding reasons to choose Apple Maps over Google Maps, with some customers commending its clear public transport directions and visually appealing design.

apple-maps-3d-feature.jpg

That's according to anecdotal reports collected by The Wall Street Journal (paywalled). While Apple Maps comes preinstalled on all iPhones, the overwhelming majority of iPhones in the U.S. have Google Maps downloaded as an alternative, according to Canalys.

But that hasn't stopped some users becoming particularly impressed by how far Apple's transit route information has come. The app is often recommended by users for its cleaner view versus the more cluttered design of Google Maps.

For example, Jane Natoli, a Google Maps "power user" told WSJ she finds herself using Apple Maps more in her everyday life after her iPhone prompted her to use it in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The app knew she was at the airport and offered recommendations for shops and restaurants in her terminal. It had clearer information that was easier to interact with than Google Maps, said the 42-year-old.
A recent graduate from Georgia Tech shared a similar sentiment. At night while driving, she said she finds that the roads are easier to look at on Apple Maps, and there are fewer points of interest cluttering her view. "Apple's really good at making things look pretty," she told the outlet.

Apple Maps launched in 2012 and was quickly criticized for having incomplete and inaccurate mapping data, which led some iPhone users on dangerous routes. Apple CEO Tim Cook offered a rare public apology for the frustration it caused customers, and then iOS chief Scott Forstall was ousted just one month later.

Since then, Apple has made significant improvements to Apple Maps, building in new features and correcting lingering errors. Real-time traffic information and navigation options for pedestrians were added to Maps in 2013, which is also the same year Maps was extended to OS X. In 2015, Maps was updated with "Nearby," a feature that offers up local points of interest and transit directions in a handful of cities.

In early 2020, Apple completed a complete overhaul of its maps in the United States, featuring significantly greater detail including updated building massing, parks, sports field, pools, and more. A new Look Around feature in select cities is similar to Google's Street View, and the updated maps have been rolling out to more countries in the time since. In iOS 17, coming in the fall, users will be able to download maps for offline use in Apple Maps – something Google Maps users have been able to do now for quite some time.

Praise for Apple's offering isn't by any means universal. One user told WSJ she was frequently led astray by Apple Maps as she walks around Boston, while another user said his experience with Apple Maps via CarPlay had often added time on to his commute by taking him through neighborhoods with stop signs in an effort to avoid gridlock.

Apple Maps still gets a bad rap among some users, but Apple's continued efforts to improve the app appear to have helped reverse some of those opinions. "Maps has come a long way, and people have noticed," Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software, said during WWDC in June. Are you more or less likely to use Apple Maps these days? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: Apple Maps Gradually Winning Over Google Maps Users, Report Suggests
I’ve preferred Apple Maps for a very long time. I remember going on a business trip with a guy who used Android, and he got us lost, and my Apple Maps got us to the hotel first try. I also prefer not to use Google’s spyware.
 
Speak for yourself. A lot of the USA has no cell service and it’s been incredibly important for me to be able to download my maps on Google Maps.
I guess that Apple is including downloadable Maps in iOS17 for people who drive through the boonies frequently.
 


iPhone users are increasingly finding reasons to choose Apple Maps over Google Maps, with some customers commending its clear public transport directions and visually appealing design.

apple-maps-3d-feature.jpg

That's according to anecdotal reports collected by The Wall Street Journal (paywalled). While Apple Maps comes preinstalled on all iPhones, the overwhelming majority of iPhones in the U.S. have Google Maps downloaded as an alternative, according to Canalys.

But that hasn't stopped some users becoming particularly impressed by how far Apple's transit route information has come. The app is often recommended by users for its cleaner view versus the more cluttered design of Google Maps.

For example, Jane Natoli, a Google Maps "power user" told WSJ she finds herself using Apple Maps more in her everyday life after her iPhone prompted her to use it in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The app knew she was at the airport and offered recommendations for shops and restaurants in her terminal. It had clearer information that was easier to interact with than Google Maps, said the 42-year-old.
A recent graduate from Georgia Tech shared a similar sentiment. At night while driving, she said she finds that the roads are easier to look at on Apple Maps, and there are fewer points of interest cluttering her view. "Apple's really good at making things look pretty," she told the outlet.

Apple Maps launched in 2012 and was quickly criticized for having incomplete and inaccurate mapping data, which led some iPhone users on dangerous routes. Apple CEO Tim Cook offered a rare public apology for the frustration it caused customers, and then iOS chief Scott Forstall was ousted just one month later.

Since then, Apple has made significant improvements to Apple Maps, building in new features and correcting lingering errors. Real-time traffic information and navigation options for pedestrians were added to Maps in 2013, which is also the same year Maps was extended to OS X. In 2015, Maps was updated with "Nearby," a feature that offers up local points of interest and transit directions in a handful of cities.

In early 2020, Apple completed a complete overhaul of its maps in the United States, featuring significantly greater detail including updated building massing, parks, sports field, pools, and more. A new Look Around feature in select cities is similar to Google's Street View, and the updated maps have been rolling out to more countries in the time since. In iOS 17, coming in the fall, users will be able to download maps for offline use in Apple Maps – something Google Maps users have been able to do now for quite some time.

Praise for Apple's offering isn't by any means universal. One user told WSJ she was frequently led astray by Apple Maps as she walks around Boston, while another user said his experience with Apple Maps via CarPlay had often added time on to his commute by taking him through neighborhoods with stop signs in an effort to avoid gridlock.

Apple Maps still gets a bad rap among some users, but Apple's continued efforts to improve the app appear to have helped reverse some of those opinions. "Maps has come a long way, and people have noticed," Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software, said during WWDC in June. Are you more or less likely to use Apple Maps these days? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: Apple Maps Gradually Winning Over Google Maps Users, Report Suggests
I’ll give it a try… I hope it really improved.
 
I've tried to use Apple Maps full time, but it always becomes a frustrating experience and I end up going back to Google Maps or Waze. For Carplay (where I use it most of the time) it doesn't display the remaining trip time in the dashboard, the small button to get into the menu to end a route, the default 2D view that reverts from 3D after navigation.

The problems are its less useful interface really, rather than it's navigation, which is a shame because its integration and smooth display are stellar in comparison to the competition.

I would love to use Waze full time since it has the most features, but it seems to be too aggressive in its routing, often zigzagging through multiple streets instead of a more direct route.
 
I try to use Apple Maps just to avoid giving more data to Google, but Google maps is definitely more useful. Google maps has opening and closing times, restaurant menus, and a more complete database of businesses.
 
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I don't think it's fair to call iCloud janky. Think about what it's doing. It literally keeps billions of devices in sync all the time. The web interface is very Apple-like too. What's janky about it?
I’m specifically talking about the web interface. The service itself works pretty well.

I mean… I’m not sure what to tell ya. If you’ve used Dropbox or Google Photos/Drive, you’ll know it’s far and away a different experience than iCloud. iCloud’s web interface isn’t very good at all.
 
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I guess that Apple is including downloadable Maps in iOS17 for people who drive through the boonies frequently.
There’s so much of this USA that doesn’t have cell service. It’s actually kind of crazy. I had no idea until I started road tripping around.
 
I'm a long-time user of Apple Maps.
Yes, so Google Maps has way more points of interest (in South Africa at least), but that's not enough for me to switch.

Things I Love about Apple Maps:
* It can display on the Lock Screen. And with AlwaysOn Display, it's even better
* Design. When navigating, it's just a cleaner, less fussy design than Google Maps. However, when not navigating, and just tracking my current location, it's hard to see the roads.
* Voice Guidance. It sounds so much friendlier than Google Maps. And it doesn't have the "Head North" of Google Maps. HTF am I supposed to know where north is (especially on a cloudy day)?

Things I don't like about Apple Maps:
* Multistop route - the user experience needs some work, especially on macOS. But it's finally available.
* Interface to add Favourites and/or Guides is confusing. Also adding an address to a contact - I constantly forget where to do it.
 
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I mean but… gridlock avoidance is a good thing. Maps always takes me away from traffic when I’m commuting and it does it pretty damn well. I love it.
 
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Ironically the thing I love about Apple Maps is the thing that Google is better at: business information. Google hands down has everything and it’s usually accurate. Apple really lacks. But Apple is much less cluttered.
 
Love Apple Maps. I only wish there was a way to create scenic routes to my destinations. Google maps lets you drag the route to manually create unlimited ways to get to your destination.
 
One of the problems with maps for me is when you start the route. The app is very slow and cannot find its orientation until you start driving, and then you realise you are driving in the wrong direction and I have to turn around. I don't understand why Aplple does not use the compass to help Maps find its start up orientation.
Sometimes Google Maps does the same thing.
 
I use Google maps to search for things.
then I use Apple Maps to navigate to the address.

Google maps always points me the wrong way and is not very responsive to turns and other changes on my journey Path. Apple Maps has nothing on it - most businesses do not exist, are closed, have wrong hours, or they’re wrong location. If a business moved any time in the last 5 years, it will show the old address. In Australia Apple Maps is missing estimate maybe 4/10 businesses, and of the remaining another 4/10 have some mistake.
 
Ironically the thing I love about Apple Maps is the thing that Google is better at: business information. Google hands down has everything and it’s usually accurate. Apple really lacks. But Apple is much less cluttered.

I may make the jump from Google Maps to Apple Maps. The thing that's been aggravating me about Google Maps is how they suddenly started placing giant bubbles of random businesses in the area on the map for no apparent reason (but is likely tied to ad sales). I'm traveling to a restaurant, I don't need to see where Floor & Decor or Mattress Firm are along the way.
 


iPhone users are increasingly finding reasons to choose Apple Maps over Google Maps, with some customers commending its clear public transport directions and visually appealing design.

apple-maps-3d-feature.jpg

That's according to anecdotal reports collected by The Wall Street Journal (paywalled). While Apple Maps comes preinstalled on all iPhones, the overwhelming majority of iPhones in the U.S. have Google Maps downloaded as an alternative, according to Canalys.

But that hasn't stopped some users becoming particularly impressed by how far Apple's transit route information has come. The app is often recommended by users for its cleaner view versus the more cluttered design of Google Maps.

For example, Jane Natoli, a Google Maps "power user" told WSJ she finds herself using Apple Maps more in her everyday life after her iPhone prompted her to use it in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The app knew she was at the airport and offered recommendations for shops and restaurants in her terminal. It had clearer information that was easier to interact with than Google Maps, said the 42-year-old.
A recent graduate from Georgia Tech shared a similar sentiment. At night while driving, she said she finds that the roads are easier to look at on Apple Maps, and there are fewer points of interest cluttering her view. "Apple's really good at making things look pretty," she told the outlet.

Apple Maps launched in 2012 and was quickly criticized for having incomplete and inaccurate mapping data, which led some iPhone users on dangerous routes. Apple CEO Tim Cook offered a rare public apology for the frustration it caused customers, and then iOS chief Scott Forstall was ousted just one month later.

Since then, Apple has made significant improvements to Apple Maps, building in new features and correcting lingering errors. Real-time traffic information and navigation options for pedestrians were added to Maps in 2013, which is also the same year Maps was extended to OS X. In 2015, Maps was updated with "Nearby," a feature that offers up local points of interest and transit directions in a handful of cities.

In early 2020, Apple completed a complete overhaul of its maps in the United States, featuring significantly greater detail including updated building massing, parks, sports field, pools, and more. A new Look Around feature in select cities is similar to Google's Street View, and the updated maps have been rolling out to more countries in the time since. In iOS 17, coming in the fall, users will be able to download maps for offline use in Apple Maps – something Google Maps users have been able to do now for quite some time.

Praise for Apple's offering isn't by any means universal. One user told WSJ she was frequently led astray by Apple Maps as she walks around Boston, while another user said his experience with Apple Maps via CarPlay had often added time on to his commute by taking him through neighborhoods with stop signs in an effort to avoid gridlock.

Apple Maps still gets a bad rap among some users, but Apple's continued efforts to improve the app appear to have helped reverse some of those opinions. "Maps has come a long way, and people have noticed," Craig Federighi, Apple's head of software, said during WWDC in June. Are you more or less likely to use Apple Maps these days? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: Apple Maps Gradually Winning Over Google Maps Users, Report Suggests
Last fall we used Apple Maps in Paris and Lisbon to navigate the public transportation systems. In both cases Apple Maps performed wonderfully notifying us of what trains, buses, and trolleys to take, when they were approaching, and when to get off. Apple Maps also easily directed us through the stations, especially some of the more complicated Paris stations. I was able to easily program in destinations for my wife to use without me, most importantly return to the hotel destination.
 
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