Gowalla – location-based services and travelling
Thursday, October 21st, 2010People around me have been getting into using GPS devices for games for a while with geoaching. But I never tried it, and haven't gotten a gps-enabled device before last summer with my android phone. Even then I tried foursquare a little bit, but not really. I didn't really get the hang of it.
Recently I have used gowalla a bit more, and try to get some fun or useful things out of it. So far I have only checked in at a few points, and not really used it. I wonder if most people use foursquare, because I can only find few contacts that I already know in Gowalla. A lot of people are making a lot of buzz around it. Basically the same people who talked about twitter a long time before I got to understand its uses. And today I love using microblogging.
Gowalla and foursquare use the gps-coordinates of your cell phone to find places nearby where you could be. You can also add new places. That way, you can "check in" at the cafe, classroom, workplace, museum, hotel etc. where you are. Your contacts will be able to see this. If you connected your account with twitter or facebook, everybody will get the message, too.
A whole different approach to locationbased services is Layar, a location-based video-browser for your surroundings. I have only tried this a little bit, because it is quite hard on the battery resources of my phone. And this really is a lot of fun. You can see where you are going, and where in your proximity someone tweeted something recently. This, again, is not so widely used in Norway, but in other countries people have created services for this Augmented Reality Browsing. Like aids to find a new appartment, for example.
If you want to learn more about new geolocation services, NRK beta has a good writeup on projects presented at the conference SXSW earlier this year. I refrain from writing about facebooks location services here (because, whoops, no longer an account there). But twitter allows geolocation for tweets now as well.
Google Latitude is an interesting service, which for me, only ever worked during a congress in Berlin where a some of my Google contacts where around at the same time. The only use case for me there is to find people and to see where they are without asking them. Otherwise I mostly have Latitude turned off. I don't want or need to send out data about where I am at any moment.
All my experiences considering I am still where Vegard, fellow student and blogger, is. It is fun to use, but its still very lonely. There aren't that many people using this, so checking in at ferries or class rooms or at my work place, is just a little bit pointless right now. Which is why I often forget to do that. What I would really like to try is geocaching and location-based games. That sounds like fun.
