What Do YOU Want To Find On Mobilised?
 
Nokia Finds There's Money In Maps Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Tuesday, 12 February 2008
Nokia has not only introduced a new personal navigation phone at this year's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, it has used the event to launch a total revamp of its mapping and navigation offering that improves navigation for pedestrians and adds satellite images to the maps.

Mapping is becoming a key function in the mobile world as potential advertisers increasingly see the enormous impact location based services could have on their marketing efforts. Accordingly, Nokia has also announced a global Media Network bringing 70 publishers under an umbrella that could reach more than 100 million mobile consumers around the globe.

Key to the new navigation push is devices such as the new Nokia 6210 Navigator. It's the company's first GPS-enabled mobile device that has an integrated compass to help pedestrian find there way instead of walking on the road to their destination.

The system works with Nokia Maps 2.0 and includes full voice and visual turn by turn guidance powered by an 'accelerometer' which measures changes in direction and orientation rather than  relying solely on GPS positioning. This built-in compass makes it easy to follow the map when walking as the device automatically orientations the map if you turn a corner or re-orient the device.

The integrated Nokia Maps 2.0 application will plot the quickest route to the desired destination and illustrate it on the map. But the solution goes further. Thanks to the high speed broadband capabilities of the phone, users will also be able to instantly access detailed information about points of interest, or get the phone number and web address of businesses they see along the way.

Of course the Nokia navigation system still offers drivers the facilities they need for in-car navigation. One-touch navigation and full voice guidance equips the Nokia 6210 Navigator with the type of navigation possible from dedicated GPS devices.

The Nokia 6210 Navigator supports assisted GPS (aGPS), which enables the GPS receiver to acquire satellite positioning faster by leveraging the information it can glean from triangulated readings off mobile phone towers.

Nokia's plan is for local maps to be pre-loaded on a 1GB memory card that comes with the device and map updates will be included in the sales price. For an additional fee, users can purchase multimedia city guides from premium content providers via Nokia Maps application and download additional map areas for free says the company.

With a redesigned user interface the new Maps application helps you work out where you are by giving you information about buildings, streets and parks (including pathways through the park) that are around you. With the multimedia guides it should even be able to show you photos, videos and provide audio guides.

"The personal navigation market is expanding rapidly and mobile phone navigation is its fastest growing area. According to recent market research by Canalys, over 60% of mobile phone users are keen to have navigation on their phones," says Markku Suomi, the head of Nokia's Connect device category. "The Nokia 6210 Navigator offers the next generation in mobile navigation to a broad consumer base."

It is also interesting to note that Nokia is bringing a version of Nokia Maps to the Series 40 platform opening up the functionality to a muich wider range of mid-priced phones than the Series 60  Symbian devices we've seen so far. Nokia says thatSeries 40 devices accounted for a large portion of the more than 437-million devices Nokia estimates it had cumulatively shipped by the end of 2007.

On the advertising side, Nokia has signed up over 70 leading publisher and operators including AccuWeather, Discovery, Hearst, Reuters, and Sprint to form what it is billing as the first global mobile ad network of top tier publishers. The company says it is achieving click-through rates averaging 10% on certain channels which will certainly start turning heads in corporate marketing departments.

Although this is not yet linked in to the location capabilities of the GPS services that will surely come. The ad network is built on a system the company acquired when it bought Enpocket, in October last year which users "ground breaking analytics technology" to better target the punters when they are nearly ready to part with their hard earned cash.






Older news items
Tag This Now:
Delicious
Digg
Stumble
Reddit
Fark