Wednesday, December 12, 2007

ABI: 50 million users will generate map and POI data by 2012

Dominique Bonte
ABI Research today released a new study,“User-Generated Digital Maps and POIs”, forecasting that by 2012 a large part of all map and POI content will be generated by more than 50 million active members of user communities. The acquisition of NAVTEQ by Nokia and the bidding war between Garmin and TomTom for control of Tele Atlas have shown how important digital maps have become in the navigation and location value chain. However, explains ABI Research, with the expected growth of handset-based pedestrian navigation and location based services, traditional map production technologies will no longer be able to generate and update the exponentially growing volume of required map details. The case for user-generated content for POIs is even stronger, as they are even more dynamic in nature. “TomTom Map Share is the first commercial implementation of user-generated map content technology directly on a Personal Navigation Device,” says ABI Research principal analyst Dominique Bonte. “Map corrections or POI additions can be input on the device on the fly and instantly uploaded and shared with the rest of the TomTom Map Share community. AND (Automotive Navigation Data) has recently made available an online digital map which can be modified by all users based on Web 2.0 technology, allowing AND to produce maps more quickly and at a lower cost.” While branded content sharing initiatives are aimed at keeping commercial maps up-to-date at low cost, completely open and standardized community projects will create digital maps and POI-databases from scratch. “The OpenStreetMap project has already achieved high levels of coverage in the Netherlands, UK and Germany”,said ABI. “Several open POI-community projects such as GPS-Waypoints, TellmeWhere and GyPSii have recently been launched, some of which have attracted important venture capital funding. Their main revenue source is expected to be based on advertising, and opportunities may still exist to sell packaged content to navigation vendors”. “Geocontent will become an important new dimension of social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace”, added ABI.
Wednesday 12th December 2007

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