Nokia leads the way with indoor mapping

Published by Rahul Desai on July 16, 2012

Where do you go after you have mapped over 37 million kilometers of roadways worldwide? Easy. You go inside.

At last year’s spring CTIA show, we launched Destination Maps, our latest product. Destination Maps takes the highly accurate mapping coverage you have come to expect from Nokia, and moves it inside to continue the orientation, routing and guidance beyond the great outdoors.

Nokia Lumia 920 and Lumia 820

Our first Windows Phone 8 smartphones.

Be a part of it.

Indoor venues are continuing to grow larger and more complex, making it difficult for all of us to find our way easily and quickly to our desired need. Imagine being in an unfamiliar city and needing a football. With Destination Maps, you can search for the football, find out the stores that carry it, know exactly where to park or which door to enter, and get the fastest walking route directly to that store. Incorporating Destination Maps into location apps or onto a specific device eliminates the stress and the unnecessary time spent reading floor plans or guessing which store carries the football.

And, it’s not just shopping malls we have mapped. Since the launch of Destination Maps, with 214 shopping malls in the US, we have steadily increased our coverage each month, both in venues and countries around the world. To date, we have mapped 4605 venues – shopping malls, retail stores, airports, and transit hubs – in 38 countries with more being added every month. This is over a 2000% increase in just 16 months. Wait until you see what happens in the next 16 months.

While other providers claim to have powerful indoor map offerings with a large number of venues mapped, Destination Maps are not just the average 2D floor plans that can be viewed on a device. Our indoor map content enables a full end-to-end experience, making the exploration and discovery of indoor places more realistic. Further, Destination Maps include a wealth of interior map attributes, like escalators, floor levels, ATMS and restrooms. Including these important points allows for more advanced and accurate guidance and routing.

Like most of our products, Destination Maps is optimized to work seamlessly with our other Nokia Location Content offerings. Dynamic content such as movie listings, flight times or transit schedules can all be added to these indoor maps, providing even further value to end-users.

As always, Nokia offers Destination Maps across many devices and PNDs. Already, Bing Maps has implemented this location content into their maps with the announcement of Bing Venue Maps last month. Nokia Maps will follow soon.

Given that people worldwide spend 87-90% of their time indoors, helping make routing and indoor discovery faster and easier is a natural next step. Drive navigation is fairly mature – indoor mapping is the next untapped frontier of mapping, and you can expect Nokia to continue to lead the way.

Image credit: The Columned Mall by stuckincustoms on Flickr

Comments

  • Rashpal Bhati

    What does this even mean;

    “Imagine being in an unfamiliar city and needing a football. With Destination Maps, you can search for the football”

    Who goes to a city to look for a football?
    Proof reading needed, or a much better plain English example given, football really??

    • Malkmus

      “being in an unfamiliar city and needing a football” doesn’t mean you went to the city looking for a football. I do agree that it’s an odd example though.

      • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

        Hi @google-7c32c15166766567a1deab3badb84cab:disqus, @Malkmus:disqus,
        I don’t understand the problem here. It’s an example like any other. It can be a cake, a book, a pair of shoes. We picked up a football this time. You know? one like this

        • Malkmus

          I was disagreeing with Rashpal that it doesn’t make sense. I understand it, it just sounds a bit odd because of saying you “need” a football, like you “need” a map. Anyway, I thought Rashpal was being a bit hypocritical because he criticized the writing while misunderstanding it himself. It was an unnecessary criticism.

          • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

            Let’s all buy a football next time we visit a shopping mall ;-)

  • beefiron

    Where can we see a list of the destinations that are currently available? How do you actually use the service? Do you access it through Maps, or is it a separate application?

  • lumdam

    How to use these maps on my C7? Seems that these maps are available at bing not even on nokia web maps…

    • rahuldes

      Destination Maps is not yet available on Nokia Maps, but
      you can see it implemented on Bing Maps now.
       

    • rahuldes

      Destination Maps is not yet available on Nokia Maps, but
      you can see it implemented on Bing Maps now.
       

  • Mad_Iguana

    Sounds great, but where? What locations? Are they included in the downloaded maps? How do I see them?
    Sheesh Nokia, you’re not really doing yourself any favours with half-brilliant advertising of 100% brilliant features.

    • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

      Hi @Mad_Iguana:disqus, do you want me to list all 4600+ venues here? :-)
      If you tell me where you live or in what venues you are interested I can give you some examples…

  • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

    In 2009 Nokia hosted calling all innovators challenges around the world. You awarded a prize but no cash to a developer in South Africa who brought a Nokia Indoor Navigation idea to the challenge. 

    I cannot believe that you then took his idea tweaked it and implemented it on a grand scale without working further with him. 

    You did the same at the 2010 Nokia calling all innovators challenge. I won the rights to use Sesame Street characters in my award winning eLiteracy app. After the contest these rights just vanished and every attempt to benefit from this prize ran into a dead end. Now I see Nokia is publishing apps for Sesame Street. 

    So sad to see Nokia stealing idea’s from hard working 3rd party developers and failing to deliver on their promises. Total #FAIL

    • http://twitter.com/Hdrules Hradayesh Nimavat

      this is sad :(   ….I will think twice before posting an idea on Nokia sponsored crowd sourcing sites now on.

      • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

        Hi @twitter-7986572:disqus, I’m not expert of “Calling All Innovators” but I think you are referring to Mall-Buddy and eLiteracy.
        I can find out more on the second if you give me more time, but let me clarify to you and @twitter-329186169:disqus that we started working on indoor maps years ago.
        Back then, the company in charge of collecting these maps was known as Navteq, now part or Nokia Location&Commerce business unit.

        • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

          Yes 1. I am referring to Mall Buddy developed by Paul Hinrichsen. He showed his system to the world in 2009 thats 4years ago. I find it very odd that he was awarded a prize for his innovation and then just dropped. Why if Nokia thought his idea was so good did they never work with him to take this further? Then after the fact Nokia announces Indoor navigation plans. Sorry but that just seems very very odd. 

          Yes No. 2 is eLiteracy. I am the owner of this award winning app and Calling All Innovators 2010 clearly stated: ”
          Within the education subcategory of the Life Improvement category of the contest, the winning applications will have the opportunity to use Muppet characters from Sesame Street in their final app.” This part of the prize was never honoured. I made direct contact with Nokia and also Caroline Strzalka of sesame street but this went nowhere. 

          We are now 2 years down the line and Nokia is merrily developing Sesame street apps.Sorry but that also looks very very bad. 

          • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

            Hi @twitter-7986572:disqus, as promised on Twitter, here my answer.

            I’m going to follow up internally about eLiteracy and hopefully I’m going to help you out. Sorry for what has happened, but I’m still confident that there is a fair explanation.

            Mall-Buddy is a different story. Again, I do not have all the background info here, but I’m sure in 2009 we recognized how ahead of time this kind of application was. However, it’s a long shot to think that indoor mapping is an exclusive idea introduced by Mall-Buddy. Perhaps @rahuldes:disqus, who has written this article, can let us know when exactly Navteq started working on indoor mapping. But consider that we are not talking here only about an app for Nokia smartphones. We are talking about collecting indoor maps all over the world for a business, the location one, that extends itself beyond Nokia (PND manufacturers, car manufacturers, websites, …).

          • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

            Thank you for following up, much appreciated. 

            I cannot speak much for Mall Buddy as I am not the owner of this software. It was however a prototype and as you say “in 2009 we recognized how ahead of time this kind of application was” and thats exactly what this app was. Way ahead of the crowd.   

            Yes everyone is looking for a “fair explanation” and this is why we are now 2 years away and still no resolution. 

            Thank you for trying. Would love to hear the “fair” explanation to an unfair situation when you find it. 

          • http://twitter.com/Phinrich99 Paul

             Hi.

            Thank you all for recognising that – at that time – my app was ahead of its time. At that time I was prepared to share my ideas but no one came to the party. OK I am not the inventor of indoor navigation – although in 2009 my app was the ONLY indoor nav app on the net. I cant claim to have the best code in the world but as I said I have moved on and my algorithm has moved on and I still believe that my alogorithm is unique. Lets leave it at that. There are others here who have other interests and ideas to push.

            Thanks again Simon and Pino.

          • http://twitter.com/Phinrich99 Paul

             One last point – I have e-mail correspondence from January 2008 between myself and the late Russel Shaw of Znet where we discussed my Indoor navigation ideas. But theres really no point in fighting over who gave birth to the concept. It was due to arrive sooner or later.

            Paul

          • http://twitter.com/Phinrich99 Paul

             Hi Simon. Thanks for your support. As the developer of the Mall-Buddy let me add the following to the conversation.

            Yes I was awarded a prize in 2009 and that was the last of it. In the meantime I have developed the concept further and the current app provides full turn-by-turn directions in an indoor muli-level space (something which even Google say they cant do right now – and this is not knocking Google but is said with all due respect). Its not easy to provide turn-by-turn directions in an indoor map but I have found a way. Twice I have offered the idea to “Invent with Nokia” and twice the idea has been rejected.

            I have moved on and have converted my code to a more powerfull coding platform and right now I am working in partnership with someone from the States to bring my idea to the world. I am not trying to build maps for 200 different locations but right now for one particular location but being MUCH more than just a map. I cant say what else I am adding to it because someone might just hear.

            I am now developing my idea for the Android and Apple Platforms.

            Meanwhile I have kept my eye on the Indoor navigation space and there are a number of start ups already out there for months/years now. Not bragging but I believe that my concept is ahead of them all. My only problem is I am a hobbyist developer with no technical help who has to do everything himself but I will get there.

            Thanks again.

            Simon I am aware of your Sesame Street issue with Nokia and yes its really a shame that things like this happen.  It really does MUDDY the water and you deserve SO MUCH more for your perserverence and enthusiasm and for the way you have supported Nokia till now.

            Paul

          • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

            Thank you for your feedback Paul. 

        • Raoul-Marie Couture

          What about Japan ? I just came back from a trip there and I realised, to my surprise, that my Nokia Map application was useless in Japan ? We need a phone that will work with offline map everywhere, otherwise should I buy a second device when I travel to Japan ?

        • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

          Hi there, did you get any further info on why eLiteracy never received the rights to work with Sesame Street as per our prize?

  • pundakian

    Maybe you have the best mapping software, but it is not worth anything when you don’t have maps for countries!
    You still don’t have a map for Israel, which is a hi-tech country and part of OECD…
    and I’m a sucker with a Nokia phone, while all the friends around me have iphone/android … with maps of Israel available with no problems.
    So who cares about advanced features when you don’t even have a basic map?

    • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

      Hi @google-3d1cf838b0b13adea57f8f77a6cc15a3:disqus, I feel your frustration and if your country is one of the few missing in our database I know it feels like the whole world is missing.
      Indeed we currently do not offer a navigable map for Israel due to the level of quality of available map data. However, we work hard on refining and improving Nokia’s location based services continuously and make navigable maps available in as many countries and regions as possible, including Israel.

      • Federico

        it’s not just israel, think Japan and Cyprus, not to mention Africa.
        just use crowdsourcing or openstreetmap… either way, WAKE UP NOKIA!

        symbyan was the first (and still the only) to have free offline navigation but after the acquisition of navteq how many countries have been added?

        • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

          Wow, I feel your energy @mrlovat:disqus! Of course we would like to cover those countries too.
          Right now we have map data for over 190 countries and over 110 over them are navigable (not just 29 like some competitive offers). This impressive coverage didn’t happen overnight, to answer your question.
          Of course there are some exceptions, like those you have mentioned but we also want to provide high quality maps, so crowdsourcing can help only in specific cases. Have you heard of http://maps.nokia.com/mapcreator?

          • http://twitter.com/SimonBotes Simon Botes

            Map Creator only works in some locations. South Africa is not available for editing.

  • http://www.favbrowser.com FavBrowser.com

    Waiting for Eastern Europe

  • redtidal

    Awesome. Can’t to see what you guys do with Windows Phone 8!

  • rahuldes

    @beefiron Listing all 4600+ venues would take a lot of space. You can see what type of venues we have mapped and in which countries they are located in our infographic.

    • http://www.facebook.com/ahmedvorajee Ahmed Vorajee

      Are there maps for South African Venues and also for Dubai airport

  • http://twitter.com/capricotwi04 Caprico

    It’s great to hear that Nokia is working on indoor maps – but there should be higher priorities than that. Barely anyone needs that stuff – maybe Americans with their big malls. But honestly, I’ve never got lost in any of them. In most buildings everything is already written and explained so well (like Airports) that I feel it’s easier to get lost while trying to understand an indoor map on your phone.

    Important would be to improve Nokia Maps. The amount of POI could be better and there are still places which simply don’t exist for Nokia – like Cyprus. Cyprus has a pretty modern street system and is part of the E.U. That’s more than just a scandal – fortunately there is still Google Maps (there is a political story behind it, search Google – I cannot tell about it here). Even worse is that Nokia doesn’t inform its customers and let them in the dark. It’s like talking to a wall – well maybe the best definition for the Nokia support since the Elop-era.

    One of the big advantages using Nokia Maps is the offline option and the great Navigation software. But now that Android offers also offline Maps, Nokia really needs to start improve their services.  

    It’s also important to activate features like Live-Traffic on all Nokia phones – especially the ones which are sold most. While its possible with a complicated trick, someone without the knowledges just can’t activate features like that. 

    So there’s a big open construction place in front of Nokia and I really feel indoors map should be a much lower priority. Anyways, good luck with all map project you are working on :-)

  • http://www.facebook.com/ahmedvorajee Ahmed Vorajee

    Are there ivenue maps for Dubai int Airport? Are there any maps for South African Venues?

    • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

      We do not have venues in South Africa. In UAE we currently cover:
      Al Ghurair Centre

      Al Wahda Mall

      Arabian Center

      Burjuman

      Ibn Battuta Mall

  • http://www.facebook.com/ahmedvorajee Ahmed Vorajee

    Are there venue maps for South Africa and is there a venue map for Dubai Airport