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Tag Archives: Google

Ah, Technology (Part 2)

14 Sunday Jul 2024

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion, Uncategorized

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Driving, Google, Google Maps, GPS, Maps, Navigation, Route Planning, Travel

I like maps, and modern digitized mapping is really quite excellent. Instant access to the maps across the world, satellite imagery and Street View, what could be better? Well, understanding its limitations would be a start.

Satellite based navigation for cars really opened up the possibilities, and now cellphone-based navigation systems are bringing in a raft of developments in route planning, especially with traffic information available pretty much in real time. So if I like it so much, where’s my gripe? As it happens, it’s two-fold.

Firstly, the visibility of the map on your hand-held or inboard device is quite limited, generally around 500 metres, even on the big screens available in modern cars. The whole premise of navigation seems to based on that 500m, and the designers of the systems appear to think that you don’t need any more immediate information than that. In a big city with intersections every few yards, I’d agree, but outside of the city, that 500m is pretty paltry. It’s probably just me, but I like to be looking way, way further afield so that I can anticipate things that the navigation system doesn’t let you know, like whether your turn two miles away is to the left or the right. You could argue that you don’t need that information, but I can’t drive without having a general idea of where I’m going. There’s the rub, of course, you may not need that information but without it you’ll end up having to make snap decisions and quite possibly mistakes, all that could have been avoided with more advance information.

The second part of the gripe is the way systems’ developers want to decide the parameters of your journey for you. The prime example is the manner in which systems will constantly suggest route changes as you’re driving, just so that you can potentially save a minute here or a minute there. Seriously chaps, why would be be bothered about single minutes? I drove in a rented car from Plymouth to Manchester and had the navigation system constantly suggesting route changes, to a point at which it became intrusive. I spent some time trying to get the system to stop making suggestions, but when set to “Quickest Route”, those suggestions were not optional. That particular system, in an Audi, sent us on three different routes on three different days between the same two points. Interesting for sure, but why? I couldn’t discern that any of the routes was better than the other. I can’t imagine a long(ish) drive where you did take up all of the system’s supposed time saving route alterations.

There are myriad stories of people being directed down inappropriate roads by their navigation systems and I can’t help thinking that with a bit more information, a wider view, people might not be inclined to blindly follow the instructions.

My solution is to peruse a map before I travel, paper or digital. That way I can get a feel for where I’m going, and use the navigation system to augment that broader information. Travelling across London (Ontario) yesterday, I had checked on a digital map to see that I’d need to be travelling from east west to catch a link road that ran north to south. The cellphone navigation system called out the turns, but I was at least able to follow the wider route I had lodged in my memory by making sure I was moving in the correct direction.

OK, it is me, normal people manage with navigation systems just as they are. Me, though, I still like that broader view.

Cock Up On The Google Front

21 Thursday Sep 2023

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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Data Loss, Google, Microsoft, Stupidity

Or “How Not To Do It”

Ever since we bought our Airstream Trailer, I have documented our travels. I’ve used various apps and media to do that, but had settled on Google Drive and a whole heap of PDF files, all tied up with a Google Sites free website.

Why wouldn’t I? Everything is in The Cloud, they do the backups and I had a massive amount of storage space bought and paid for. Everything was looking rosy.

Then last week, I had a series of prompts from Google, on my phone, suggesting that I clear down unwanted data. I wasn’t paying a whole lot of attention, and stuff on the phone is usually pretty meagre, so I had assumed that they were talking about duplicate files, previously deleted files, and things that hadn’t been used. I happily clicked “Yes”, even to the warning that the action I was taking was irreversible, and went to bed happy.

The next day, though, the horrible truth dawned on me when I noticed that a few files had been replaced by placeholders on my Sites page. A further delve into Google Drive and it became instantly clear that there wasn’t a single file left in the entire space. Not one. The pieces fell into place and my heart sank; I had deleted everything, and nothing could get it back again.

Google, of course, doesn’t mirror your cloud storage on your local PC like Microsoft OneDrive, so it only takes one idiotic person to make one idiotic mistake and it’s all lost. I could, I suppose, have backed up everything locally myself, but the whole idea is that using Google Drive means that you don’t have to. But in reality you do.

The good news for me was that apart from the Airstream Blog, I didn’t have anything that was critical stored in Google. I had, curiously, kept key things in Microsoft OneDrive where, even if I had screwed that up, I would have had a local backup. Also, everything I had squirreled away in Google Photos was still intact, as was the data in Google’s Blogger app. That said, I am busy making a local backup of Google Photos as we speak.

The upshot of all this has been my partial return to the Microsoft fold. Key documents are in their OneDrive, in the cloud and on my PC. I’ve gone back to Outlook for mail and calendar functions, picked up with Office products again, and I’ve even started to use the Edge Browser a bit. It’s not that the Google offerings don’t work, but I simply do not trust them any more. Anyway, I pay a fat wad of cash to Microsoft each year so I might as well get the most from them.

I’m not advocating a mass rush away from Google, especially given that most of what they do is very cheap, or free. It’s just that you have to be careful when using their products, which is something I clearly wasn’t. Still, onwards and upwards.

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