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All Posts Tagged Tag: ‘GPS’

Home / Tag: GPS

COD: Toozla – an audio guide to the world 0

I love seeing all of the innovation going on in the travel and tourism sector. On my most recent trip to Australia, for example, I used iPad based city guides instead of books, and was delighted with the convenience.

Well, a Russian start-up called has an even more fascinating and intriguing way to learn and explore new places. The Toozla platforms uses geolocation to pair wikipedia, tourist book, expert, and user generated entries to specific GPS locations. If you’re standing outside the Hermitage, for example, you can start your Toozla mobile app and get a narration of the history and facts of this important landmark.

But it’s not just Russian landmarks, not by a longshot. Toozla’s reach is international with more and more cities getting online. And the breadth of information sources that power Toozla provides huge opportunities for exploration of eateries, restaurants, out of the way spots etc. With the delightful to Toozla benefit of geo-loco ads. Here’s a vid from their website that simulates the experience:

to give you a sense of the range of info Toozla has or is planning to include in its mobile travel service, take a look at this list from their web site:

•National ministries of tourism.
•Local tourist boards.
•City tourist information centers.
•Individuals, companies and organisations who have professional content that they want to share with a wide audience.
•Producers of audio guides.
•Publishers of hard and soft-copy guides.
•Travel websites.
•Internet booking agencies.
•Tour operators (both incoming and outgoing).
•Travel agencies.
•All travellers worldwide.
•Museums.
•Restaurants.
•Hotels and other accommodation.
•Shops.
•Any business/service with local operations.
•Big FMCG brands.
•International hotel chains.
•Car rental companies.
•Travel equipment companies.
•Mobile operators.

How cool is that. I’d liken it to an approachable AR layer on major markets around the world.

Want restaurant tips for the immediate area you find yourself in? Toozla can do it. Want to know who that statue represents, but see only a Cyrillic plaque? Toozla will tell you.

I love this concept. The key challenge will be to make this potentially enormous amount of information useful but not overwhelming. No one wants a pop up 10% off from every patisserie in Vienna. No one wants a 10% off coupon from every tea shop in the lake District. But when you want one, you definitely want one. Toozla’s approach to this challenge is to organize the bits of info into topical channels that help the user get to the sort of information they want — historical or commercial, for example — more quickly.

The use of Wikipedia combined with the private sources of information I think is great because it means that lots of destinations that may be off the beaten path will also be powered by Toozla independent travel experience.

A great concept and I wish them all the luck in th world.

Posted on: 01-5-2011
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

Silicon O’Valley 0

Recently I had the good fortune of getting to go to Le Web, the biggest digital conference in Europe. As I wandered the booth section, I came across an interesting participant: Enterprise Ireland and some of the start ups they are helping to support and promote. Enterprise Ireland is the Irish State Development Agency.

EI reports that The Economist Intelligence Unit ranked Ireland 17th in the world in digital activity. Not impressed? Well, consider that it’s 4.6MM population ranks it 119.

As a deeply committed Hibernophile who actually once turned down a trip to Hawaii to vacation in Cork — in February — I am never above giving shameless publicity to Irish things. So I thought I’d give some ink — err, electrons to some of the interesting companies emanating from the Emerald isle. There are clearly some sharp people working away every day there.

PinPoints

is a mobile application from Limerick-based Cauwill Technolgies that automatically programs your mobile phone’s navigation software to provide turn by turn directions to a destination. It converts a given location to a shortened url, and when you click it, it uses the native GPS in your phone to plot your starting point, your end point, and the best available route. It works on all smartphone platforms.

Teamwork PM

is a web based project management platform that I found very easy and powerful. Simple, intuitive, and graphical, it offered great usability versus other platforms I have tried. Pricing ranges from a free limited features edition to an enterprise version costing €149/month. From the nine year old (that’s 63 in Internet years – a testament to good products) Digital Crew Developers in Cork.

Feed Henry

offers a development and deployment platform that makes it easy to create and distribute apps across all types of smart phones, and across the organization. “Build once, deploy to all.” Further, it makes it easier to integrate with existing business systems, report and optimize, and defend via enterprise quality security.

Gruupy.com

is a Groupon-style deal a day site focused on offering Europe’s best deals on electronics and gadgets. Discounts of 50%+ seem to be the norm, though it’s a bit challenging to evaluate because most stuff is cheaper over here, what with VAT and all. What interests me here is the vertical play – that with Gruupy you will generally know what sorts of things to find ad you go back every day. And because the deals are relevant across Europe, it’s focused on goods rather than local services.

Louder Voice

is a tool that adds reviews, ratings, and commenting to a web site in just a few minutes. With offerings for everything from SOHO websites to enterprise ecommerce sites, Louder Voice is focused on improving sales for businesses by including personal endorsement and recommendation in more selling experiences. Integrated with FaceBook profiles, registration for consumers is easy, which increases the number of comments on a site. The reviewer also has the opportunity to send their review to their own FB page or twitter stream. The tool also offers SMS and Android review tools.

from on .

Me really likey.

Weedle.com

is a massive network of “people with skills.” You join, quickly create a skills summary web page, and connect it to pages and profiles of people you know. Photography, web development, catering, you name it. The personal networks feature is important because it serves to highlight your profile when someone looking for your skills is just a degree or two of separation away from you. Their studies indicate that, not surprisingly, these sorts of connections can be very valuable ways of improving your close rate.

There are lots of other companies – these are just a few of the ones I felt qualified to briefly describe. It appears that there is also a robust sector for enterprise security and SaaS offerings in the snake-free land. While many of the companies are in Dublin, there are also a surprising number in the other cities and towns.

The economic news from Ireland has been rough of late – but it appears that whatever happens to the budget and relationship with the IMF, Ireland’s tech sector is going to continue to perform well.

Posted on: 01-3-2011
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

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