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Businesses Transportation

Uber Wants To Buy Nokia's Mapping Services 45

jfruh writes: When Nokia sold its handset business to Microsoft, one of the services left that it intended to rebuild the company on was Here, its rival to Google Maps. But now a deal is said to be in the works to sell Here to Uber, a company that relies heavily on navigation services and that doesn't want to end up too reliant on Google, a potential rival in the futuristic self-driving car business.
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Uber Wants To Buy Nokia's Mapping Services

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  • I hear Baidu wants them also.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday May 09, 2015 @09:51AM (#49653411)

      They should just support and contribute to OpenStreetMap [openstreetmap.org]. The world does not need yet another proprietary map system, and Uber needs to focus on their core business rather than getting side tracked into a lot of silly vertical integration.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Their core business is moving out of the taxi service and into financial markets. 3 Billion dollars, how long have these people been around to get that kind of money?

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          They got some dumbasses to take on all the risk while they get the profit - perfect Wall St material.

        • Their core business is moving out of the taxi service and into financial markets. 3 Billion dollars, how long have these people been around to get that kind of money?

          But...but...they're not a taxi service!

          They're innovative bleeding-edge disruptive paradigm shifters in the 21st century liberalised transportation market.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        You should read "The Halo Effect" http://www.amazon.com/The-Halo-Effect-Business-Delusions/dp/1476784035

        "Focus on their core business" is only seen as wise with the benefit of hindsight when it works well. When they lose market-share because of "The Innovator's Dilemma" then they are suddenly buffoons for being complacent and not innovating.

        If these "maps" investments(Autonomous Cars BTW) pay off should we expect a retraction/public back pedaling to match the "I told you so's" that we can expect if this doe

        • "Focus on their core business" is only seen as wise with the benefit of hindsight when it works well. When they lose market-share because of "The Innovator's Dilemma" then they are suddenly buffoons for being complacent and not innovating.

          Uber certainly needs to innovate. Autonomous cars are coming. Digital, constantly updated maps, are already here. Uber should USE these technologies, but they do not need to BUILD their own.

          Many companies use the electric grid, the phone system, and the internet. But that doesn't mean they need to design and build their own generators, string up private phone lines to all their customers, and use a proprietary protocol to communicate. They can just use existing infrastructure.

          Likewise, Uber can just us

  • It was free download; got what I paid for. UBER is out of their league tackling reincarnation of a dead product that doesn't work as a _map_. They should buy RIM Blackberry 'Traffic.app. There's a map that routes, directs, updates and beats GoogleMaps and could be bought.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 09, 2015 @11:03AM (#49653707)

      I love 'Here', downloaded Paris when I moved there, no need for data connection, unless I want public transport times. I find it clearer than google maps to orientate myself thanks to landmarks (Eiffel tower, odd shaped tower blocks etc) being 3Dish and having different textures. Haven't tried voice navigation. Google maps was really unintuitive about downloading maps, and seemed (they didn't make it clear) to make it difficult to keep maps for long or to download large areas - this might have improved.

      I prefer it to Google maps on my laptop screen even.
      (I have never used the Blackberry one so that might as you say also be better than Google - I just wanted to point out that Here works for me.)

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I've only recently tried out Here and I'm very impressed. Offline maps for my whole country and offline routing that does a pretty damn good job as far as I can tell. It also has realtime traffic updates, but (obviously) only if you have it on online mode. I keep my setting to offline, so I don't know how well that feature works.

      Recommend that people give it a try and, if nothing else, it's worth having in case you get to a spot with flaky phone reception. I like it more than that, though.

    • One of the reasons that Nokia took pretty much the whole market for Windows Phone was the Here suite of apps; turn by turn navigation, public transport routing, live traffic, downloadable maps and local discovery and all of it integrated into the OS. Very slick. The other reason was the cameras, of course.
  • Is it really Google competing with Uber or is it really Uber competing with Google?

    In February this year Uber formed a partnership with Carnegie Mellon University to develop driverless car technology. They're now looking to buy Nokia's map technology for navigation and replace technology provided by Google maps.

    Google says they aren't competing with Uber. Their drive sharing app was made internally for certain employees to carpool to work.

    Google has at least $258M invested in Uber and has their chief legal

  • I don't know how Uber plans to pay for this, but Stock Options are worthless if Uber tanks.

  • Well if they do buy it I hope Uber does more with it than Nokia has. It's in terms of the maps it offers Nokia Maps is actually a pretty decent service and has the potential to give Google a hard time if somebody puts some money into it to add features it is missing and improve existing ones like the satelite view feature.
  • Here maps is the app that bundles with the Windows phone I believe. This single application is the main reason I score Nokia's Lumia series -1 out of a possible 0 to 5 score, where a score of 0 indicates the product is so defective that owners should request a refund from the manufacturer.

    The phone doesn't do a single thing well, but at least most functionality doesn't involve you reentering the destination while driving every time the screen sleeps. It does other things, like recalculating your route be
  • Uh, didn't Nokia already sell they Map division to Apple when Apple was having trouble with Apple Maps after they dropped Google Maps? Apple didn't just instantly map the entire world, they had to acquire all that data...

    Perhaps they just bought a licence to the data, but I had thought that they had just bought it outright. That sounds more like Apple. It would have cost a couple billion, but then they have/had mad cash on hand anyway.

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