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iOS 6 Maps

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About

iOS 6 Maps is an application packaged with Apple’s iOS 6 publicly released on September 19th, 2012. Due to the amount of errors in the app, many iPhone users began posting screenshots of the faulty application or creating parodies of it, criticizing the way locations are displayed.

Origin

Rumors of an in-house designed Maps application to replace Google Maps in Apple’s iPhone operating system first appeared on the Mac-related news site 9 to 5 Mac[3] on May 11th, 2012. The new Maps application was officially announced in June 2012 at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference, where it was also revealed that the app would be powered by the navigation data service TomTom.[4] Shortly after the conference, YouTuber MyJailbreakMovies provided an early look at the new application with a video titled “iOS 6: Maps.”



iOS 6 was released to the public on September 19th, 2012, following the release of iPhone 5. That same day, Twitter users began complaining about the lack of public transportation integration and visible distortion of well-known landmarks in the application with the hashtag #ios6pocalypse.[5]




Spread

On the day of the release, Gizmodo[6], the Huffington Post[7] and Read Write Web[8] all posted about the dismal reception of the map. That evening, the parody account @iOS6maps[9] was created on Twitter to interact with people’s complaints and the single topic Tumblr blog The Amazing iOS 6 Maps[10] was launched to showcase screenshots of the contorted maps found across the web.



Over the next two days, coverage of the application’s poor reception appeared on many news media outlets and technology blogs including The Verge[11], Yahoo! News[12], Fox News[13], CNET[14], Forbes[15], PC Mag[16] and CNN.[17] A lengthy discussion on the comparison of iOS 6 Maps and Google Maps appeared on the /r/Android subreddit.[19] Additionally, a handful of small Facebook fan pages[20] were created to criticize the Maps application. Between September 19th and 20th, there were nearly 104,000 mentions of “iOS 6 maps” on Twitter.[21]

Apple’s Response

On September 21st, Apple spokesperson Trudy Miller released a statement calling the app “a work in progress.” She also noted that the company is working on integrating transit directions into the app, but did not address the complaints regarding the distorted 3D imageries of landmarks. The statement was picked up by PC Mag[1], the Huffington Post[2] and Techcrunch[18] later that same day.

Notable Examples




Search Interest



External References


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