According to a report by ABI
Research, there will be over 240
million GPS-enabled mobile phones in
2008. Many of these phones will find
their way into India, which translates into
a huge opportunity for the Indian GPS/
GIS industry. But will these millions
of GPS enabled handhelds be used for
navigation alone? The probability is low.
To illustrate our point, let's do a status
check of consumer-oriented GPS services
in India. Currently, brands like Airtel,
Google, MapmyIndia, Nokia and Yahoo!
provide navigational maps for Indian
cities. Some of these maps cover almost
four dozen cities and close to half-amillion
Points of Interests (PoI). But
try searching the route to a residential
address and the navigation software will
return no results. The problem with the
current GPS services is their inability to
give last mile navigation directions to the
user. While GPS application developers
claim that a user won't have to roll down
a window to ask for directions again, the
harsh reality is that is exactly one has to
do after veering off from the main road.
Another aspect, which holds true in the
Indian scenario, is the current offerings are
mere 'applications' and not 'services'. When
we say GPS as a service, we include things
like live traffic updates, which would come
handy for a user to avoid traffic jams and
take a detour instead. At present, we use
GPS only for navigation, that too when
we are headed to an unknown place, an
occurrence that doesn't happen frequently
to justify the need. We appreciate the
effort that has gone in putting together
detailed digital maps of Indian cities
but we fear that isn't enough.

Unlike a couple of years ago, when consumer oriented GPS enabled devices were expensive and rare, in 2008 there will be many midend cellphones (and not forgetting Bluetooth enabled
GPS receivers) available to choose from.
Don't be surprised if you get to hear a
statement by the end of 2008 that indicates
more number of GPS -enabled cellphones
were shipped that stand-alone personal
navigation devices. After all, it has
happened with digital cameras, portable
music players and PDAs, there is no
reason why it shouldn't be the same with
personal navigation devices. Most of the
consumers of such cellphones will be the
youth, who at this point aren't the typical
end-users that the GPS industry caters to.
These rather sudden developments require
a change in the perspective of how the
industry looks at the GPS market. We
believe that instead of mere navigation,
GPS based social networking and user
generated content sharing applications
will be more popular in 2008.
The benefit of having a GPS in a
cellphone is the fact that anything and
everything can be tagged with a precise
geographic location that is as accurate
as 10 metres. An application that geotagging
places (restaurants, night clubs,
coffee shops, malls) with user generated
reviews might become popular with
users registering themselves to get
reviews via text messages when they
are around that location. Or location
based social networking that let's you
meet friends or friends-of-friends, who
can ping you and meet, when you are
nearby can take the likes of Facebooks
and Orkuts to a different level.
With the emergence of high resolution
cameras in cellphones, there is no dearth
of user generated content in the form of
videos and photographs. If users geotag
them, upload them to a common
application, we can have almost every
conceivable part of the globe captured
in prints and video footage. The
possibilities are endless. Let's give the
consumer something more to do with
his GPS-enabled cellphone. And of
course, let's find new avenues to generate
revenues with existing technology.