Archive for the ‘Meetups’ Category

Waze World Champs Meetup 2013

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013
Waze meetup Prague 2013

Waze meetup Prague 2013

Oh what a weekend it was!

This past weekend, 30 veteran country and area managers from both Europe and South America convened in Prague, Czech Republic for a full day of Waze related presentations, discussion and QA.

CMs

Travelling from Waze HQ to attend the meetup were Co-Founders Ehud Shabtai and Amir Shinar as well as Head of Community and Support Chen Barshai. Also joining were community and product managers Ohad, Shirli, Ori and Adrian.

Presentations given by the Waze team included the topics of the map editor, community, social media and of course some things we have planned for the future.

Shirli

Not to be outdone, the community planned some presentations of their own on issues ranging from what it’s like to be a baby Wazer, gamification, search and improved tools for area management.


All in all it was a great weekend spent with a dedicated and passionate community of long time expert Wazers.

 
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We’d also like to send a special shout out to Zirland for meeting participants at the airport and ensuring a soft landing in Prague with train tickets and SIM cards.

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Check out our full photo gallery of the event.

The full list of Wazers in attendance included: (AUSTRIA) GPSRitter; (BELGIUM) steveningelbrecht; (BRAZIL) antigerme, scarlogarcia; (CHILE) meb001; (CZECH REPUBLIC) Zirland; (FRANCE) arbaot, bullshoot, milkyway35, pulsarxp, slicer; (HUNGARY) railcar, wroadd, zsezo; (ITALY) anto64, asterix06, fmondini, lopaolo69, Michelozzo; (NETHERLANDS) gerben, petervdveen; (SLOVAKIA) guri211, dragstor, foxitrot, shalafi; (SPAIN) Brshk1, Robindlc; (SWITZERLAND) argus-cronos; (UK) dmcconachie, kieranrawley.name-tags-template - czech - all

Palo Alto Meetup Brings Together New and Experienced Map Editors

Sunday, March 17th, 2013

MeetUp Pic

Boy, do we love meetups!

Earlier this month, a group of new and veteran map editors convened in Palo Alto to do what they do best — discuss how to create the best and most efficient community mapping initiative possible.

In attendance were special guests from Waze HQ: Co-Founder Ehud Shabtai and Community, Support and Product team members Shirli, Jonathan and Ohad.

The agenda featured wide-ranging talks that were mostly technical in nature. Everything from modifications to gas stations, turn restrictions, intersections, service roads and more map editor features and tweaks were discussed.

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Highlights included a talk by CEO Noam Bardin and presentations by top map editors ‘skbun,’ ‘bgodette’ and ‘AndyPoms.’

Major accomplishments in 2012 were discussed, as well as goals for 2013.

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“We still have a lot more to do. It’s not going to get boring,” Noam said in his talk.

500 Million Map Edits in 2012

Wednesday, February 6th, 2013

It’s been a great year for Waze. We’ve grown faster and in more places than we ever could have imagined, and we’re constantly in awe of the amazing community of drivers we have and their commitment to fighting traffic, together!

BUT this growth would have been impossible without the hard work of the incredible map editing community, without which Waze (and the map) would be obsolete.

So we wanted to take a moment to reflect on some map editing highlights from 2012, as a precursor for an even better 2013!

Sleek New Map Editor

Plans to overhaul the Waze world map editor began as early as last January, when our attempts to create a more intuitive user interface began. After releasing a revamped version, we published a full video to get new map editors acquainted.

In October, we revealed that our map editing community is growing quite fast, with a 40% month-over-month increase in new editors. The increase was likely attributed to the new and improved map editor, a higher growth rate in drivers using Waze and increased efforts on our part to make map-editing a more user-friendly experience.

In November, the older map editor (affectionately known as the “Cartouche”) was officially retired. The now-official map editor was rolled out in its place, newly designed for new map editors to be able to “jump in” and edit, with features such as “play mode.”

Meetups, Meetups, Meetups Everywhere

Meetups were all the rage, and if there is one thing we love more than our map editors meeting online, it’s when they meet in real life. These gatherings produce great ideas, are a chance for the local/regional communities to summarize their objectives, and give the ordinary folk from Waze HQ a chance to meet the extraordinary map editors they work with in person.

2 ‘superuser’ meetups, one in Paris and one in Palo Alto, set the stage for a meetup-filled year, which included gatherings in:

Czech and Slovak: The community there met first in January, and then again in June, when they launched a DIY bumper-sticker guerrilla campaign. At their last meetup in Bratislava, Waze Co-Founders Ehud Shabtai and Amir Shinar paid a visit and were awed by the great level of engagement and involvement they saw.

Hungary: The Hungarian map editing community produced a spirited Waze musical tribute! If that wasn’t impressive enough, the community there also revealed a telemetry car, used to fine-tune map editing while on the road, during a Budapest meetup in June.

Meetups were also held in The Netherlands, Italy, Brazil, and more.

Finding Cheap Gas and Avoiding Toll Roads

After launching our gas station feature in the United States, we gave editors the ability to add gas stations to the map editor worldwide in July. With the ability to add gas stations in their country, map editors could expedite the release of Waze’s cheap fuel locator in their respective countries.

The initial numbers were quite impressive, with editors adding more than 50,000 gas stations on the map in the first month. Today, thanks to the map editing community, the real-time gas price feature is active in more than 20 countries and counting.

Similarily, after adding the ability to add toll roads to the map editor, map editors marked more than 50,000 toll roads worldwide, expediting the release of the the ‘avoid toll roads’ feature in countries such as Australia, Belgium and Canada.

Solving Map Problems at Record Speed

New data revealed in December showed that map editors are resolving map problems at an astounding pace, with nearly 70% of system-detected map problems solved by the map editing community over a 30-day period and nearly all user-reported map problems resolved within one week.

Map Editing Rockstars

In August, we learned who some of our record-holders in map editing were, with the inaugural “Waze World Records.” Revealed were the top 10 Record Holders in Solving System-Generated Map Problems, The Record Holders in Solving User-Reported Map Problems, and the Wazers That Have Logged The Most Map Edits.

Needless to say, it was a whirlwind year. We’re humbled by this community’s achievements and are so thankful we’ve all come this far. Huge thanks to our amazing map editing community for all their hard work and making Waze all that it is. Cheers!

Map Editors and Waze Co-Founders Meet in Bratislava

Thursday, December 6th, 2012

In the era of Skype, Google+ Hangouts and instant communication, its so easy to lose sight of the value of a good-old fashioned ‘meetup.’ But a handful of loyal Wazers reminded us why these gatherings are so important over the weekend in Bratislava.

Organized by Tomas Gursky (aka guri211), country managers and area managers from Hungary, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Romania, and Austria gathered for an afternoon filled with presentations, Q&A, and discussion. The community leaders, including both Tomas and Hungarian Wazer Peter (wroadd), spoke about their respective communities and community-building in general, as well as about features and technical issues.

Tomas also spoke extensively about POI and address search and introduced a set of ideas on how to make POI search easy and intuitive for users.

Traveling from Waze HQ to attend the gathering were Waze Co-Founders Ehud Shabtai and Amir Shinar, as well as Head of Community and Support Chen Barsai and Community Manager Ori Dubnikov.

Ehud and Amir were in awe of the great level of engagement and involvement by the community of Wazers in attendance, and in their respective countries, and were glad to offer their insight on any/all issues the community sought to address.

In addition to improvements to our search mechanism (POI/landmarks), the group also requested improvements to ETA and routing issues, and in developing greater self management in different countries.

The afternoon included a presentation by Chen on Waze’s global map editing community, followed by a talk led by Ori on editor permissions and the future of self-management among map editors.

This followed a Q&A with Ehud, who answered a wide range of questions pertaining to everything from client and editor issues, bugs, feature requests and more.

Check out our full photo gallery of the event.

The full list of Wazers in attendance included: (HUNGARY) wroadd, ZseZo, Kaszast, Mochrul, Szata76, vtibi, Botika; (CZECH REPUBLIC) Zirland, Fotrik, Greby; (SLOVAKIA) guri211, porubcan, M-A-L , Shalafi, Suik,foxitrot, Glipko, grafik, Jozef Drahovsky, MagicOfLA, duky, SonkaW; (AUSTRIA) GPSRitter; and (ROMANIA) Spookyx.

Have you ever attended a meetup? Do you hope to organize or attend one in your region in the future?

First-Ever Waze Telemetry Car Revealed at Budapest Meetup

Saturday, June 16th, 2012

Here at Waze, we’re used to hearing about spectacular innovations by the ingenious minds that use our app around the world. But it’s not often that we get to witness that level of ingenuity. Enter the Hungarian Wazers’ Meetup in May.

The family-friendly event, organized by Wazer Peter Zsak (aka Wroadd),  spotlighted the first-ever Waze telemetry car:

Waze Telemetry Car

Developed by Hungarian power-Wazer Pulsarxp, the car is used for editing purposes. Pulsarxp creates “update requests” and then reviews the drive by comparing the Waze route with the pictures shot while driving.

A detailed editors booklet, created by Hungary Wazer Szikra, was also distributed at the Meetup:

EditingBooklet

The Hungary Waze Meetup began with the country’s locally produced Waze musical anthem. More than 30 Wazers came out for the all-day event featuring lectures, games and competitions and a tablet giveaway by event sponsor Huawei. Waze VP of Operations and Community Fej Shmuelevitz was also in attendance.

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Of course, no Waze Meetup would be complete without some custom schwag.

Hungary Sticker

Hungarian Wazers discussed introducing house numbers, a feature to indicate in-app metro user activity (currently available in the U.S) and more detailed hazard reporting as areas they’d like to see updated in the next app release.

Peter (Wroadd) has seen the Waze Hungary community grow from 6 very enthusiastic users in October 2010 to a thriving community of Wazers and editors today. He and the top Hungarian editors meet once a week, have a large social media following and their own mailing list where projects and ideas are circulated.

The community unites around one goal: to get Waze into every car in Hungary.

Currently, the Hungary community has two upcoming Meetups slated for fall. The first is an event for the geeks which will feature presentations and workshops on editing and more. The second Meetup will be held for the region’s Top Wazers, from Hungary and neighboring countries.

Do you want to see a Waze Meetup held in your area?

DIY Bumper Sticker Campaign Launched at Slovak Meetup

Monday, June 11th, 2012

Bratislava’s power-Wazers joined forces again last week to discuss all things Waze. The group reviewed suggested features and tweaks, errors and bugs, and impressively, a guerrilla campaign to attract more Waze users across their local city.

Waze Sticker Slovak

The DIY campaign is made up of catchy bumper stickers with promotional text in Slovak. The stickers, printed in a2 and a3 formats, were distributed, and pasted, at the Meetup.

Stickers at Meetup Slovak

Paste Sticker Slovak

Organized by Tomas Gursky (aka guri211), the 20 Wazers in attendance toasted to fantastic growth across their region. Since their last Meetup in January, user growth has increased 100%, with 80% growth in Prague alone.

Useful tools created by the Slovak community include their very own Status Page, which Gursky created in April 2012. Additionally, Czech Wazer fotrik and Gursky collaboratively produced a tool that measures user activity and growth in the region.

Gursky, the owner of a VOIP company, is one of the first editors and area managers from Bratislava. Without an RDS-TMC system in place, Wazers in Slovakia have come to rely upon the app for all their traffic needs. As a result, Gursky has stated, the Waze maps are more accurate than any other sources’. This is partly thanks to the work of long-time dedicated editors, such as Wazers foxitrot and shalafi, who were also in attendance at the Meetup.

Discussion points included a desire for better map protection tools after several reports of map vandalism. Additionally, validated house numbers, problems with turn restrictions and the use of better aerials all ranked high on the list of problems Slovak Wazers would like to see improved.

However with such a strong map already in place, the Wazers shifted their attention to one goal by the meeting’s end: gaining more users through the DIY campaign and other means of outreach.

Would you paste a Waze bumper sticker on your car?

maybe i’m just freaking and need to talk to him