Posts Tagged ‘social GPS’

Which Wazers Have Logged The Most Map Edits?

Thursday, August 9th, 2012

Map editing can be a very complex, and time-consuming, business.

In our Waze World Records series, we’re taking a look at the record-holders in all aspects of map-editing. The 15 Wazers above are the map editors that have logged the most all-time map edits in our map editor. (For a brief video tutorial on how to use our map editor, scroll to the bottom).

It’s been more than 3 years since our first map editor was launched, and we’re constantly in awe of how crowdsourcing has led us to have some of the world’s most accurate driving maps in the places where our community is strongest. It’s in these places where our maps also reflect the fastest road changes.

There are many countries not yet represented here, so stay tuned as we keep spotlighting the efforts of our global map editing community in the weeks to come.

Our mapping community has dedicated countless hours to improving all aspects of our maps, from resolving errors, to adding roads, to updating turn restrictions – and more! Our top map editors around the world are the leaders in their respective countries and are the driving force behind Waze’s success.

Get to know our top 3 mapping medalists in this category below.

The Record Holder

Dave (aka Mapcat) is the current record holder in all-time map edits, with well over a million edits under his belt. Dave, a university geographer from Ohio, has been map editing since December 2010. He’s both an area manager and a country manger and prefers to do most of his editing from the comforts of his home.

On Why He Started Editing:
“The maps were horrible! I tried using it to get to a store and it told me I could get on the freeway where there was a bridge. Some of the directions were okay, but most of the route was ridiculous. So when I got home and got ready to delete the app, I searched to see if anyone else was complaining about it…and then I found the forum. It didn’t take long to discover that the only maps that worked were the ones that users had fixed themselves, so I decided to stick around long enough to see if I could do that in my area. I made some basic changes and a few days later the maps updated, and it actually was better. Not perfect, but there was an improvement. I played with it some more, and got some great advice from other editors, and pretty soon I was hooked. And getting good directions!”

The Runner Up

Argus (aka argus-cronos) works for the Swiss Federal Railways in Basel, Switzerland and is in second place for all-time map edits, with more than 730,000 edits. A country manager, Argus started working on the Waze maps in April 2010, after a poor experience with the Waze maps in his area. Argus does most of his editing from home, or occasionally on his Galaxay Tablet.

On Why He Started Editing:
“First, I wanted a well-functioning navigation app in my hometown and as time went by, it became more fun to build the maps in Waze’s map editor and see the results of my work on the client.”

The Third Place Record Holder

Rob (aka banished) works in Information Systems/Security specialist from Northwest Florida. A country manager, Rob began editing in September 2009. His favorite part of editing? Working through a complex number of user reports.

On Why He Started Editing:
“I was driven by frustration with the snail’s pace of map updates from the larger manufacturers. That, and as a kid from the Northeast who hated shoveling snow, I studied road maps avidly.  Places like Panama City, Florida, sounded exotic.”

Feeling inspired? Get a quick overview on how to map edit below.

Nearly 10,000 Gas Stations Added Within Days (and counting) . . .

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

The momentum is rising! More than 1,300 gas stations have been added to our maps in the last 24 hours, bringing the total number of user-generated gas stations to nearly 10,000. The number of gas stations added has actually more-than-doubled since we released our stats last week.

Adding gas stations in our map editor has gotten even easier, with the availability of gas station brands in several countries added to the editor yesterday.

The more gas stations editors add, the faster the feature will be made available in each country. So keep adding gas stations, and if you have brand lists or other relevant data – send them on over!

Check out some impressive user stats below:
 
Top Countries + Number of Gas Stations Added

Italy – 1,449

Germany – 503

Sweden – 465

France – 429

United Kingdom – 401
 

Top Users + Number of Gas Stations Added

Italy

linus71 – 212

zabb – 109

asterix06 – 66
 

Germany

Error79 – 34

trunkenbold – 32

drazhar – 21
 

Sweden

pnylin - 195

ulfhe – 35

MartinMossfeldt – 30
 

France

mgcarre – 30

Coilans – 22

NitroFuel – 21
 

United Kingdom

ditchi56 – 27

CTCNetwork – 20

Dave2084 – 20
 

Top 5 Gas Station Contributors

Borden_y (China)  – 238

linus71 (Italy)  – 212

pnylin (Sweden) – 195

zabb (Italy)  – 109

asterix06 (Italy) – 66

New Version Featuring Exclusive Moods For Top Scoring Wazers

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

This new version consists mostly of  bug fixes and clean ups, but  for those of us who work hard to make it to the top weekly charts in our state there’s a cool new feature – Exclusive moods, available just to us!  Exclusive moods are Gold, Silver and Bronze wazers that are open only to users that scored the highest on the weekly chart the previous week.   If you were a high scorer, you’ll be driving around with this mood for an entire week.

Welcome on board French wazers!

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Sunday morning, everybody’s napping and newly joined French wazers are cruising, checking out waze.

Driving community in Israel, on top of every incident

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

bikers

Yesterday, bikers in Israel organized a strike to protest increased insurance rates on their population by clogging some of the countries main transportation arteries. Thanks to waze, the driving community was all over it, and navigation was routed around the problem areas. In fact, we saw this tweet from a user on Twitter who managed to circumvent the protests, getting to work in record time… :)
tweet

Italy diggs waze. Here’s the map, a few days post-launch – WOW!

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Waze reached nearly  10,000 downloads on its first day in the Italian Appstore.

  • Road recording and community activity is in full speed. This is very exciting to us, and to think that there’s not even a base map yet! Oh…. and there seems to be lots of chit chat :) .   This is also an opportunity to apologize for the tech difficulties we’ve been having over the past week. We’re working tirelessly to fix them.

Italy

  • The community prepared videos on how to edit the map and is very active in the forum.

International users FYI – we are working on a platform that will allow you to translate waze into any language, except the UI and the Voice prompts. We’ll get it out there as quickly as possible. Upcoming version will have Spanish in it, the following will be open

to any language that the community has translated. If all goes well  :)

Screen shot 2009-11-15 at 11.47.07 AM

Screen shot 2009-11-15 at 12.00.15 PM


Waze In Netherlands, two days after launch – GO GO Netherlands!

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

The waze Netherlands community is building very quickly! This is the map and community two days after launch.

Screen shot 2009-11-11 at 6.42.53 PM

Waze now available internationally – put your country on the map!

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

worlds

In our humble attempt to take over the world one traffic lane at a time, waze is proud to announce today that we’ve gone global! Wazers from all around the world are now able to use our platform to build crowdsourced maps, 100% from scratch. In fact, in certain countries with no base map, users will literally be building maps from scratch – paving the roads entirely themselves, as they drive…

Already, driving communities have organically formed in over 20 countries around the globe, including Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Singapore, Thailand, Kazakhstan, and Trinidad Tobago – and people have even begun map editing their regions online at world.waze.com.

The funny part is that even before we opened up the platform for international use, we’d see wazers in clusters on the map in areas with no waze support, self-organizing to  check out what we have to offer. In fact, in Singapore, the highway grid was mapped in just a few days by a handful of active users! We thought it was a pretty amazing thing to see, so we decided to formally open waze to users, worldwide, so everyone can enjoy crowdsourced maps and, eventually, free navigation, turn-by-turn directions +  an improved daily commute.

Help us spread the word to your friends in far away places – the more wazers on the road, the more everyone benefits!