Posts Tagged ‘waze world records’

The Record Holders in Solving System-Generated Map Problems

Tuesday, August 28th, 2012

To improve and keep our maps up to date, automated processes are in place analyzing user drives and detecting potential map problems. Finding these map problems is important because they can often affect the route quality for hundreds of drivers. While some of the map problems are automatically fixed, others require human intervention. This is where the map editing community come in.

In this Waze World Records post, we are taking a look at the Waze map editors to close out the most system-generated problems.

Get to know a little bit more about our top 3 mappers in this category below.

The Winner

Mark (aka HavanaDay) is an accountant from Charlotte, North Carolina with a true love for problem-solving. He also happens to be a record holder in a previous category. Learn more about Mark here.

The Runner Up

Anthony (aka anthyz) is a software engineer from San Diego that been map editing with Waze since August 2010. His motivations for mapping come from, “seeing improved directions, especially when the directions can be changed to look and sound more natural and better align with what a driver is actually seeing.” Anthony, a Country Manager, does most of his editing from home. In the future, he’d like Waze to continue improving “the community aspects” of its product.

On Why He Started Editing:

“The very first time I tried Waze, the directions included a road segment that was long gone.  I attempted to delete the road and others in Cartouche but quickly found that I would need to become an Area Manager if I wanted to make a serious attempt to improve the map.  There were very few active Area Managers in San Diego at the time and none covering the area where I lived.  Over time as I edited more and more, I increased the size of the area I managed.  There were lots and lots of map problems, and I began to really enjoy spending time solving them which in some ways is like solving puzzles.”

The Third Place Winner

Jeff (aka jhfrontz) has swiftly risen up the ranks, joining Waze’s map editing community in December 2011. Jeff, a software engineer from Ohio, is motivated to map for three reasons – his  desire to learn about new areas, the satisfaction of helping others and the challenge of solving a “real-life multidimensional” puzzle. Jeff is an Area Manager of Ohio, several islands in the US and British Virgin Islands, and the East Bay (San Francisco, California area). Most of his editing is done at home on the couch while watching re-runs of old TV shows.

On Why He Started Editing:

“I started editing because I wanted the roads around my neighborhood to be correct (we live on a complicated street with tricky terrain that has caused difficulty for every mapping/GIS device, site, and app). We routinely have first-time visitors tell us that their GPS told them to drive off of a bridge and to take the wrong way down our one-way street. The unusual terrain gives the mistaken impression that roads at different grades actually intersect.”

What motivates you to map?

The Record Holders in Solving User-Reported Map Problems

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Luckily for us, our users love reporting problems. Missing turns, new roads, incorrect junctions — our maps keep improving because our community of drivers report these map issues in the app as they see them.

But reporting the issue is only half the challenge. On the mapping side, our community of map editors are working steadily to resolve these user-reported problems with speed and accuracy.

In this edition of the Waze World Records, we’re taking a look at the 10 map editors that hold the records in solving the most user-reported map problems.

Read more about the top 3 editors in this category below.
 
The Record Holder

Our current undisputed record holder, Dave (aka mapcat) has solved more than 30,000 user-reported issues in our map editor. He also happens to be our record holder for all-time map edits. Learn more about Dave in our previous post here.
 
The Runner Up

Our number 2 in this category, Mark (aka HavanaDay), has been a Waze map editor since September 2010.

An accountant living in the Charlotte, North Carolina region, Mark is an area manager. He was drawn to editing from his of love problem solving. For Mark, solving user-reported problems (or ‘update requests’) is akin to giving “a virtual pat on the back” to the millions of users doing their part.

On Why He Started Editing:

“Always loved GPS technology. Garmin/Navteq got very frustrating when you drove mainly the same routes on a consistent basis and the same errors are there. With Waze I am able to change that aspect of it in a timely manner. I also love solving problems. I think a good editor is a problem solver.”
 

The Third Place Winner
Andreas West (aka a4xrbj1), comes in third – but only by a little over a hundred errors! The Kuala Lumpur native began editing in August, 2010. West, a Senior VP at a telecom provider, is a country manager that does his editing from home. He’s rallied the Malaysia community of mappers, opening a special Facebook page in order to expedite editing tasks such as unlocking roads.

On Why He Started Editing:
“Couldn’t find my street at all in Kuala Lumpur, not even my district. I didn’t really understand the concept of Waze back then, and like so many others, was wondering why the map wasn’t complete. Then I started reading more about it and figured out it was up to guys like me to build the map. It actually turned out to be relaxing for my stressful day-to-day job, since then I edit to calm down.”



Want to try your hand at map-editing? Get started after watching this clip:

Introducing the Waze World Records

Monday, July 30th, 2012

Olympics-fever has swept over Waze HQ! And without a pass to this year’s games, we’ve decided to reveal our very own international mapping medalists.

As briefly mentioned last week, we’re going to be releasing the names of our all-star mappers in a series of blog posts that will acquaint you with our top mappers.

These dedicated map-editors hold the records in:

  • Solving system-generated map problems
  • Solving user-reported map problems
  • Adding house numbers
  • Adding roads

Can you guess who will top each category? Are there any other record-breaking categories you’d like to see?

Update: We’ll also be revealing the editors that have made the most all-time map edits as well!