I was in New York City on Tuesday and there were maybe 900 or so around 4pm...I would figure that number should be higher?
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That may be true to a certain extent (especially Manhattan), but it is so densely populated the number should really be higher. I would think 8 million people within the 5 boroughs & 22 million in the metro area would yield more than 900 Wazers? Not sure, however, whether they have some kind of radius count or if it's a cumulative number for an entire metro area?jenncard wrote:I thought new yorkers don't drive...?
I actually caught 1325 around 5:15pm that same night. The Friday prior I think I caught 1380 or so? That's a huge bump from 6 months ago!tibble wrote:I saw ~1250 on Friday around 530 in Philly.
Wow, nice! I have yet to see 1400 crossed.tibble wrote:Right now in Philly
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How about over 2000 this past Friday evening at 5:30pm? First 2000+ i've ever seen & based on the amount of newbies on the roads, the iOS6 issue definitely played a part.tibble wrote:Saw 1725 at 5pm in Philly today. A bump from mapgate already?MReiser4670 wrote:Wow, nice! I have yet to see 1400 crossed.tibble wrote:Right now in Philly
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Six months ago, Philadelphia was showing 700 on a good day. It's a combination of natural growth, the Apple maps issue, and the top-rated local ABC affliliate using it for traffic reporting. When I'm driving around now, probably 20%+ of the users having a group shield is showing their logo.Jpere wrote:I wish we had nearly as many here in Miami. On a good day well be in the 700s. It'd be amazing to have 2000+. I wonder if I'll ever see the day.
Over this past week I've been seeing 4000-5000 in Philadelphia and 9000-10,000 when I cross the bridge into New Jersey. Not sure why they're separate, but I suppose there's a reason. Either way, these numbers are basically double what they were less than a month ago, and 4x what we were seeing 9 months back.CBenson wrote:The last couple of days I've received some anomalously high numbers on the order of 17000 in the Baltimore, Washington area.
This is actually why I questioned it...I guess it's splitting hairs, but it's the "Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area" which includes 5 counties in New Jersey. I just find it odd that the "Philadelphia" & "Wilmington" areas are combined on Waze while the "Camden" area is separate AND gives numbers 2-3x that across the river. The 5 counties that make up the NJ portion of the MSA don't even equal the population of Philadelphia County. Is it possible that all of NJ is combined together? I get similar numbers when I cross into Mercer County in both the Trenton & Princeton areas.WeeeZer14 wrote:NJ is split amongst a few US Census Bureau Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) and that is what the Waze areas are based off of. (Or was it is the Combined Statistical Areas, CSAs? Same impact either way.)MReiser4670 wrote:Over this past week I've been seeing 4000-5000 in Philadelphia and 9000-10,000 when I cross the bridge into New Jersey. Not sure why they're separate, but I suppose there's a reason. Either way, these numbers are basically double what they were less than a month ago, and 4x what we were seeing 9 months back.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Me ... ical_Areas
Exactly...and I notice the higher numbers are similar regardless of whether I'm crossing into NJ around Trenton or if I'm farther south in the Burlington/Camden/ Gloucester County areas. I'm currently sitting less than 1000 feet from the Delaware River, so I cross the river in both areas at least weekly.CBenson wrote:But you shouldn't be leaving the Philadelphia–Camden–Wilmington MSA (or the Philadelphia-Reading-Camden CSA) unless you're crossing the bridge at Trenton. I suspect they're using the CSAs as 1) the numbers would be bigger (look better for marketing) and 2) I commute from the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson MSA to the Washington-Arlington-Alexandria MSA (while staying in the Washington-Baltimore-Arlington CSA) without typically seeing any changes in the numbers.WeeeZer14 wrote:NJ is split amongst a few US Census Bureau Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) and that is what the Waze areas are based off of. (Or was it is the Combined Statistical Areas, CSAs? Same impact either way.)MReiser4670 wrote:Over this past week I've been seeing 4000-5000 in Philadelphia and 9000-10,000 when I cross the bridge into New Jersey. Not sure why they're separate, but I suppose there's a reason. Either way, these numbers are basically double what they were less than a month ago, and 4x what we were seeing 9 months back.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Me ... ical_Areas
Re: Number of local Wazers at rush hour