Where 2.0 2011 – Day One

Where-logo.jpgI’ve attended a few sessions so far at Where 2.0 today, with more to come. I’ll keep this posted updated throughout the day.

While most of the information today is focused more on location-based services like Foursquare, there is certainly some interesting stuff being shared.

The first session was “Mining the Geo Needles in the Social Haystack” by Matthew Russell

He showed off some interesting tools, such as the ability to turn a list of locations (like this one) through the tool at microform.at to generate a KML file like this one. Very slick.

He then covered ways to use mine geo data from various services such as Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook. As an example, you can see how oAuth works with Facebook on this sample page.

Finally, he showed some ways to extract location data from natural language for cases where geo-coded data isn’t available. Considering this is the vast majority of data out there (text on websites, text messages, etc), it’s a valuable tool to develop. For some tools that work on that, check out www.datasciencetoolkit.org.

Next I checked out “Why Data Collection Must Extend Beyond the Check-in“, presented by Scott Hotes and Mohit Gupta from Location Labs.

They worked on showing a detailed breakdown of what “check-in” really is, covered the growing issue of fragmented place databases and how they all differ, and some ways to track phones (with consent) in various scenarios such as check-ins, parent/child tracking, etc.

Next was “Hands on Map Scripting” by Adam DuVander (@adamd) of ProgrammableWeb.

He spoke a bit about the new changes we’ve seen over the last few years in regards to mapping APIs (more mobile, etc), but spent most of the time walking us through Mapstraction. Mapstraction is a very cool way to write code for a single map that will work acorss a variety of mapping APIs (Google, Bing, etc). If you write any mapping code for a site, it’s something you need to check out.

Next was “Getting Started with Google Maps and Fusion Tables” by Kathryn Hurley and Mano Marks. After Mano gave us an overview of Fusion Tables, then Kathryn walked us through creating a basic Fusion Table ourselves. Even better, they’ve provided the full tutorial if you’d like to walk through it yourself! There’s quite a lot of power in this feature, and the tutorial is a great way to get started.

Later this evening I’ll check out the various “Ignite” sessions, where many groups will be quickly showing off their ideas.

Google News for Opera Mini

While the Google News team has been hard at work redesigning our service for smartphones, we’ve also been thinking about our milllions of users around the world who access the web not from a smartphone, but from a feature phone, using Opera Mini as their browser.

So we have rolled out a redesigned Google News for Opera Mini in all 29 languages and 70 editions of Google News. This includes an enhanced homepage featuring richer snippets, thumbnail images, links to videos and section content without explicit navigation, a convenient search bar, comfortably spaced links and the ability to access your desktop personalization on your phone.

We hope that this will improve the news browsing experience for Opera Mini users around the world, including millions of people using a feature phone as the primary point of access for the web. See it here in the Indian Hindi and Nigerian English versions.

So, pick up your feature phone and point your Opera Mini browser to http://news.google.comto catch up on news anytime and anywhere. For more information or to share your feedback with us, please visit our Help Center.

Android Developer Challenge, Sub-Saharan Africa!

In the past year alone, we have met with over 10,000 developers and techies across Sub Saharan Africa. We are continually impressed by the ingenuity and enthusiasm of this community in solving real problems with technology. From applications that crowd-source traffic info to mobile registration of local businesses, handheld devices have taken center stage for consumers and developers in Africa. With a number of countries in the region hovering around 80-90% mobile penetration, mobile is the screen size for the web and the communication experience.

Correspondingly, at every Google event in Africa, Android is the hottest topic; we know why. Every day over 300,000 Android devices are activated globally! A growing number of these mobile devices are powering on for the first time in emerging markets like those in Africa. As Android users multiply, so does the appeal to for developers of building apps on this free open-source platform.

An increasing number of users are searching for ‘Android’ on Google in Sub-Saharan Africa

For all these reasons and more, we are proud to be launching the Android Developer Challenge for Sub-Saharan Africa!

The Android Developer Challenge is designed to encourage the creation of cool and innovative Android mobile apps built by developers in Sub-Saharan Africa. Invent apps that delight users and you stand a chance to win an Android phone and $25,000 USD. To get started, choose from one of three defined eligible categories (see below), build an Android app in a team or by yourself, and submit it via the competition website by July 1st. The winning app will be announced on September 12th at G-Kenya. Get more details as well as Terms and Conditions on our site.

Categories for Entry:

  • Entertainment / Media / Games
  • Social Networking / Communication
  • Productivity / Tools / Lifestyle

(See Terms & Conditions for more details!)

To launch this competition, we have teamed up with Google Technology User Groups (GTUGs) across Africa to host Android Developer Challenge events. Check out our website for Android gatherings near you, and get coding!