Ten years later,the eroticism of saulius ke Foursquare is still making a case for location-sharing tech.
The company known for popularizing the digital check-in at SXSW a decade ago now is showing off a new, experimental feature that takes advantage of all of the company's location data. It's called Hypertrending, and it's launching now in Foursquare's apps for SXSW attendees in Austin (you have to shake your phone to access the feature).
Hypertrending is essentially a real-time heat map that lets you see where people are at any given moment. It's all anonymized, so you can't see the location of any one individual, but the idea is to give users a window into where the masses are -- something that could be useful for the thousands of people who descend on Austin for SXSW.
"Hypertrending is a top-down view of all the places and phones that Foursquare knows about in Austin," Foursquare founder and former CEO Dennis Crowley writes in a blog post.
"The 'Map' view gives you a real-time look at how people are spread throughout the city – each dot represents a different place, the size of each dot corresponds to the number of people at each place, and each color represents a different type of place. If you see it on the map, you’re seeing it live."
All this location data in't just based off Foursquare's own apps, by the way. It also pulls data from third-party apps that use its platform (it allows apps like TouchTunes to use its location data), although Foursquare isn't disclosing which apps are part of Hypertrending. Data from these apps enables Foursquare to get an up-to-the-minute read on where people are at any given time, Crowley says.
If you think the idea of real-time location sharing is, well, kind of creepy, you're not alone. Crowley says the company is well aware that Hypertrending is "provocative." He notes that potentially "sensitive" locations, like residences, are excluded from Hypertrending.
"We’re aware that Hypertrending walks a fine line between being 'creepy' and 'cool,'" he writes. "That’s why we decided to make the Hypertrending demo available only in Austin, only during SXSW, and we currently have no plans to launch it to a larger audience after SXSW."
Instead, he says the company is showing off Hypertrending now in order to show what might be possible in the future. "Our hope is that the demo piques the interest of developers and entrepreneurs and inspires them to build things we can’t even imagine using our tools, technology, and data platform."
Topics SXSW
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
MapQuest is letting you name the Gulf of Mexico whatever you want
'Silicon Valley' reaches the beginning of the end in Season 6: Review
Police are mad about a 'Grand Theft Auto' mod and all the internet can do is LOL
2020 candidates finally talk criminal justice reform at two forums. But will anything change?
Anker raises Amazon prices amid US tariffs
Apple responds to people's tweets with entire commercials
Google has a 'new' way to create calendar events
Google has a 'new' way to create calendar events
SpaceX's Starlink satellite launch in pictures
The Popeyes chicken sandwich is coming back and it's bringing lots of Chick
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 17, 2025
Trump thinks something terrible happened in Sweden, so here come the IKEA and ABBA jokes
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。