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Posted

Tue Mar 13 2012, 1:13pm

By loqi

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Geoloqi adds Appcelerator, Factual and Locaid partnerships, covered by TIME, Wired, CNet and VentureBeat and more at SXSW

We are pleased to share the news resulting from Amber Case’s keynote yesterday at SXSW Interactive. At the event, she shared that Geoloqi has established three key partnerships with Appcelerator, Factual and LocAid. These three partners help extend the Geoloqi platform into the hands of 1.6 million mobile app developers, to over 350 million phones, with a database including more than 60 million places of interest. The audience filled the room to capacity with 3,200 people and another 1,000 in overflow rooms with a livestream link.

Amber Case speaks to a packed ballroom at SXSW 2012 - Photo by Sheryl Maloney

Press

We’re excited to share some of the great coverage we’ve been getting so far!

SXSW: Why Geo-Fencing Might Change Your Life (and Make You Believe in Location Sharing) “Imagine a world in which location-based applications were used less to merely identify location than to dynamically coordinate one’s personal data and agenda, making the accessing of information easier and more efficient.” – Time

Smartphone Battery Dead Again? Geoloqi Locates a Possible Solution “It’s notoriously annoying to handle all of this as a developer,” independent mobile security researcher Ashkan Soltani told Wired. “Geoloqi wraps everything together for third-party developers in a streamlined package, while also adding analytics services to sweeten the deal.” – Wired

How cutting edge geolocation can change everything This afternoon at the South by Southwest festival here, Geoloqi founder and CEO Amber Case gave a keynote talking about the state of the art in geolocation, and how new tools like those from her company and others are changing the world. – CNet

Geoloqi, Solver of the Great Location Problem, Partners Up Portland startup Geoloqi has been heralded as the one company to have finally cracked the code. It’s no accident. “We didn’t want to work on problems everyone is working on,” co-founder Amber Case told me. “We want to solve the hard ones.” – PandoDaily

Geoloqi adds 3 partnerships, extends reach to 1.6M devs The tools Geoloqi offers can be used to develop with any carrier and on any smartphone. These include geofencing, which allows an application to monitor a specified area and provide interactions to users based on whether they’re in that zone, “battery-safe trigger zones,” which tells an app to reduce its GPS monitoring based on whether a user is near a geofence, and “location-based messaging” which pings a user with information relevant to where they are. – VentureBeat

SXSW 2012 Apps Buzz Is Location, Location, Location Geoloqi makes a host of different location notifications that could have myriad consequences for consumers and businesses. Users can ask for notification reminders (“Don’t forget the tomato sauce!”) when arriving at a destination. – Huffington Post

Geoloqi Extends Platform with Appcelerator, Factual and Locaid Partnerships Geoloqi, a powerful platform for next-generation location based services, today announced strategic new partnerships with Appcelerator, a leading cross-platform mobile development platform; Factual, a large-scale data aggregation platform with a Global Places API; and Locaid, the world’s largest carrier location platform. – Directions Magazine

Ambient Location and the Future of the Interface Case is interested in the next generation of location, one that is ambient because it sits in the background and solves problems. Hence she has developed a platform called Geoloqi, a private location-sharing app to help address her frustrations. At SXSW she announced new partnerships with appcelerator, factual and Locaid to move Geoloqi to the next level. – Porter Novelli Blog

“Cyborg Anthropologist” (and CEO of Geoloqi) Amber Case at SXSWi 2012! When asked how GPS-based apps can change the world, Case answered, “Once you break down the barriers of space, then you start getting superpowers, this omniscient idea of where people are.” – What’s Trending

Location, location, location at SXSWi Geoloqi also found a way to keep battery usage down, a plague on location-services that are always monitoring where in the world you are. – NOW Toronto

Video

We don’t yet have a video link to the keynote from SXSW, but you can see Amber in action on an episode of Qualcomm Spark.

Posted

Sat Mar 5 2011, 1:13pm

By loqi

Categories

Press

Guest Post – Geoloqi and the Future of Location by Thomas Wendt

Today’s guest post is by Thomas Wendt, a Social Engagement Specialist in Minneapolis. Thomas is interested digital technology and its effect on the human condition, and explores theories of the technological “beyond,” imagining what humanity will look like when machines are as intelligent (or more so) than us.


I’ve been geeking a little bit lately about Geoloqi, a location-based application that enables users to send location information to others and leave geonotes based on GPS coordinates. Developed by Amber Case, UX Designer and Cyborg Anthropoligist, you can definitely see the efforts made to make the app user-friendly and simple. I see lots of potential here.

As much as we live in digital spaces and rely on our digital identities, the fact remains that physical space is still a huge part of everyday life. This might change some day, but for now we are based in physical reality and in some ways constrained by it. Geoloqi taps into a desire to assert some kind of control over the physical, or at least to know more about it.

Enter Geoloqi. I see this app as essentially a convenience tool that revolves around utility. Sure, the technology is striking, the idea behind it is impressive, and the interface is pretty, but at heart the application plays to our sense of practicality and ease. I recently co-presented on social innovation at the agency I work for, and we all agreed that location applications are experiencing some early adopter burnout. I think users are looking for this utility that Geoloqi offers, which made it our primary example of practical location services.


This is my route from work to home. I sent my location as an SMS message to my boss saying that I will be back online when I get home. Through a temorary link, he was able to follow my location in real time.

Okay, I did this for the geek factor. But think about when you’re on your way to for a time-sensitive meeting and get caught in unexpected traffic. Send your location via SMS, email, Twitter, etc. to the person you are meeting and they will have a real time sense of your arrival.

And how about delivery services? Bike messengers, courriers, and even pizza delivery people can use this app to allow customers to track progress for time-sensitive deliveries (and what could be more time-sensitive than pizza?).

Have you ever been out with a friends who has had one too many nips off the bottle and needs to get home by walking through that sketchy neighborhood? Have them send their location (or do it for them if you’re more coordinated at that point) and make sure they get back safely.

Geonotes are the other great feature. A geonote is pretty much exactly what it sounds like: a virtual note left based on geographical coordinates. Select the location of your office and leave a geonote containing a quick morning to-do list. When you arrive, you’ll receive a push notification with that note.

The big example that Geoloqi likes to use is a shopping list. It works the same way: tag your grocery store with a list and have it delivered upon arrival.

Used in conjunction augmented reality, I think this technology can add tons of value to urban street games. Geonotes could function as clues while location tracking can add new variables to competition and timing.

Some new features coming soon include better integration into Twitter feeds and automatic check-in options. I would also like to see some more battery-saving options. This is the big drawback with these types of apps; either a user sacrifices battery life or they have to constantly turn GPS tracking on and off. It prevents one from using the app for extended periods of time or without constant manual updates. Nonetheless, this is not a fault of this app in particular but rather GPS in general.

Send me a geonote here.

Check out Amber Case’s TED talk.


You can read the original post on Thomas’ blog, Surrounding Signifiers.