Ambient Proximity Is The Next Phase Of Location Sharing
It’s
not where your friends are, but how close they are that matters. After
years of exact coordinate check ins, both Foursquare and Facebook are now
focusing on ambient proximity — constantly and automatically sharing
your approximate distance from close friends. Ambient proximity lets you
know if a friend is near enough to meet up with, yet without the
creepiness of seeing their every move on a map. That balance could
finally make location sharing appealing to the masses.
Four square’s new ambient proximity app Swarm was announced today
and will become available in the coming weeks. It creates a feed of
your best friends lumped into groups based on how far away they are,
like around 500 feet or about a mile.
Facebook Nearby Friends launched earlier this month and is rolling out to iOS and Android users in the U.S. Inside Facebook’s main app, the Nearby Friends feed
shows the vague distance of any friends who’ve opted in, such as 1/2 a
mile or 1 mile. If you want, you can send them your ongoing, real-time,
exact location for a few hours. Suddenly, after years of stagnation,
there are new ways to get together offline.
Check-ins and exact ambient location sharing certainly never caught on
with the general public. The space is a graveyard, with apps like Loopt
and Glancee being acquired, while Sonar, Banjo, Highlight, and even
Google’s Latitude have failed to gain major traction. [Disclosure: I
advise a stealth location-sharing app.]
Facebook launched Places for checkins, but location-tagged photos and
status updates have proven more popular. And while Foursquare has been
at the center of the location app sphere, it only had 45 million
registered users as of December. Plus, many of those use Foursquare
primarily for Yelp-style discovery of local places rather than sharing
where they are.
The issue is that exact location is only really useful when you want
to rendezvous with someone. Most of the time, either you or your friend
is busy and you can’t have spontaneous meetup, Knowing precisly where
they are feels a bit like spying.
If you are available, it’s hard to tell whether your friend actually
wants you come join them just from their checkin or moving map beacon.
See they’re down the street or checked in at the local coffee house?
They could be on a date, in a meeting, hard at work, or just trying to
get some alone time. Dropping in can lead to awkward situations. You’re
best off contacting them first to make sure. And by then, knowing their
exact location ahead of time isn’t helpful because you could have just
asked them.
Ambient
proximity solves many of these problems. Knowing someone’s current
neighborhood or approximate distance from you indicates if they’re close
enough to make joining forces convenient. Then you can just ping them
with SMS, a messenger app, or directly through the app (in the case of
Facebook Nearby Friends) to ask specifically where they are and if
they’d like to get together. You can’t surprise them by showing up
unannounced.
Most imporantly, since ambient proximity feels less creepy, more
people are likely to opt in to sharing it. These apps thrive on network
effects. They get much better when a critical mass of your friends use
them instead of just your most privacy-progressive, early-adopter
buddies. Swarm and Nearby Friends could make it simple to join friends
in the park, see who else is at a concert, find people to grab dinner
with, or gather after the bars close.
There will still be two major hurdles to adoption. Most
quantitatively, Swarm is a standalone app that will start with zero
users, and Nearby Friends is buried deeply in Facebook’s main apps.
Foursquare and Facebook will have to find ways to promote them without
seeming pushy. On the more fuzzy side, these companies will have to
convince users this isn’t the Big Brother-ques, invasive,
always-on exact location sharing of yore. And it isn’t the cumbersome check-ins process either.
Perhaps one day our perception of privacy will evolve to make
Latitude-style, non-stop broadcasting of our exact locations feel
natural.
That could take a while if it ever happens, though. Ambient
proximity gets the job done in a way that feels safe. After a decade of
social apps suckering us into staring at screens all day, getting out on
the town thanks to ambient proximity could be a literal breath of fresh
air.
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