Mobile startup Aloqa launched earlier this week at the MobileBeat conference, revealing their innovative interface for location-aware search. Their new application proactively seeks out nearby businesses, services, events, and even Facebook friends and presents them to you in a colorful yet streamlined interface. The app essentially lists everything that's nearby - with no need for you to perform map-based searches or launch a browser. Instead, all you have to do is look at your phone.
The concept behind Aloqa's app offers a unique vision for mobile search that's quite different from how most people use their phones today. Currently, if you're looking for nearby restaurants, for example, you would first launch a mobile mapping application like Google Maps, let it locate you, and then perform a search for "restaurants." Once the results loaded, you could tap on the various pushpins to see the info about restaurants nearby, including names, phone numbers, and addresses.
In Aloqa, however, that same search would be much simpler. In fact, it wouldn't be a search at all. Instead, you would just tap on the icon for restaurants and immediately see a list of those nearby. When you see the one you want (oh look, there's sushi!), a second tap will display a window where you can choose to go to the business's web site, display the location on a map, call the business, or send the info to a friend.
This same sort of functionality can be used for anything from restaurants to retail stores to gas stations and ATMs. It can also help you find events that may spark your interest, like a nearby concert for instance.
One of the even more interesting functions in Aloqa is its ability to find your nearby Facebook friends. Instead of building an entirely separate mobile social network like mobile social networks Loopt and Brightkite have done, Aloqa lets you invite your Facebook friends to share their location with you on the "Aloqa Buzz" channel. Then, when you and your friends are in proximity to each other, you'll be able to chat with each other via the mobile application. Although this still isn't the ideal solution for making Facebook a true mobile social network (nothing short of a location-aware mobile Facebook app would really do that), it comes very close. All you have to do is convince your friends to accept the invite.
In addition to proactively monitoring your location, Aloqa can also send out "push notifications" based on your own preferences for the types of alerts and levels of intrusiveness you want. For example, you can choose to receive a text-based alert when you walk past a nearby store offering a mobile coupon or you could receive a phone call when an important event occurs - like when your child leaves a pre-configured safety zone.
Surprisingly, Aloqa doesn't exclusively use GPS technology to deliver its location-aware information. If your phone doesn't have a GPS chip, then Aloqa will use cell towers or Wi-Fi to determine your relative position. Not only is this data "accurate enough," explains Aloqa CEO (and ex-Googler) Sanjeev Agrawal in an interview with VentureBeat, it's less of a drain on battery life, too.
Currently Aloqa is available only on the Android platform in beta form. Over the coming weeks, the app will be made available for other phones, too. Stay tuned to this company's news - this is one app you're going to want to try.
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I'm excited to see the interesting apps coming out on Android. I think that will be the platform of choice going forward. Too bad I have 17 months left on my contract that I signed when I got my iPhone 3G.
Google provides a free app for Android called Places Directory that works like this, in the sense that you simply pick a category and it shows you the closest places nearby, how far they are, and even points the direction to walk. It also pulls in reviews from a few sources (I'm seeing citysearch and timeout below the sample location I just tried. The facebook integration doesn't exist, but the "push" search does.
I might buy these people!
@Kevin: I think the Facebook search is the killer feature. Have you tried both? Which UI do you prefer?
@Kevin: Facebook worked for me in a great way. I connected the client via http://buzz.aloqa.com, invited some friends and quite immediately my phone showed me one of my friend being in proximity. So this was really pushed to my phone.
Also I tried Google Places Directory before, but I have to wait some seconds after I selected a category to get results. On Aloqa instead I see the results immediately. So the have to do some push in the background. Plus I like their dynamic content (concerts, nightlife, etc.)
So the facebook thing totally got me, the only problem is, that it is only available on Android. I hope they will support other phones soon.
OOOh! I can't wait for this! I find google maps a bit too tedious. How about submitting this useful app to http://appuseful.com ?
Cheers!
love the pragmatic approach of leveraging existing popular social network instead of trying to create a new one (which eventually will fizzle off)... It'll be notable to see what happens when facebook themselves come up with a similar offering. As of search, definitely a better experience.
Thanks for the pointer to Useful Apps and all the other comments - one other big difference Id like to highlight is that unlike all "pull" applications we don't require users to express intent and search the way they do on PCs. We show them in real time a cross-section of useful information that might add value to their life on the go, instead of waiting for them to search. The phone is an interrupt based device, (e.g. when a phone call comes in) and we silently push useful info without the user having to treat their phone as a "lean forward" device like a PC.
Sanjeev (CEO, Aloqa)
beat making software
Cheap sofa