Yahoo! today released a developer preview of its Yahoo! Internet Location Platform, a collection of in-depth geo-location based APIs. We expect to see location be more smartly used in many applications around the web thanks to this platform.
The gist of what's being enabled is this: applications can provide the name of one location and then the Yahoo! APIs will report neighboring and "parent" locations. Flickr developer and map lover Dan Catt articulates the potential power of the API very well in a blog post today.
Yahoo! explains the breadth and depth of location data it now offers thusly: "The [Platform] contains about six million places. Coverage varies from country-to-country but globally includes several hundred thousand unique administrative areas with half a million variant names; several thousand historical administrative areas; over two million unique settlements and suburbs, and two-and-a-half million unique postcode points covering about 150 countries, plus a significant number of points of interest, Colloquial Regions, Area Codes, Time Zones, and Islands."
Geolocation is hot, a number of new projects are underway to leverage increasingly sophisticated geographic knowledge to deliver value to end users. See our coverage of Brightkite and of Yahoo!'s own excellent FireEagle, for example.
Flickr developer Catt explains, for example, that Flickr could use the new APIs to offer images of nearby photos on several different levels, with accuracy as granular as Flickr is able to output.
There are a lot of interesting possibilities, not just for mapping but for services that are map aware. What would you like to see turned geo-smart? We're excited to see what developers come up with. We probably won't have to wait for long, either, since the Platform was released the day before O'Reilly's Where 2.0 conference begins in Burlingame, California. Keep your eyes peeled for location savvy apps this week!
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Well, it's already been mentioned but Flickr is just going to be made even more awesome with these API's, it's going to take people inputting geo location data and better GPS enabled (or location-aware somehow) devices to really make it work for Flickr though.
Here's hoping the new iPhone can geotag photos!
I'm eagerly awaiting some iPhone apps that combine the Core Location feature in the iPhone (or the rumored GPS in the next generation iPhone) with services like this, FireEagle, and tons of location data sources (Yelp, Flickr geo-tags, etc). Can't wait to see what sort of mobile location mashups developers come up with once the iPhone app store opens in June.
My organization was looking for just such a solution. Yahoo! has saved me tons of time developing it on my own. In my opinion, Yahoo! is leading in terms of having the most extensive API platform - beating even tech giants such as Google.
- Jawad Shuaib
Yahoo! provides the great opportunities for developers as well as for there end-users. Yahoo! Is ever pioneer to provide World-Class Services for there end-users and developers.