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    Home Development
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    Mappoint—Hailstorm of Mapping World

    Written by

    John Taschek
    Published April 22, 2002
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      Now that HailStorm—I mean .Net My Services—is on hold (see www.eweek.com/links), Microsoft needs another offering to prove that its brand of Web services is viable. It may have found it with maps.

      Truth be told, HailStorm got off to a rocky start and was barraged by a hailstorm of another variety, personified by Jonathan Schwartz, chief strategist at Sun. Schwartz argued effectively that HailStorm made Microsoft an intermediary in any business transaction that used the service.

      Schwartzs point was a good one—and even Microsoft failed in its attempts to spin .Net My Services as a separate product that could be hosted by other companies.

      Maps, however, are where its at. Mapping to most people means typing an address into MapQuest and getting a map back. Yahoos Maps—which until this year had a relationship with AOLs MapQuest—was another popular service. (Yahoo is now using its own mapping code based on maps from Navigation Technologies and Geographic Data Technology.)

      Microsoft has its own brand of free maps and driving directions called MapPoint (www.mappoint.com). Microsoft, however, launched MapPoint as a Web service last September, and MapPoint .Net Version 2 was announced two weeks ago. The most interesting thing about this is that MapPoint may actually be the first “Web service” that makes money. Of course, MapPoint had made “money” from the Microsoft-specific services that use it, such as Carpoint and Expedia, but the money from those seems to be more of an internal accounting function.

      The difference with MapPoint .Net Version 2 is the addition of a SOAP/XML interface, which allows any commercial company to use MapPoint as its own service. The first to sign up for MapPoint are TellMe Networks, which uses it to bring driving directions to cell phone users, and Zone Labs, a software firewall company that uses MapPoint to allow customers to plot out locations where attacks originate.

      Eventually, well see MapPoint evolve into business intelligence solutions that have geocoding capabilities. These services are already available now—from companies such as BeyondGeo, QuestSoft and ESRI. As a Web service, however, MapPoint eliminates the need for CDs, never goes out-of-date and can interface more readily with most applications.

      Now the big question is: Whats the fundamental difference between MapPoint and .Net My Services?

      Doesnt MapPoint make Microsoft an intermediary—just like HailStorm? Send e-mail to john_taschek@ziffdavis.com.

      John Taschek
      John Taschek
      As the director of eWEEK Labs, John manages a staff that tests and analyzes a wide range of corporate technology products. He has been instrumental in expanding eWEEK Labs' analyses into actual user environments, and has continually engineered the Labs for accurate portrayal of true enterprise infrastructures. John also writes eWEEK's 'Wide Angle' column, which challenges readers interested in enterprise products and strategies to reconsider old assumptions and think about existing IT problems in new ways. Prior to his tenure at eWEEK, which started in 1994, Taschek headed up the performance testing lab at PC/Computing magazine (now called Smart Business). Taschek got his start in IT in Washington D.C., holding various technical positions at the National Alliance of Business and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. There, he and his colleagues assisted the government office with integrating the Windows desktop operating system with HUD's legacy mainframe and mid-range servers.

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