Maps

Google Maps on the Web is awesome already. It lets you type in any address or point of interest in the U.S. or many other countries—and see it plotted on a map. You have a choice of a street-map diagram or an actual aerial photo, taken by satellite. Google Maps is an incredible resource for planning a drive, scoping out a new city before you travel there, investigating the proximity of a new house to schools and stores, seeing how far a hotel is from the beach, or just generally blowing your mind with a new view of the world.

And now you've got Google Maps on the iPhone, with even more features—like turn-by-turn driving directions, a live national Yellow Pages business directory, GPS that pinpoints your current location, and real-time traffic-jam alerts, represented by color coding on the roads shown on the map.

Note

Your happiness with Maps depends a lot on how you're connected to the internet. A Wi-Fi connection is fairly snappy. a cellular eDge connection may mean waiting a few seconds every time you scroll or zoom the map.

Browsing the Maps

The very first time you open Maps, you see a miniature U.S. map. Double-tap to zoom in, over and over again, until you're seeing actual city blocks. You can also pinch or spread two fingers to magnify or shrink the view. Drag or flick to scroll around the map.

image with no caption

To zoom out again, use the rare two-finger tap. So—zoom in with two taps using one ...

Get iPhone: The Missing Manual, 3rd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.