![]() |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399341)
If you look at the old map in forum post #19 above, you can see that controlled access expressways were orange, busy city streets are yellow, and regular city streets are white.
That three tiered system was great in my opinion. Doesn't matter if they use an orange theme or any other colour theme, just make it obviously different. I prefer the grey to white, but I’m sure that differs from person to person |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399312)
Here you go.
The biggest problem from a cycling perspective is that major and minor roads are now the same color. Makes it very difficult for bicyclists to choose quiet roads to ride on. If you zoom in you'll also see that they took away the width on smaller lanes and made them simple lines. The changed color of woodland also makes green colored paths harder to see. And yeah, the new colors are also more disgusting. Who wants to look at puke cyan and turquoise all day? https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...71396d598b.jpg I get that they arent the exact same- highway color is different and road color is different. But I dont view the new one as disgusting. That really isnt an adjective that I would choose if I had to list 20 to describe the map. But OK then- that certainly something you are passionate about. Funny thing is that I can lose hours looking at interactive maps like googlemaps, but if what I do look at is the new version, it hasnt impacted me enough to be this outraged. |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399312)
Here you go.
The biggest problem from a cycling perspective is that major and minor roads are now the same color. Makes it very difficult for bicyclists to choose quiet roads to ride on. If you zoom in you'll also see that they took away the width on smaller lanes and made them simple lines. The changed color of woodland also makes green colored paths harder to see. And yeah, the new colors are also more disgusting. Who wants to look at puke cyan and turquoise all day? https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...71396d598b.jpg This screenshot is from an article that was written over a year ago. https://www.autoevolution.com/news/g...al-220470.html ...is this thread complaining about a change to googlemaps that happened over a year ago? |
Originally Posted by mstateglfr
(Post 23399349)
This screenshot is from an article that was written over a year ago.
https://www.autoevolution.com/news/g...al-220470.html ...is this thread complaining about a change to googlemaps that happened over a year ago? Maybe the OP didn't update their app on their phone until now? |
To get from A to B in Europe, I use Komoot… way, way better than Google maps.
GM is better for finding specific places in a city, imo |
Originally Posted by mstateglfr
(Post 23399346)
it hasnt impacted me enough to be this outraged.
|
Originally Posted by imi
(Post 23399351)
To get from A to B in Europe, I use Komoot… way, way better than Google maps.
GM is better for finding specific places in a city, imo By the way I think the default Brouter map theme has excellent separation between major and minor roads. It's very easy to read. Not taking about color aesthetic taste which varies by person, talking about the information clarity. https://brouter.de/brouter-web/ |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399359)
For route creation have you tried Brouter? It's more customizable than Komoot. For example you can input a custom algorithm setting for distance vs climbing and find your own balance.
https://brouter.de/brouter-web/ Not long ago I used both paper maps and GM, but Komoot has left me gobsmacked at the wonderful paths and routes it sends me on. As to paper maps. So many different colours! But to zoom in or out you have to buy new maps! 😆 https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...b94ea7236.jpeg |
Originally Posted by imi
(Post 23399363)
As to paper maps. So many different colours! But to zoom in or out you have to buy new maps! 😆
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...b94ea7236.jpeg It's getting cold now, even snowed here yesterday. |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399367)
Last month I took the train to Orléans and rode back to Paris. Nice ride, but nothing to see in between.
It's getting cold now, even snowed here yesterday. Everyone seems to have got snow in Europe… except where I am in Sweden |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399355)
It impacts us all different amounts, depending on how much time we spend studying maps each day. A person on tour will be impacted more than someone living their regular life at home. Especially if that regular life is in a small place.
|
Originally Posted by imi
(Post 23399374)
Have you ridden the Eurovelo Route through Paris to Gien?
Everyone seems to have got snow in Europe… except where I am in Sweden It's warming up again. 19 degrees in Paris tomorrow, wow! |
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399429)
Six weeks on the road using Google for every day and I found nothing wrong with the maps…other than trying to take me off into the woods all the time.
I just finished a 16 month bike tour around the world a few weeks ago. Slightly longer than yours. I referred to Google maps early in the tour, but after the theme change I stopped using it completely. I was in Japan when the theme change happened. Checkout what Tokyo looks like now under this new idiocy. You want to talk about an indistinguishable sh*t nest of nearly identical colours and thicknesses? Absolute unusable garbage clustered*ck. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...1e4c9135ad.png Compare with before. Are you able to see the difference? https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...33e9f08b42.jpg Not:
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23398929)
They look pretty much the same.
|
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399482)
6 weeks...
I just finished a 16 month bike tour around the world a few weeks ago. Slightly longer than yours. I referred to Google maps early in the tour, but after the theme change I stopped using it completely. I was in Japan when the theme change happened. Checkout what Tokyo looks like now under this new idiocy. You want to talk about an indistinguishable sh*t nest of nearly identical colours and thicknesses? Absolute unusable garbage clustered*ck. Compare with before. Are you able to see the difference? Not: Right? |
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399509)
Not a lot of difference... They look close enough.
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399509)
I don’t stare at a map all day long, am more likely to follow my nose.
|
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399516)
Errr... ok, whatever you say mister. I think you're living in your own universe over there. :lol::lol::lol:
I see... I see... ;) |
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399548)
two
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399548)
Is it wrong to actually look where you are going rather than staring at a map all day?
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399509)
am more likely to follow my nose.
Quit this pedantic drivel wordplay BS. Yes, actually, to bike tour you do indeed need to use maps. As good of a dog as I'm sure you are, you can't smell your way in and out of Tokyo with your nose. Nor Palembang, or Tbilisi. Ok? Did you hit these places on your six week tour? Or was the dog merely nosing around his own back yard? Not exactly hard, is it. |
I think the format has been changed to reduce data and power consumption on mobile devices. These are problems I had when using Google Maps navigation on my bike, and the main reasons I stopped using it.
|
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23399562)
Learn to count, bubbles :lol:
Quit this pedantic drivel wordplay BS. Yes, actually, to bike tour you do indeed need to use maps. As good of a dog as I'm sure you are, you can't smell your way in and out of Tokyo with your nose. Nor Palembang, or Tbilisi. Ok? Did you hit these places on your six week tour? Or was the dog merely nosing around his own back yard? Not exactly hard, is it. I’ve traveled across cities and know what a freeway looks like while I riding and tend to avoid those…at least in cities. “Following one’s nose” isn’t about smell. It’s about using you eyes, ears, and other senses in a sensible manner. And, no, I didn’t do a six week touring around my house. I drove nearly 2000 miles to a place I’d never been before and had no idea of what the roads were or where they were going to take me other than what I had seen on a map. Not that doing a six week tour in an area I know would be a problem. I often ride in areas that I leave near. I hardly use a map for those because I know the territory and, usually, there is no phone service. Mountains make cell phone coverage much more difficult. |
Originally Posted by cyccommute
(Post 23399653)
Okay, three then. At least I can put together a clear sentence and thought. I’ve traveled across cities and know what a freeway looks like |
""And now "New" Google Maps""
Old or new version, for bike touring google maps is useless! It's fine for hotel search if needed. For route planing and navigation there are much better options out there. |
|
I used Google Maps a lot on my home computer. But never used it on my phone.
Bike touring, while rolling, I use a GPS for my navigation, phone is turned off. GPS is a general recreation one, not a bike specific one. Bike touring, route planning ahead of time if I do not have my computer with me, I use GPS (cycle tour routing or car routing, whichever one looks better if different), Komoot, Maps.Me (car routing, avoid toll roads), and of course comparing that to paper map. And I decide which routing looks best. There have been times that all the electronic options were worse than a rather direct route on the paper map that the electronics were avoiding. I recall one day saving over an hour by taking the straight road on the paper map that all electronics did not want to use. It was a perfectly good low traffic provincial highway with good pavement. Komoot sometimes gives me crazy options. When that happens I pick a point in the middle on the map to force it to go through that point to make it less crazy. I have a new phone with a bigger screen, maybe I should try Google Maps on it? |
Komoot uses Open Street Maps.
Open Street Maps is the Wikipedia of maps. Anyone can edit it. It's generally pretty good but sometimes there's an error in the map and it throws off routing. The worst is when the map is missing a short section of path and routing sends you on a big detour instead. The next worst is when the map has incomplete or outdated information on the surface type, causing you to end up on poor roads when you wanted pavement. |
Originally Posted by Yan
(Post 23400035)
Komoot uses Open Street Maps.
If I was mapping things out on PC the day before and was in enough populated area - then I liked using RWGPS from my laptop and downloading to my device. If however, there was an adjustment to plans or it was very sparsely populated then I liked using Komoot from my phone. What I liked was that Komoot had different profiles for Cycling, Road Cycling, Gravel Riding, Backpacking, etc. I wasn't always sure what these settings did but they gave me several alternatives. Also the Road Cycling was less likely to send me on "unknown" roads in sparsely populated states that RWGPS would present as paved. The other thing I learned was that the cars recording Google Street View in the US seemed to avoid gravel roads so if I asked for a street view and it was missing that also gave me a clue. I would ride gravel roads where it made sense but also found variations between ones more similar to CO gavel roads I've cycled (*) and others much rougher so it was useful in setting expectations. (*) When I last lived in CO I printed a large scale map of Weld County and was going through an exercise of riding every road on the county map (~3200 miles total about 20% paved - with good gravel roads, Weld County is approximately the same area as Delaware and Rhode Island combined). |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 08:08 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.