With the COVID-19 pandemic keeping many of us away from buses and taboo sex videotrains (and Uber and Lyft rides), we've reverted to driving ourselves. This means more time with Google Maps — whether that's on our phones resting on a car mount, or on the car screen through Android Auto or Apple CarPlay.
After almost a year of pandemic life filled with mental health getaway road trips and masked-up, socially distant grocery store visits, we have some thoughts on how Google's navigation app could improve the driving experience.
Here are some new features Google Maps should add:
After a road trip that kept taking me on shortcuts that were terrible, I’m calling for a Google Maps notification that indicates when you're being diverted from the main route and onto a shortcut. I'm all for a quicker route, but when you're sent down a sketchy side street in the middle of the night, it'd be nice to know that you're no longer on the usual path. That way, you could opt out of the faster route and stick to the tried-and-true option.
This one is for the Los Angeles drivers that follow Google Maps' suggestion to take the alternative route for a faster ride, but then come up against unprotected left turns. For the unaware, those are turns that don't have a dedicated left-turn arrow, so you have to make it through during a break in traffic before the light turns red.
You would select "Rush Hour" mode to ensure that Google Maps avoids sending you on a path that makes you risk your life just to get across lanes without the assist of a traffic signal.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
I love how the Google Maps app adjusts the screen contrast from light to dark mode once it's officially sundown. But in the list of directions or on the trip overview, it could let you know that the light and visibility will be changing during the course of your drive. Similar to how Google Maps already alerts you that the business you're heading to may close by the time you're scheduled to arrive, the app could notify you that the sun will go down during your drive.
Instead of figuring out the best order to visit multiple stops during a single drive on your own, Google Maps should be able to calculate that for you. As it is now, you can add as many stops or destinations as you'd like. But the order in which the app maps all those stops is based on whatever order you manually entered those stops.
The trip mapping doesn't take into consideration that you put the grocery store first, your grandma's house across town second, and then the gas station near the grocery store — and in that order. That's not the most efficient route, and while you can easily shuffle the order, can't Google just do it for us?
In the Google Maps settings, you can choose to show routes that "avoid tolls." But some of us might like to see all the options and then make a decision, especially if paying a toll might speed up the journey.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.SEE ALSO: 10 Google Maps hacks everyone should know
Then there's the cost of the tolls. Google Maps indicates with a symbol that there is a toll, but it doesn't tell you how muchyou'll have to pay. Other apps have cropped up, like TollGuru, to calculate your toll costs on a trip. But that information should be available within Google Maps, not an entirely separate app.
Topics Google
Amazon insists on putting Alexa where no one wants it79 amazing little details in 'Red Dead Redemption 2'Student gives professor an awkward nickname, accidentally submits paper without changing it'Big Mouth' is the candid conversation about sex you never hadAlcohol's cancer risks outweigh any health benefits, study showsSingapore police invokes the power of Pokémon to get its message acrossSmart Replies constitute ten percent of all emails sent on GmailBollywood star Salman Khan acquitted of poaching endangered animalsSonita Alizadeh narrowly avoided being a child bride. Now she raps about ending forced marriage.Grammar lovers slam Trump for errorDad surprises his baseballJane Fonda has some advice for disgraced men who want a comebackAmazon just revealed its plan for total smart home domination'Daredevil' returns with new Season 3 teaser, poster & premiere dateAmazon unveils an AlexaTim Cook reportedly behind Apple's family friendly TV showsSonita Alizadeh narrowly avoided being a child bride. Now she raps about ending forced marriage.Prepare yourself, Donald Trump is doing a Reddit AMAPayPal drops Infowars because it promotes 'hate'What Amazon got right about smart speakers that Facebook won't Being Reckless: An Interview with Karl Ove Knausgaard by Lydia Kiesling Sex in the Theater: Jeremy O. Harris and Samuel Delany in Conversation by Toniann Fernandez America’s First Connoisseur by Edward White Reading the Artifacts After the Capitol Riot by Swati Rana In Winter We Get inside Each Other Fuck the Bread. The Bread Is Over. by Sabrina Orah Mark The Secret of the Unicorn Tapestries by Danielle Oteri Watch Clarice Lispector’s Only Televised Interview, from 1977 The Year of Grinding Teeth by Madeleine Watts Inside the American Snow Dome by Jamaica Kincaid No Walk Is Ever Wasted by Matthew Beaumont What We Know of Sappho by Judith Schalansky Vanitas by Jordan Kisner Beatlemania in Yugoslavia by Slavenka Drakulić Redux: Her Ticking Wrist by The Paris Review Tokyo Reeks of Gasoline by Yi Sang Mark Twain’s Mind Waves by Chantel Tattoli Charm and How to Come By It by Dubravka Ugresic Redux: It’s Almost Next Year by The Paris Review We Tell Ourselves Stories in Order to Die by Jessi Jezewska Stevens
4.0515s , 8614.4765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【taboo sex video】,Openness Information Network