Google has added a new element to its search interface that will let others' websites use geographically linked information.
The company has opened up outside access to its Geo Search API (application programming interface), said John Hanke, head of Google Earth and Google Maps, at the Where 2.0 conference in Burlingame, California on Tuesday. That means other sites incorporating Google Maps will be able to find geographic features that are in Google's database but that previously were visible only through Google's own map site.
John Hanke, head of Google Maps and Google Earth, speaks at the Where 2.0 conference.
Credit: Stephen Shankland
Google previously shared only some geographic data through its search API: businesses within a search of a local area. With the search API now producing broader results, a Web site could show not just the Marriott hotel near San Francisco International Airport but also nearby jogging trails, Hanke said.
"The API guys are on a more even footing with Google [when it comes to building a mashup that combines Google Maps with a third-party site via the interface]", Hanke said in an interview.
Google Maps now shows Wikipedia entries.
Credit: Google
Separately, Google added a new feature to Google Maps that can show the presence of geotagged information stored in the Wikipedia collaborative online encyclopedia. The map shows a "W" link for entries associated with a specific location, as the Google Maps Mania site observed on Tuesday.
The announcement comes after the search giant's rival, Yahoo, also released its own geographic development and search interface this week, as part of its Internet Location Platform.
Yahoo's geotagging service is currently in Beta testing, and allows users to incorporate the search company's geographic data into their own applications, as well as its basic interface which facilitates the finding of locations using its Where on Earth ID system.










