My second blog entry is going to start in a similar manner to the first. It's saturday night and I'm out with some friends. Last minute plans are hastily hatched... this time it's for a sunday hike. The hire car has been arranged... but where should we head to? In the UK it's not a problem to figure out.... because our wonderful OS maps make it possible to stitch together a route out of your back garden. But here in the US, you need to find a "trail" !?
Searching on the iPhone was slow and painful, so we ended up exchanging some midnight emails and resorting to the AMC Day Hikes in New England book. The upshot was a trip to World's End, a tame but beautiful reservation in Quincy, reminiscent of an English country park. How ironic. Personally I'd been hoping for something a bit more wild and challenging ;-)
What was missing? An iPhone app to help you find the perfect trail! The search begins.
So far I've downloaded "TrailBehind" launched in July 2009 with 109 ratings (approx 5,000 downloads) for $0.99.
Click on the heading and you get linked to a web page with the full review. Content is drawn from about 5 sources: EveryTrail, Local Hikes, Wikipedia, WayMarking.com, TrimbleOutdoors.com, SummitPost.
The app is certainly a convenient way to browse reviews from different sources. However it falls down in several respects.
1) Content pages are not optimized for mobile
After clicking each link you are taken through to websites which aren't designed for viewing on a mobile device. Here it gets difficult to click the links and retrieve information
2) Basic categorization
Even if I had this app on saturday night, I don't think it would have helped us to confidently resolve our quandry. Apart from categorizing trails as "hiking, biking or climbing" and giving an approximate distance, there is no way of sorting. I would have liked a difficulty rating, user feedback, distance from my location, type of terrain etc
3) Limited content
For an app 1 year old I would have expected more quality content. Since I live in Boston I want lots of detailed suggestions about local areas around Boston. When I travel then I'll be looking for more touristy content. At the moment there's barely enough content here to make me revisit the app more than once. Perhaps that says something about the quality of content on all the combined trail review websites out there! And without any user generated content on the app, I wouldn't expect this state to improve much.
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