Skip to main content

Google Maps expands super-useful feature for mass transit

Google Maps has announced a significant expansion of a handy feature that lets you see how crowded your train or bus is likely to be when it arrives.

After launching the feature in 200 cities in June 2019, the web giant is this week rolling it out to 10,000 transit agencies in 100 countries. If available, the data will appear when you look up transit directions.

Google Maps

It’s never any fun having to squeeze onto a packed train or bus, even more so since the start of the pandemic when social distancing became a thing. If you can find out beforehand if your subway or bus line is particularly busy and you’re not in a rush, you can hold back and perhaps run some outstanding errands or simply go and relax somewhere.

Recommended Videos

“These predictions are made possible through our artificial intelligence technology, contributions from people using Google Maps, and historical location trends that predict future crowdedness levels for transit lines all over the world,” Google Maps’ Eric Tholomé said in a post announcing the expansion, adding that for privacy the feature uses anonymization technology and various privacy techniques to ensure that your data remains secure and private.

As part of efforts to make the transit data even more useful for passengers, Tholomé said his team is currently piloting the ability to see real-time crowd information “right down to the transit car level.” The tests for this particular feature are taking place on the Long Island Rail Road in New York and on transit services in Sydney, Australia, with special software used to interpret data gathered from weight sensors built into cars’ suspension systems.

Other new features announced by Tholomé include a new Timeline Insights tab, initially for Android only (with location history enabled), that shows you monthly trends about how you’re spending your time out and about. Accessible via a new tab in your Timeline (tap on your profile photo, then Your Timeline), the surfaced data will show you things like the kinds of transport you’ve used, along with distances covered and the distance and time you’ve driven, flown, biked, or walked. “You can also see how much time you’re spending at different places — like shops, airports, and restaurants — and instantly drill down to see all the places you visited,” Tholomé said.

Finally, a new Trips feature in the Timeline tab lets you surface data linked to past vacations, “like which hotels you stayed at during that epic trip to Tokyo or the restaurants you visited on your weekend getaway.”

We should point out that if you’re starting to feel spooked by the extent to which Google can track your daily activities, here’s how to disable its location history feature and also how to disable location services on Android and iPhone.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Google Pixel 7a could add three huge features over the Pixel 6a
The Google Pixel 6a laying on top of the Google Pixel 6.

The Google Pixel 6a had good cameras, an average display with a 60Hz refresh rate, and more. While the $449 device was among the better ones in the segment, Google is working to further improve its successor. The Google Pixel 7a could add a new camera sensor for improved photography, a 90Hz refresh rate, and wireless charging to the feature list.

According to Tweets from Kuba Wojciechowski, who has reported correct information in the past, the Pixel 7a is code-named "Lynx." He discovered all the new information by digging into the camera drivers. Wojciechowski found that "Lynx" is a midrange smartphone and its camera setup is called "Pixel 22 Mid-range." He also found that the reference to GN1, which was a moniker used for the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro's Samsung sensor, has been removed.

Read more
Does the Google Pixel Watch have ECG? The health feature, explained
Someone using Google Maps turn-by-turn directions on the Google Pixel Watch.

Google has thrown its hat into the smartwatch ring with the Pixel Watch, a flashy new Wear OS device on a playing field already occupied by veteran Android smartphone makers like Samsung, Moto, and Oppo.

The fact that Google makes it may be the most intriguing thing about the Pixel Watch. Coming from the company that created Android and Wear OS in the first place, not to mention its successful Pixel smartphone lineup, Google’s new smartwatch has been one of the most highly-anticipated wearables in years.

Read more
Google gives Maps’ Immersive View a boost and adds a new vibe feature
An aerial view of London on Google Maps.

Google is continuing its never-ending work of enhancing Maps, with four new updates coming to the app on Wednesday.

First up, the team has been working to expand the coverage of Immersive View. Google started rolling out the feature in July, offering remarkably detailed 3D fly-arounds of famous landmarks and layering it with useful information such as the weather, traffic conditions, and the general busyness of the area. It can do this for the current time or, by examining historical trends, for a future date. Immersive View will also let you zoom in from an aerial view right into, say, a restaurant of interest, at which point the software flips to Street View in order to take you right inside, if the imagery is available.

Read more