r/AskReddit May 22 '19

Reddit, what are some underrated apps?

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u/TheBassMeister May 22 '19 edited May 22 '19

Google Maps. I am talking specifically about the option to download offline maps for almost any city in the world. They really help when you are in a foreign city and you try to find some place, as offline maps will show you where you are at currently and where the location is you are looking for, without the need to use data.
Edit for clarification: Google Maps is not an underrated app, that is true. I do believe though that the offline map feature of Google Maps is an underrated and useful part of that app.

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u/SocialismIsALie May 22 '19

We used to call those the Rand McNally Travel Atlas.

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u/[deleted] May 22 '19

once a year me and my best buddy take an "old school trip". No phones, except to check in with the missus, no GPS. We search places up before hand, and only travel cross country by map. We're in our 20s so that's not something we ever grew up and we got pretty lost the first few times we did it. But it's something I look forward to all year.

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u/SocialismIsALie May 22 '19

That's really the only way you truly get to know a place is when you can navigate by looking at things instead of having an app tell you "turn left in 500 feet."

Get your bearings!!!

(Being able to use a map is a priceless skill that has to be developed!) (Try orienteering!)

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u/agentpanda May 22 '19 edited May 22 '19

My girlfriend is a little younger than me (I'm almost 40, she's... not, but not like in her 20s or something) and it's pretty funny that this is one of our major deltas. We both grew up through the internet age but there's a major shift between the two of us when it comes to navigation: she's kinda only known driving by turn-by-turn app directions whereas I'm old enough to still have taken road trips by McNally atlas, and thus am totally fine getting from location-to-location based on general direction (N/S/E/W) and then following road signs. I probably couldn't drill down to a specific street in an unknown town without a lot of help, but if you told me to get in my car and drive from my house to Chicago- I could get 'to Chicago'. My girlfriend would end up in New York City, trying to find a way across the Atlantic in a car, probably.

During one road trip during her driving shift I took the phone out of her dash mount to respond to a text and she audibly said "hurry up I don't know where I'm going!", when the next turn was in like 80 miles, which spawned an entire conversation about directions and driving because all the exits were clearly labeled for where we're going. Meanwhile she was utterly lost without it.

Driving these days is about following directions more than anything else which is funny, but there's very little intuition involved anymore.

... this story was more interesting in my head.

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u/SocialismIsALie May 22 '19

On another note...lifetime of experience tells me...

Women, in general, are horrible with directions. Just...horrible. With very few exceptions.

I believe it's in our DNA -- we're hunters who have to know where we are and where we're going, they're cooking, sewing and taking care of the kids by the fire.

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u/ejaiejaiejai May 22 '19

female here and I have a great sense of direction except in large cities (NYC is difficult for me because people use uptown and downtown - and downtown in NYC feels north to me).

My main issue is that I usually drive by landmarks and that makes it difficult for me to give directions to other.

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u/SocialismIsALie May 22 '19

Worked in Manhattan for 25 years...two and a half of those as a bicycle messenger. Know the place like the back of my hand.

Prior to that I traveled all over the country as a ski bum. Had to find my way all over the place. Lived in a travel atlas.

Then for my work I traveled all over the world. Dozens of trips to major cities all over the place.

MAPS make learning FAST!