After adding 20 locations last month, this month Apple has added another 20 cities to your system that offers a three-dimensional view on Apple Maps known as flyover. The cities added are of Spain, France, England, Mexico, Belgium, Italy, Australia and Taiwan. From Spain, as you will see below, A Coruña, Salamanca (from where you can see a part in the previous screenshot) and San Sebastián have been included. From the other Spanish-speaking country, Mexico, they have included Cabo San Lucas and Guaymas. You have the rest of the list below.
New cities added to Flyover
- A Coruña, Spain
- Ajaccio, France
- Archon, France
- Bastia, France
- Besançon, France
- Blackpool, England
- Bonifacio, France
- Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
- Calvi, France
- Corte, France
- Ghent, Belgium
- Guaymas, Mexico
- Messina, Italy
- Mobile, AL, United States
- New Castle, Australia
- Nottingham, England
- Porto-Vecchio, France
- Propriano, France
- Raleigh, NC, United States
- Salamanca, Spain
- San Sebastian, Spain
- Taichung, taiwan
- Wichita, KS, United States
In addition to the new cities that can now take advantage of the Flyover, Apple has also confirmed that the traffic data of their maps are also available in Malaysia and Singapore. Spain has had this type of data available for some time now, something that you can check by navigating to a city with a lot of traffic (such as Madrid or Barcelona), tapping on the «i» and selecting the option «Show traffic», which will show in red color where circulation is slow and orange where it is more fluid. If we don't see anything, if I'm not mistaken, it means that the traffic is fluid.
Flyover came to iOS about three and a half years ago as part of the maps they presented in iOS 6 and he did not have a difficult childhood either, showing very deformed areas that did not look much like what they were trying to represent. But at the moment, iOS users use Apple maps more than Google maps, which is sure that there are few of you who do not understand how this is possible. In any case, that Tim Cook and company continue to improve their maps is good news, since they offer us an increasingly better alternative.
I think the correct headline for the news should be "including La Coruña, Salamanca and San Sebastián." Auspicious days