Skip to main content

Google Maps and YouTube will work offline for people in developing countries

Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage

Google Maps is about to get even more helpful, as the company prepares to take the navigation system offline. Google Maps won’t even require a data connection to operate. Google VP for Engineering and Product Management, Jen Fitzpatrick, revealed the news on stage during the keynote presentation at Google I/O 2015, along with a host of changes to Android, which make the OS more accessible for people using phones in developing markets.

She said the company is “working hard” to deliver the Google Maps experience offline, and showed it won’t be a simple, static map you’ll see either — it’ll be the whole thing. Demonstrating the system on a phone with Airplane Mode activated, the search bar still brings up results, and autocomplete works just as it does with a data connection.

Recommended Videos

When you find the location you want, the information screen will deliver reviews and opening times, ensuring the essential information is still there. It gets better, because Google will make its turn-by-turn navigation work offline. Travelers will love to have this very helpful feature available without eating up any data while abroad. However, it’s even more important to people living in places where local data plans are very expensive, or the coverage is unstable.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Google Maps Offline SupportGoogle highlighted six international markets where the majority of smartphone growth will occur over the coming years — including Brazil, China, Indonesia, and India — and discussed other ways Android is changing to help make using a smartphone easier, faster, more convenient, and perhaps most importantly, cheaper for everyone.

For example, YouTube Offline makes videos available to watch without a connection for 48-hours, while Google Search adapts to remove images and replace them with colored placeholders to save on data, and shrinks down text to make pages load faster. All this is made possible by something called the Network Quality Estimator, which examines the strength of a connection, to make sure the phone performs at its best. Using these methods, Google says Web pages load four times faster, use 80-percent fewer bytes, and an 80MB reduction in memory use.

Going back to Google Maps, the offline mode is expected to launch later this year, but Google hasn’t confirmed whether it will be exclusive to certain territories — like YouTube Offline — or if it’ll be available for all. We’ll keep you updated.

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
Google may make it easier to share files between Android and iPhone
Android 14 logo on the Moto G Stylus 5G (2024).

Wish it was easier to share files between Android and iPhone? Android Authority says a file-sharing service designed for Android devices may eventually become available on Apple products.

During the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January, Google announced its collaboration with Samsung to introduce a new feature called Quick Share, which aims to simplify file sharing. This feature offers a unified solution for sharing files across Android devices, Chromebooks, and Windows systems, making the process seamless within these ecosystems. Think of it like AirDrop but for Android.

Read more
Gemini in Google Maps may be the best use of mobile AI yet
Google Maps on the Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra.

We scarcely need reminding that Google is putting AI into everything, but its latest push is probably one of the most interesting and immediately helpful yet, as Google Maps has now entered its Gemini era.
Vast experience
Before going into the many AI updates happening across all of Google’s “Geo” (the collective name for all its mapping tools) departments, it’s helpful to understand just how rich Google’s location data already is. Collected over the last 20 years, Google’s mapping expertise is available in more than 250 countries and territories across the world, and Google Maps alone has more than 2 billion active users each month.

Google already uses AI in its mapping products, such as the Lens overlay in Maps’ AR mode, which puts live place information in front of you on the map. Google is now using AI to improve the photo-realistic 3D tour in Immersive View, a feature first launched last year, with live data on the location, including weather, parking, and turn-by-turn information. Immersive View is now set to launch in 150 cities this week and will include university campuses, too.

Read more
The Google Pixel 9 may not have the Android version you expected
Official teaser of the Google Pixel 9 Pro.

Google’s holding its next big event on August 13, where we expect to see the new Google Pixel 9 lineup, including the Pixel 9 Pro Fold and other goodies. But Google may end up doing something very odd, considering the timing of the event. The Pixel 9 series may not ship with Android 15, breaking a longstanding tradition.

In the past several years, Google has always launched the newest Pixel phone with the newest version of Android, which only makes sense considering Google creates both the hardware and software. In 2021, the Pixel 6 series launched with Android 12. Then, the Pixel 7 launched with Android 13, and last year, the Pixel 8 launched with Android 14.

Read more