Microsoft Invests $15m in Foursquare for a Slice of Mobile Data

Microsoft Foursquare Cortana

Windows Phone may not be the best mobile OS in the world, but it’s Microsoft’s brainchild, so the company needs to improve it continuously. This partnership with Foursquare will bring mobile users entertainment and restaurant suggestions at their fingertips.

Cortana, the voice-activated assistant that Microsoft is working on, will provide location data from Foursquare, thanks to this collaboration. The Redmond company wants more than just to provide an app for checking-in, as it intends to make the whole experience a lot more interactive. By doing so, Microsoft will take on Apple’s Siri and Google Now.

Dennis Crowley, CEO of Foursquare admitted that “This is huge validation for the stuff we’ve been working so hard on. It’s one of the leaders in the space we work in looking at us and saying we can really help power the next generation of devices.”

Cortana is going to be one of the revolutionary features of Windows Phone 8.1, which is supposed to be launched in a few months, Samsung Huron being among the main devices to sport the new version of this operating system.

Zig Serafin, a VP in Microsoft’s Bing search unit, explained how Cortana’s location data will change things: “We’re building some contextually aware experiences to power some upcoming products in Windows Phone. This will be for anywhere you get a Bing-powered experience.”

While I’m not a big fan of Windows Phone (OK, OK, I admit it, I’m an Android fanboy), I think that this operating system progressed quite a lot since its launch. Yes, it moved slowly, but the changes are impressive. Moreover, I’m glad to see such strategic partnerships, especially when Foursquare is involved in them.

I read a few months ago an article about how this service would vanish completely, now that Facebook, Twitter and Google+ are so widely used. The author of that article argued that all these social networks, which enable their users to check-in, render Foursquare obsolete, but I’d beg to differ. One tiny example that sets 4sq apart from all the others is the ability to see a history of your check-ins. Want to visit a city you haven’t been to in a few years? Browse the approximate period and find out exactly the names of those restaurants or touristic attractions that impressed you the most.

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Dennis Crowley: Foursquare’s a discovery and recommendation engine first, social service second

Dennis Crowley FourSquare's a discovery and recommendation engine first, social service second

Plenty of Foursquare fans use the app primarily as a means to share their own location and see the locations of others around them, but Foursquare isn't only about socially-acceptable stalking. At the GigaOm Mobilize conference today, company co-founder Dennis Crowley informed those of us in the room that thinking of Foursquare as merely a check-in app is misguided. According to him, the plan for Foursquare has always been for it to be a customized discovery and recommendation engine first, and a social tool second. You see, all your check-ins provide Foursquare with valuable information about you and your friend's habits. Those check-ins, as far as Foursquare's concerned, are merely an efficient means to get the data needed to build the individualized, location-aware search and recommendation engine that powers the explore tab in the app. Crowley said that he's been hearing plenty of positive feedback from users about the accuracy and usefulness of Foursquare-powered search, and some folks have even begun using it instead of Google. Foursquare isn't on Mountain View's level just yet, but it seems that Crowley and his cohort have the reigning king of search squarely in their sights.

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Dennis Crowley: Foursquare's a discovery and recommendation engine first, social service second originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Sep 2012 22:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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