Despite the buzz around location-based services, I have been ambivalent, if not skeptical about the technology.
As much as social media has encouraged people to share information, I have not been convinced there is the same amount of enthusiasm for broadcasting your location.There's the issue of privacy, as well as few "rewards" for telling the world your location.
In many respects, however, being unconvinced about the potential of location-based services has been like a Don Quixote-like experience, particularly when you're an enthusiastic member of the social media community. The idea that you don't really buy into the next new thing seems almost sacrosanct.
It was interesting and, to be honest, encouraging to read Joshua Brustein's column in yesterday's New York Timesabout whether the excitement surrounding location-based services is being driven by technology companies and investors, while consumers only seem modestly interested.
Brustein's column came on the heels of a Pew Internet and American Life Project survey that discovered only 4% of Americans use location services like Foursquare and Gowalla, compared with 5% last May. Even among smartphone-toting 18 to 29-year-olds, only 8% use location-based services.
It may just be that location-based services won't be widely embraced. Or it could be that location-based services have yet to find their sweet spot. However you want to explain it, the reality is location-based services have failed to live up to lofty expectations as social media's next hot thing.
Perhaps Facebook's entry into the market will change things, particularly if consumers are attracted to the link between the company's Places and Deals services.
Or maybe not. It could be that most people have no use for location-based services despite the best efforts of companies and investors.
After all, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink