In a brilliant move by Google which has seen share prices in GPS rivals Garmin and TomTom plummet, the search company has unveiled a new turn-by-turn navigation solution which integrates Street View, satellite imagery and even voice commands in one seamless service.
Oh, and it is coming for free to Android phones running the new 2.0 ‘Eclair’ software.
Demonstrated here on the gorgeous new Motorola DROID, Google Maps Navigation attempts to erase all of the frustrations leveled at current GPS systems in one fell swoop. See it in motion below!

Enabling searching for destinations in plain English, 3-D satellite imagery that shifts into Street View for a real representation when nearing a location, even constantly updated points of interest and local traffic conditions show that Google are truly utilising the connectivity of mobile phones with Maps Navigation.
Users are even able to place their phone into a car dock, which fires up a simplified landscape user interface for use on the go.
The question is, when will Google be making all our journeys easier? Well, Google have said Maps Navigation will come for free with Android 2.0, which we know to be installed on the Motorola DROID (arriving on US network Verizon on November 6th)…as for when the UK will see it is still unclear.
Word has it that the HTC Hero is one phone which will be making the leap to Android 2.0, let’s hope that the new iteration of Maps makes it along for the ride!

The second point is will this remain an Android exclusive? Whilst iPhone owners shell out for GPS apps that do a lot less yet charge a lot more money, does Google finally have a stand-out ‘killer’ feature for their mobile platform over Apple’s OS?
The iPhone 3GS could certain handle this on a technical level, but no beans have been spilled regarding porting the service across at this time.
“Apple is a close partner, and millions of users experience Google Maps on the iPhone,” said a Google spokesperson in a suitably cryptic e-mailed statement.
What is for certain is that Google Maps Navigation will soon providing a free service – without ads – that puts many competitors to shame. Those charging a monthly fee for the ‘privilege’ of us using GPS navigation on our phones will soon have to justify that against Google’s impressive yet data-hungry solution.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt said the update to Google Mobile Maps was not about devouring existing paid navigation services, but rather about fulfilling consumer needs.
“Anywhere we can provide a customer benefit, we’ll go after it,” Schmidt said.
We’ll see if that comment bears out by how long it takes to port Google Maps Navigation to other handsets, we think that this feature in Android’s 2.0 ‘Eclair’ update might be a little too tasty to share…