The feature, which was definitely new to me, is called us Codes. It’s a method developed by ’s Zurich office that is designed to be more user-friendly than identifying a location by titude ngitude. y this matters: Maps drops in a lot of interesting new tidbits all the time with the beta version of its mapping application. So sign up if you want to try out the latest mapping tricks before anybody else.

Drop a pin, get a code

You’ll now see it in Maps when you drop a pin: You can then copy the code paste it into the map or a message to share with another. The first four characters are grayed out, because those correspond to a general region might not be necessary if you’re sending them to someone who is us Code savvy. It’s a pretty neat system, but will need to do some education to make this mainstream. On the navigation front, Maps will now announce you’ve reached your destination with a “You made it to…” notice. There’s also a “walk the rest of the way” button, which might help for those times you had to park a mile away from that restaurant you’re going to try out want the navigation to just be quiet. will also offer to tweak your route based on past performance. In an A teardown, Android lice found some more features that might be coming to Maps down the road. Speed limits signs may finally tell you how fast you can go, which might not be as useful while driving since you shouldn’t be looking at your phone (we’re here to help), but it would definitely be nice to have in Android Auto.  Other possible updates floating around in the code are a capability to order food (yum), new features specifically for cal Guides, just maybe some type of integration with kemon Go. The evidence for that is particularly slim as it boils down to a single keball icon, but maybe you’ll be able to ask one day if there are any kemon hanging out at the cafe.