Dash Navigation, the Mountain View, Calif., company that has developed a network-connected global positioning system (GPS) device, is finally making it available for pre-order. The Dash Express will set you back a whopping $600 dollars plus related services of between $10 and $13 a month, depending on the service play you choose. And although it is by no means the most expensive GPS system out there, it is indeed a device that reflects the true spirit of Web 2.0.
Dash, which has raised close to $42 million in VC funding from the likes of Kleiner Perkins and Sequoia Capital, is one of those startups that initially seemed to be more sizzle than substance. But a demo of their most updated device and the web service that goes along with it made me reevaluate my skepticism. Let me explain.
For nearly two years, one web company after another has offered an API (application programming interface) as a means to access the data locked up inside their vault. Zilo, Flicker, eBay, Yelp, Yahoo and Google Maps — the list goes on and on. And yet we have not seen anyone come up with a way to combine these disparate data streams together and build a service that helps our everyday life. Sure, we’ve seen some clever mashups, but most of them are locked up inside our browser. Close the lid of your computer and everything is left behind.
Dash, however, has come up with a way to take Web 2.0 to go. The device can pull information from a panoply of sources: gas station listings, restaurant listings, recommendations from Yelp, real estate information from Zillow.com, and so on. Say you’re driving and you see a house for sale — you can enter the address and get the list price from the Zillow.com database. Feel like eating sushi? Enter “sushi” and the device pulls down the nearest sushi restaurant information, including reviews from Yelp or some such service.
Your subscription also gives you access to MyDash, a special web site that allows you to subscribe to RSS feeds of your choice. If you’re a New York Yankees fan, for instance, and need to find a Yankees-friendly saloon in, say, San Francisco, you can look on one of the mapping services such as Platial and find yourself a map mashup that lists such bars. Subscribe to that RSS feed, and you will always have pinstripe heaven close by. Another feature I like is called Send2Car, which allows you to highlight an address from any Internet browser or Microsoft Outlook and send it directly to your car. Oh and it also offers real-time traffic updates and navigation.
I didn’t necessarily want to do a review of Dash, but it’s allowed me to point out something that is being forgotten in the mad scramble that is Web 2.0: The Internet is not just about the browser, but rather it is about data and how one can use it to build clever products. I think Dash, much like Amazon’s Kindle and RCA’s Small Wonder video camera, is part of a movement that is breaking Web 2.0′s browser shackles.
I think it’s “Zillow.com,” not “zilo.com”?
Fixed. Sorry about that. Just one of those things that the eyes missed.
It is cool and probably would be very useful but do you really need to buy a piece of expensive hardware and pay a monthly fee to get the functionality of Dash’s product? Can’t this same functionality come via a smart phone/pda on an EVDO or 3G network? I’m curious if there are there ads or can companies buy search placement if you did type in the word ‘sushi’?
tomo
since they are charging you for the service i bet they are not going to much around with ads. i think you are right about this functionality is going to be built into mobile phones, but there could different class of devices that will bring to us similar services.
THis is a car device, and since I don’t much care for driving I would be happy with a mobile phone solution. A next generation blackberry or iphone could do the trick.
Check out my other post on Atheros buying a GPS chipset maker. Your and my wishes might come true faster than you might think :-)
price point is too high. i predict a loser here.
Dash Express is loaded to fascinate us with on the go telling us;
Features which I admire most,
The device is pretty expensive, But what is the real deal breaker is the cost of the service. Granted that Dash did not really have too many options in its vision of a connected GPS unit.
It could have gone the Kindle route and given access for free amortized by the cost of the device. Or they could have also used the cell phone data over bluetooth for connectivity. Either way at 600 bucks + 10 – 13 bucks a month – Expect a loser.
Cellphone GPS does a lot of the same things as Dash except the community traffic routing, Though not as cleanly as Dash. However cellphones as GPS have a fundamental limitation of screen size and the docking/undocking being cumbersome. Thus like the mac mini as a media centre approachg expect it to be relegated to geeks.
Looks like the folks at Dash have created a great product. Problem is that success is going to be hard earned.
Great product and great review Malik. Ok the price is a little bit high and I don’t know if common people would be ready to pay 10 or 13 USD per month. Indeed if you occasionally use your GPS device, you will not see any benefits to pay for the service but if your job need you to be often on the road maybe you will be interested. However, I am happy to see a product that can make life easiest by using all the web2.0 data availables. Today with the web2.0 or web3.0 euphoria, many entrepreneurs are creating some pretty applications or websites but that bring nothing more to the users and don’t make their life easier. And I can’t see any future of these kind of application. What do you think?
[...] For more views on the Dash Express, check out CrunchGear and GigaOm. [...]
Yuvamani – This is Mark from Dash. I couldn’t agree more with the sentiment of your statement “Looks like the folks at Dash have created a great product. Problem is that success is going to be hard earned.”
Yes, it will be hard earned, and we will have to prove our worth in the marketplace. Hopefully you will have the chance to personally give a Dash unit a try to determine how we have done.
Mark
I think you mean platial, not palatial.
http://www.platial.com
wireless man – thanks for catching that. appreciate the fresh set of eyes :-)
[...] die geeft je ook toegang tot de website waar je nog specifiekere voorkeuren kunt instellen. Zoals Om Malik uitlegt kun je zelfs aangeven dat je New York Yankees fan bent en op die manier via Platial ook aan [...]
It’s nice to see a company finally follow through on an effective location-based aggregation system. Everyone talks about location-based, personalized advertising, but really… why would I care about that? What I’d really want is a ‘real-time’ updating feed, particularly of travel warnings, traffic, weather, breaking news, and local blogs based on my location as I ride through remote locations… a feed that will go directly to my GPS device via a mobile (or even sat) network… and of course, I don’t want to build it myself!
I’m looking forward to seeing the Dash system. It’s been a long time coming – a real long time – since they first announced the company, and it’s nice to see that they have the product ready for intro.
Om
Happy Festivus to you and all
I think this is a great example of what will be more commonly available
but in addition to the issue of price purchase plus subscription raised by others before me
there is the question of the eventual redundancy with other devices
as the phone platforms continue to morph to include, digital entertainment, GPS, computing
the next thing I would like to see on the table is a bigger screen
and voice activation – as opposed to typing
and yes – more realistic pricing of the services
Beam me up Scotty
that’s my Festivus Wish
Miro
http://miroslodki.wordpress.com
[...] Navigators [...]
[...] Express, the Internet-connected GPS navigation device for your car, to sell for a whopping $600 — The Silicon Valley company, Dash, has raised closed to $42 million in backing from big-name [...]
[...] Express, the Internet-connected GPS navigation device for your car, to sell for a whopping $600 — The Silicon Valley company, Dash, has raised closed to $42 million in backing from big-name [...]
[...] sands shift fortnightly around these parts. As has been well reported by GigaOm and Venture Beat (here and here, respectively) Dash is expected to be available with a $600 price tag, plus $10-13 in [...]
[...] Higginbotham, Thursday, March 27, 2008 at 12:46 PM PT Comments (0) In December, Om reviewed the Dash Express Internet-connected navigation device. Commenters agreed that it looked great, but at $600 [...]
[...] device that puts Internet data to very good use. Here’s what I wrote about them back in December 2007: The Internet is not just about the browser, but rather it is about data and how one can use it to [...]
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[...] using a data connection in the car, they may stay ahead of phones. Dash Navigation, the makers of a personal navigation device we loved, attempted this, but is now licensing its software to other device makers. When it comes to [...]
[...] using a data connection in the car, they may stay ahead of phones. Dash Navigation, the makers of a personal navigation device we loved, attempted this, but is now licensing its software to other device makers. When it comes to [...]
[...] carried a $600 price tag (later reduced to $399), but the service won praise from many reviewers, including Om. The navigation device was designed with true mobile web access and interactivity in mind, but [...]
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