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Whitefish travel app launched

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| August 31, 2011 9:06 AM

A new travel app for smartphone users

was officially released last week by the Whitefish Convention and

Visitor Bureau. The free app, available for Motorola Droid

smartphones, was designed by Old Town Creative in Whitefish. The

iPhone app will be available this winter.

Old Town Creative owner John Frandsen

explains that the app has been developed over the past six months

with the Whitefish visitor in mind. Based on his travels, he

deciphered what visitors might be looking for when they are in a

new city.

With the touch of a finger, users of

the Whitefish app can find out more about local restaurants, parks,

trails, shopping and basic needs such as the location of public

restrooms.

The functions of the app are divided

into three areas.

“Show me” lets users narrow down their

search to a certain category, such as restaurants or parks. A

scrolling list appears that users can sort through.

“Near me” lets users then find out more

about a certain search result. Photos, in-depth information, and

any deals at a business will be posted.

Frandsen says that a big advantage to

this app over other travel apps — like Google Places or Yelp — is

that the information can be customized instantly by more than 130

WCVB member businesses. A restaurant, Frandsen said, could add a

daily special or update their entertainment information in real

time. Only WCVB partners are featured on the app.

“Businesses can have an impact on

visitors on a minute-by-minute basis,” Frandsen said.

The final area of the app lets users

“map it.” The smartphone’s cellular and global positioning signals

tell a user where they are and where the desired location is. A

blip on the map will track a user’s movement while they walk across

town.

Another advantage to the Whitefish app

is that it can be used offline without a cellular signal or hot

spot. Users who leave town and visit Glacier Park could pull up the

app and read more about Whitefish from their campsite, Frandsen

explained.

Unlike Yelp or Google Places, users

can’t comment or rate the featured places on the Whitefish app. The

WCVB is unsure how to handle the possibility of negative comments,

so they have decided to leave that function out, but the capability

is there, Frandsen said.

Whitefish is currently the only city in

Montana with a travel app.

“This is a little cutting edge for

Montana,” Frandsen said.

However, he noted, tech savvy visitors

from Seattle or Portland, Ore., would expect to have this service

available.

The next generation of the app could

feature a search bar to type in specific inquiries, such as

“coffee” or “bicycles.” Further out, Frandsen says augmented

reality could be the next big thing for the Whitefish travel

app.

A user could take a photo of a

restaurant or park and the app would give you detailed information

about the place.

To download the app, go online to

explorewhitefish.com

or visit the Android market.