An iPhone geolocation app that has been very quiet about its plans to date has been San Francisco based PlacePop.
PlacePop is emerging out of Ooga Labs – a San Francisco based incubator that is also behind companies like Medpedia, a user generated database of health and medicine information, and Wonderhill, a social gaming company.
Before you dismiss PlacePop as just another “me too” check-in app, you may want to check out the people involved in this project.
Ooga Labs was founded by James Currier and Stan Chudnovsky. James and Stan earned a nice exit for early social quiz company Tickle by selling it to Monster.com in 2005, and since then have been active investors and board members in a number of high profile start-ups.
And the PlacePop team is also impressive.
Ex Friendster President Kent Lindstrom has been leading PlacePop since May of 2009. Lindstrom played a big role in orchestrating Friendster’s turn around, in the process helping the company raise $30M in funding from likes of Kleiner Perkins and Benchmark Capital.
This would appear to be serious team.
But let’s get back to the app.
To date, we’ve seen most of the check-in iPhone apps fall somewhere along a continuum ranging from pure utility (Yelp), to pure game (MyTown). Foursquare and Gowalla both sit somewhere in between.
PlacePop has placed itself squarely on the utility end of the continuum. They are aggregating content from Yelp and Twitter, making their service immediately helpful in terms of venue discovery. They are also pretty clear about their intentions to be a “frequent flier program for everything.” PlacePop thinks that check-ins should earn you rewards, not badges and points.
In talking to PlacePop community manager Julia Graham, it sounds like a lot of market research was conducted to determine their direction. They aren’t convinced that adding game elements is a winning strategy, at least in terms of reaching mainstream users.
In terms of features, PlacePop isn’t bringing much new to the table yet. They do have a nice photo tool that let’s you add photos of venues – much like Gowalla’s recent addition.
And there are still some glaring omissions, like the ability to find friends using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
But given the team and resources behind this effort, I think PlacePop is worth keeping an eye on.



![photo Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=79c85d83-7122-4457-b4e1-5c2fc96acd06)












PlacePop has some catching up to do, and you have to wonder whether they'll get squeezed by the behemoth on the Utility end – Yelp – and games like Foursquare and Gowalla. Still it's a great team and definitely an App worth watching.
Here's a mix of top check-in Apps from AppsFire, which you can share with friends or embed on your blog: http://bit.ly/top-check-in-apps
You can also create your own App Mixes with the AppsFire widget maker: http://appsfire.com/widgetmaker.php
Jonathan from AppsFire.com
Julia from @placepop actually emailed me today to check this app out…. which is fine, that's what I do.
So you mentioned one of my issues with it, the inability (at this time) to add friends via facebook and/or twitter.
- The proximity of venues seems way off, pulling lots of random venues from all around.
- I can checkin almost anywhere within about a 5mile or so radius of my current location. Within about 10 minutes I had racked up a few bronze medals.
- You can also checkin anywhere online… to test I was watching Deadliest Catch and tried to check into Dutch Harbor, I got the Unalaska Airport was the closest w/o messing with it too long… but the point is from my living room in Chandler Arizona I successfully checked into “Unalaska, AK 99692″
I think foursquare has proven that a proximity filter along with the scoring is important and shouldn't be overlooked. The only thing it does is lock you out from checking in for about 3-5 minutes or so. But if you wait, just checkin wherever you'd like.
- I get a 404 page with a ocean view map quite often when using the site
- The layout and design is nice however, clean.
- The fact they have “first 100 people to checkin 10 times at Target locations wins a $10 gift card” and the fact there is no cheating / proximity enforcement involved makes that a pretty quick way to get a $10 gift card kids. Same with their Black Eyed Peas thing.
- I like how they're pulling yelp into the venues… They have to do that however as they're starting late in the game.
I'd say the app is worth a look but not ready for prime-time yet.