Google chief criticises Apple over iPhone Maps app

Eric Schmidt, Google's executive chairman, has said the firm has not started work on a new Google Maps app for iOS, despite a clamour from iPhone owners disappointed by Apple's home-grown replacement.

Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, lends his support to the Telegraph's numeracy campaign
Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, said Google Maps is better than iOS6's new Maps app

Apple introduced its own mapping service last week when it began providing the highly anticipated update to its mobile software platform iOS6 and started selling the iPhone 5.

But users have complained that Apple's new map service, based on data from Dutch satnav maker TomTom, contains glaring geographical errors and lacks features that made Google Maps so popular.

"We think it would have been better if they had kept ours. But what do I know?" Mr Schmidt said in Tokyo.

"What were we going to do, force them not to change their mind? It's their call."

Until last week, iOS owners accounted for almost half of mobile traffic to Google Maps, but that figure is expected to tumble as they rapidly adopt iOS6. Apple said on Monday that its new operating system had already been installed on more than 100 million devices, more than a quarter of the global total.

Mr Schmidt said Google and Apple were in constant communication "at all kinds of levels." But he said any decision on whether Google Maps would be accepted as an application in the Apple App Store would have to be made by Apple.

"We have not done anything yet," he said.

Google and Apple were close partners with the original iPhone in 2007 and its inclusion of YouTube and Google Maps. But the ties between the two have been strained by the rise of Google's Android mobile operating system, now the world's leading platform for smartphones.

Schmidt said he hoped Google would remain Apple's search partner on the iPhone but said that question was up to Apple.

"I'm not doing any predictions. We want them to be our partner. We welcome that. I'm not going to speculate at all what they're going to do. They can answer that question as they see fit," he said.

Google provides Android free of charge and allows developers to add applications on an open basis, betting that by cultivating a bigger pool of users - now at over 500 million globally - it can make more money by providing search functions and selling advertising.

"Apple is the exception, and the Android system is the common model, which is why our market share is so much higher," Schmidt said, adding that success was often ignored by the media, which he said was "obsessed with Apple's marketing events and Apple's branding."

"That's great for Apple but the numbers are on our side," he said.

At one point, Mr Schmidt, who was in Japan to announce the launch of Google's Nexus tablet, used the device to show off a new function of Google Maps.

The feature allows users to shift their view of an area by moving the device in the air without touching the screen, similar to the effect of looking around.

"Take that Apple," he said, adding quickly, "That was a joke by the way."

Apple has promised that its Maps app will improve as it recieves reports of errors and iPhone owners add their own data.