- The latest drop in Google’s features could be a great victory for summer trips
- As with flights, you can now follow prices and define alerts for hotels
- Google Maps can also draw potential places to visit screenshots
If you are a fan of Google flights, especially for price monitoring data and how the current prices you see are in relation to other days, you enjoy. As part of a drop of features adapted to summer trips to come, Google aims to do for hotels what he did for flights.
And yes, it’s as good as it may seem. Now when you are looking for hotels on Google, you will be able to ask the search giant to follow prices. Essentially, you activate the functionality, then get an alert if there is a price drop.
Similar to thefts, you can be a bit descriptive, defining a price range or a “don’t mind if it does not fall” here. It will even take into account a star note if you have a selected and in the general area where you are looking for a hotel.
Google deploys this new hotel prices monitoring in the world on desktop and mobile. Once available, you will find research, completing the historical knowledge of the history of hotel prices.
This feature focused on the hotel is launched alongside other new Google features, all billed under the preparation of summer trips. The possibility of configuring price alerts for hotels is undoubtedly the most user -friendly functionality and could have the most significant impact. This could potentially help you save on a stay.
Another new feature that could help you prepare for a trip is to support screenshot in Google Maps. If you activate it, Google Maps will examine the photos and deliver a list of places you have captured screening.
So, if you have captured tiktoks on the best places to eat in New York or maybe a list of the best ice cream spots in Boston, you will not need to search all to find each place mentioned.
Instead, with IA help, Google Maps will examine your screenshots, find these spots and list them well in a practical list for you. He will live in the application in a list entitled “screenshots”, and this feature is fully optional.
This feature could be useful, but since screenshots are not only used to travel or remember specific places, this could also be a bit of a confidentiality problem.
It is opt-in and not by default, but it now takes place on mobile devices with us in English on iOS first, with Android following shortly.