My New Home: Sugars. Trees. Caring.

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My New Home: Sugars. Trees. Caring.

Sugars. Trees. Caring. That’s the new name for San Francisco—a place I call home.

But it could also be: Peanut. Butter. Brownie. It just depends on which 9 square meter(sqm) of land I’m staying at!

Three little words. That’s the solution London-based startup What3Words came up with to standardize the long and complicated address formats from around the world.

What this British startup did is very simple:

  1. They divided the globe into 57 trillion squares. Each of these square measures 9sqm
  2. They then used an algorithm to pick from a list of 40,000 or so dictionary words.
  3. They randomly assigned three words to each square.

Voila! My address is now: Sugars. Trees. Caring.

Of course, they ensured their word collection did not include offensive terms or homophones, so we don’t end up with an address like “Stupid. Die. Dye.”

However, I did discover Toxic. Manhole. Drivers as a three-word code for an area in Frankfurt.

(I must say, it’s fun navigating over that map to find out what combination of words pops up!)

At first, this idea may seem somewhat crazy. Can you imagine using an address made up of random words?

However, if you think about the challenges we have with our global addresses today, you might be the first to say, “This isn’t a bad idea, after all!”

While looking into this, various questions shuffled through my mind:

  1. How does this system handle addresses within a multistory building with many offices in it?
  2. What about the similar challenge for large residential apartment buildings in cities with multiple flats?
  3. How would you handle scenarios with two friends sharing an apartment or house? How do you ensure mail delivery to the right person?
  4. As Rob Karel says, how do you zone a neighborhood? If this is a random assignment, how do we group certain areas (people living in high-value zip codes, employees of a company who share the same address, and more)?
  5. What are the privacy implications? Today, for privacy purposes, postal services offer post boxes, making it possible to receive mail without revealing your physical address.
  6. What about countries like China, Japan, and Korea, where addresses are written in their native scripts?
  7. What happens when we misspell a word? Will the mail end up in a completely different part of the world?

Location domain is an important aspect of MDM (and one of my favorite topics that I’ve covered in a previous blog on geocoding). In my view, we’ve created a hugely inefficient way to locate places on Earth with our borders, local rules, and political systems.

As my old colleague and Twitter friend James Taylor pointed out, this, in fact, is a crowded space with many companies, such as Open Location Code, geohash.org, and MAPCODE, trying to solve this problem.

It’s nice to see startups trying to address this challenge! And only time will tell if the What3Words system will work.

In the meantime, I’ll be dreaming of a day when I can tell Amazon where I live in three words and expect one of their drones to deliver my package accurately, in the shortest time possible!

What do you think about the three-word address idea? What works? What doesn’t? I’d love to hear your thoughts! Leave a comment below or connect with me on Twitter at @MDMGeek to continue the conversation.

Special thanks to Prashant Kondi, who told me about What3Words.

Image courtesy of gubgib/freedigitalphotos.net

COMMENTS

3 Thoughts on My New Home: Sugars. Trees. Caring.
    Giles Rhys Jones
    12 Jul 2016
     6:20am

    How does this system handle addresses within a multistory building with many offices in it? What about the similar challenge for large residential apartment buildings in cities with multiple flats?
    – A 3 word address can be used to define the entrance or delivery point to a building along with office, flat number or floor. We are not intending to replace addresses but add a level of specificity that is often not there. We are also not a navigation or zoning system but a point reference system for a delivery point. There are also many places that are not covered by trseet addressing like a park, forrest, beach or assets like solar panels, fire hydrants or water points. we are used in all the circumstances.

    How would you handle scenarios with two friends sharing an apartment or house? How do you ensure mail delivery to the right person?
    – Put their name on the delivery?!

    What are the privacy implications? Today, for privacy purposes, postal services offer post boxes, making it possible to receive mail without revealing your physical address.
    – None. You can still use PO boxes, a street address or coordinates as you prefer, any of them can be augmented with a 3 word address.

    What about countries like China, Japan, and Korea, where addresses are written in their native scripts?
    – what3words is in 10 languages currently with 15 more on the way – this include Mongolian, Arabic and Russian character sets.

    What happens when we misspell a word? Will the mail end up in a completely different part of the world?
    – This is key to the system. We have put similar sounding words very far apart. If a tiny mistake is made it is incredibly obvious to both machine or human. Our system will understand that and suggest the closest match.

    Read more on how people are using it from emergency response on ski slopes, to labelling fire hydrants, to festivals to delivering mail in the favelas of Brazil to the countryside of Great Britain – what3words.com/news

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    Doug Sandler
    27 Aug 2016
     7:26pm

    Laugh. Drink. Podcast
    I’m sure that must be my address.
    Great post Prash.

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    Sid
    2 Dec 2016
     2:19am

    Hi Prashant,

    I have been following your blog for some timw now , the content of your posts says a lot on the experience and immense knowledge you hold in the field of master data management. Please keep on posting more so that your experience can be picked up to be used for many more hub implementations.

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