Most of the changes discussed below aren't that recent, but I'm personally starting to feel them a lot at this time as I finally need them. Let's talk about the old maps (classic) mode.
Currently the old maps layers available to me are:
- traffic
- photos
- bicycling
And contextual layers based on map display type and location:
- labels
- transit
- terrain
- 45'
I find all three primary layers to be useless to me personally with the occasional exception of Photos. Now, I wasn't a huge user of the Wikipedia layer myself, but not only do I see the appeal of having such a thing on top of maps, it just plain makes sense to have the best supplied and verified source of contextual information help the user figure out what they're looking at.
What really got me going though (and what prompted me to start this thread) is the apparent removal/hiding of the Weather layer. What. The. Hell. I mean, the layer is there (and can apparently be accessed via the GM API) - I can google for it and browse a map widget on a third party site that shows weather information, but the fact that I can't access it directly from Google Maps' own site raises serious questions about the sanity of the people who are responsible for maintaining the service.
Now - as for the new Google Maps. Who ever came up with that should be shot on sight, period. It's a piece of crap aimed at smart phone users who need to navigate to an address they already know. I use it for this purpose myself and it gets me by. For all other intents and purposes, the new maps are useless. On a side note - I'm not a My Places user, but apparently people are very pissed over something this basic missing from the new maps. And I empathize.
This doesn't, however, explain the completely irresponsible way they're treating the classic mode.
What happened there? Did some beat Google with a dumb stick or steal their candy bar to make them all bitter? Why are they screwing around with a proven and popular service that they've already monetized? Can someone shed some light on this?