|
|
|

Article Index 1
2
3
4
Find Yourself With Your Cell Phone
A few years ago, the FCC
mandated that cell phones have GPS capacity or some
form of location mechanism so that the phone and its
operator could be located in the case of a 911 call.
The law took effect at the beginning of 2005. Today,
over one hundred million cell phones in this country
have a chip that provides GPS capacity and
increasingly, software services are emerging that
put them to use.
GPS stands for Global Positioning Software and it
simply means that an equipped device can be located
by the satellites overhead in geosynchronous orbit
that are built to pick up GPS signals. While the
cell phone companies initially were reluctant to
participate, they have begun to develop subscription
services that provide software to help you use the
tracking system.
The GPS technology without bells and whistles simply
pinpoints the location of your cell phone. A techie
named Chuck Fletcher developed a freeware program
called Mologogo that allows one Mologogo equipped
phone to locate other, similarly equipped phones.
It's become a method for a few thousand cell owners
to keep track of each other, but hasn't moved much
beyond that.
Verizon and Sprint have developed subscription
services that will allow your phone to pinpoint your
location, complete with overhead map. It's a mobile
driving assistance tool that should enjoy some
degree of popularity. The cell phone companies have
been reticent to provide general access to the GPS
feature in their phones, because it can be a
sensitive privacy issue - especially if you're
somewhere you're not supposed to be.
More to the point, however, is the fact that the
cell operators see the GPS technology as a potential
profit center. One way to get driving directions
with a GPS cell phone is to subscribe to a GPS
navigation service. Nextel offers two:
Televigation's TeleNav and Motorola's ViaMoto. Using
the GPS and Nextel's network, TeleNav and ViaMoto
can send driving directions to a Nextel phone. If
you make a wrong turn or miss a street, the service
detects that you're off the route and new route is
calculated to put you back on track.
Aside from the basic mapping and location support,
if you're a Sprint-Nextel customer you can subscribe
to a service called Smarter Agent. This GPS
supported technology is tied to a real estate
database and can provide you with information on
home sales in the neighborhood where you and your
cell phone happen to be located. It will identify
which homes have sold in the neighborhood in the
last few years, and for what price.
Verizon has a service called getGOING. You can
download applications such as AtlasBook Places. With
AtlasBook Places you can get maps and directions and
navigate to nearby places. An option is a web-based
planning tool. These functions are available on
selected Verizon phones.
There's an inherent privacy issue here that is a
challenge for the major cell providers.
Sprint-Nextel is the only company that has always
allowed access to the GPS chips in its handsets.
They have a strict privacy agreement with any third
party service providers such as Smart Agent. If you
download software that is not provided through
Nextel, however, you have no such guarantee of
privacy. This issue, aside from dollar signs, is
what has kept GPS functionality largely an in-house
development of the cell phone companies.
Madison Lockwood is a customer relations
associate, specializing in small business
development, for Apollo Hosting. Apollo Hosting
provides website hosting ecommerce hosting, vps
hosting, and web design services to a wide range of
customers.
back to
answering service - or to Article Index
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
click
for top
|