Forget GPS, Hello WPS 286
No France writes "A company known as skyhook wireless has announced the commercial availability of its Wi-Fi Positioning System, or WPS. The company has compiled a database of every wireless access point it can find in a given city. When a mobile user running th Skyhook client is in a recorded area, their position is calculated by selecting the surrounding signals and comparing them to the reference database. Currently there are 25 US cities mapped, including New York City, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Apparently this device is accurate to within 20-40 meters, though one has to wonder how well it deals with people moving their wireless access points."
Too Simple (Score:5, Funny)
Skyhook? (Score:2, Interesting)
On a more serious note, this sounds suspicious
20 - 40 meters? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:20 - 40 meters? (Score:3, Funny)
AND we had to walk uphill both ways in the snow to get it.
Re:20 - 40 meters? (Score:5, Funny)
Let's say I'm within range of 50 access points all called 'Netgear'.
Where am I?
Re:20 - 40 meters? (Score:2, Informative)
> Where am I?
You do know that access points have MAC addresses, don't you? Every single MAC address is globally unique. They have a database of those, _not_ of the names.
Note that this database is going to get stale quickly, as people turn on new APs, move existing ones, or upgrade broken ones. Still, I think it's a great thing to keep in your arsenal of positioning tools.
Re:20 - 40 meters? (Score:2)
Where am I?
Utah?
Been there, done that! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Been there, done that! (Score:5, Interesting)
PlaceLab's big advantage is the ability to use multiple sources. Wardriving data is just one potential input. If you have a GPS receiver and a wi-fi card and a CDMA phone all connected, it'll use whichever is giving the most trustworthy results. So you can move smoothly between urban, rural, and indoor environments.
What absolutely makes me giggle is this: "Morgan adds that GPS typically only locates things within a few hundred meters, whereas the Wi-Fi location system can get within 20 to 40 meters of an object."
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Been there, done that! (Score:2)
What would be a cooler use for the wifi technology would be to have each of these access points have a small index on it in different categories. Thus you could have a category's such as "Coffee", "Food", "Sex workers", "Drugs" etc.
Then if you choose "Coffee" it would say something like: "44th and 3rd: Starbucks: BAD!!! Keep Going!"
To combat the problem of jokers just putting wrong crap out on
Re:Been there, done that! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Been there, done that! (Score:3, Informative)
I see what you're saying though, that a moving GPS on a single wardrive will have some error based on atmospheric effects, but repeated resurveys of an area on different days would tend to average these out, similar to the long-term averaging of a stationary GPS receiver.
My point was that the spokesdude in the article is either misquoted or misinformed about the accuracy of GPS, and that the neither Skyhoo
Re:Been there, done that! (Score:2, Informative)
Ekahau did this as well, but better. (Score:4, Informative)
The client software running on the tracked device measures the signal strength of the access points, forwards the data to the server which calculates the position. The big-brother scenario is avoided as long as you still have to install the client yourself.
The major drawback of the system is that it needs extensive calibration, since they are using not only the available access points, but also the signal strength of these. Normally they suggest calibration in a 5x5m (15x15ft) grid. More calibration points yield a more accurate result.
And now the piece of information you have all been waiting for: accuracy. With a good calibration this can yield accuracies of arround 1m. In my tests (indoor) the accuracies fluctuate a bit, but is at least better than 3m 95% of the time.
Just as the system described in the original post, Ekahau requires no extra hardware (we already have 2-300 APs on campus).
What a joke... (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, I can guess where I am to that accuracy. I thought GPSs where accurate within 5-8 meters nowadays. And this sounds really useful out in the open ocean, you know, where all those rouge wireless access points hang out.
Re:What a joke... (Score:2, Funny)
Ah, yes, the pink ones.
Re:What a joke... (Score:5, Informative)
I would imagine that supplementing GPS with other position determining mechanisms (like WiFi) could be beneficial in these circumstances.
Re:What a joke... (Score:2)
GPS gives accuracy in the 200 to 400m region due to multipath effects.
Don't you mean "multi-level effect along the path"?
GPS SA off since may 1, 2000 (Score:4, Informative)
Basically, the military figured out how to easily jam GPS in an area. But before then, there were GPS field units available that averaged out the error and got better than 2-3 meters so that it didn't really matter that much...
Re:What a joke... (Score:5, Informative)
Sub-meter accuracy: A little bit of position averaging + basic DGPS makes this easy for a stationary receiver, even when SA was on DGPS could cure the intentionally added errors. Very difficult to use with a moving receiver unless combined with an inertial navigation system. (Rare except in modern airplane navigational systems)
Millimeter accuracy: Also possible before SA was turned off, but required the receiver to be stationary for a long period of time, and required significant postprocessing of the data using a variant of DGPS. It still requires stationary receivers for nonmilitary systems.
About the only thing that can't be done without a method for decrypting the P code is sub-centimeter positioning of a moving object. Even with the P code available it can't be done without combining a high-grade inertial navigation system with the GPS system.
Re:What a joke... (Score:2)
I thought modern car navigation systems employed inertial navigation...?
They are equipped with speed and acceleration sensors, to extrapolate position when there is no good GPS reception. This could be called inertial navigation.
Not very accurate (Score:2)
Oh well maybe some fun could be had, like PHYSICAL address spoofing.
Re:Not very accurate (Score:3, Insightful)
My FAVORITE kind of slashdot post to respond to is this one. It's a combination of "I'm missing the point entirely" AND "I think I'm a lot smarter than I am." All rolled up into four little sentences.
WHY IS WPS USEFUL: Because there are a lot of urban areas where you can't get GPS signals for shit. Try New York City, for one--you're lucky if you can get two or three satell
Re:Not very accurate (Score:2)
On the other hand, the technology in
Dynamic data would be better (Score:3, Insightful)
Rather than trying to maintain a static database of AP locations and signal strengths, they should just put some live wifi nodes out there with real GPS on them and track the AP map in realtime as it shifts. Or they could give free service to a select small percentage of customers in return for attaching a GPS device and helping recalibrate the map with some background software once a month or something.
Bwhahaha (Score:2)
Weeeeeee! This mean we can nuke the GPS stationary satellites now? ''Shut 'em down guys!''
FWIW, there ARE stationary GPS satellites (kinda) (Score:2)
Read more at this site [garmin.com]...
Sometimes reality is better than you know... ;^)
Nope: Re:FWIW, there ARE stationary GPS satellites (Score:2)
The ground stations generate the corrections, but these are sent to stationary satellites in geosynchronous orbit. A WAAS capable GPS receiver can receive those signals in addition to the GPS signals with a compatible GPS receiver. This information is in the linked article.
It's actually pretty useless for car navigation systems, but good for marketing. Since SA was turned down, the WAAS signals only are
Only 20 to 40 meters? (Score:2, Insightful)
If this determines position by signal strength wouldn't it then be dependent on the type of antenna you were using with your WiFi card? Sometimes my signal moves around even in the same position or drops significantly lower in "dead spots". What if I'm using one of those crazy Pringles can antennas?
"Hey! 100% signal here, I'm here, over there and...yep, that a ways too!"
Anyhow, what an awesome idea, I mean, it's not like we have anything like this in exist
Re:Only 20 to 40 meters? (Score:2)
I'm thinking, worse than my wireless cards strength, what about that of the AP's around me? Wouldn't this have to work by triangulation, assuming all AP's broadcast with the same strength?
Re:Only 20 to 40 meters? (Score:2)
Re:Only 20 to 40 meters? (Score:2)
You misspelled "basement".
Re:Only 20 to 40 meters? (Score:2)
Moving APs (Score:2)
And thats exactly what it will not catch on. No company in their right mind would make products that counted on devices that aren't guarenteed to not be moved. Although it might work if the WiFi APs received GPS data and then acted as base stations to enhance the resolution of your GPS device. What I'd really like to see if GPS that worked in buildings and underground.
Re:Moving APs (Score:2)
Secondly, this may be very useful for uhm, uhh, well, I dunno...
Interesting. . . . (Score:5, Insightful)
GPS and WAAS operate on time signals and highly accurate positioning. Cell towers would be inherently more accurate since thier positions are accurately known and don't change (except under very unusual circumstances.
WiFi nodes come up and down constantly, and their position is rarely going to be accurately known by anyone but the person who installed it - and chances are they're not telling "you" exactly where the node is.
Given "walk around surveying" to map the nodes, it's not really a surprise they have accuracy that's no better than an early 2 channel GPS receiver.
And, as others have pointed out, if I'm in downtown San Francisco (or any other city) I don't need my GPS to tell me I'm at 5th and Townsend. For directions there's Mapquest, Google, Yahoo Maps, etc...
Interesting technology. But it sounds more like something a hobbiest would come up with than business.
Re:Interesting. . . . (Score:2)
WiFi APs don't even come close to such timing accuracy.
Re:Interesting. . . . (Score:2, Interesting)
What gets interesting is that AGPS is supposed to provide positioning indoors too, or in areas where GPS don't work so well. In a densely urban areas (think downtown NYC), acquiring the minimum 3 satellites for triangulation is not so easy. This is where using CellIDs and timing information from cellphone infrastructure to get your position is usef
Re:It's not a GPS replacement after all (Score:2)
Why would I need an *extra* device which is much more innacurate (APs don't stay the same nearly enough for this kind of data), and probably costs more too.
20-40 meters? (Score:5, Interesting)
MGIS-grade equipment [trimble.com] can now give positions with sub-foot ( 30cm) postprocessed accuracy. Survey-grade equipment can get within 5-10 cm.
As neat as WPS sounds, I don't think that anyone will be giving up GPS soon if WPS can't get any more accurate than 20-40 meters.
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2)
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2)
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2)
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:3, Interesting)
The system I work with can do sub-meter, sub centimeter with post-process. It retails for ~$40,000 plus a couple thou for a DGPS subscription and a few hundred to a couple thou for the DMI (odometer) equipment. And its precision falls off sharply (to as bad as 5 meters) in metropolitan areas where you get the GPS signal getting blocked by and bouncing off of tall buildings.
My
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:3, Informative)
GPS has come down in price incredibly in the last few years. You don't even need a subscription to a DGPS service anymore.
Open Source DGPS? (Score:2)
The premise seems simple enough: Have one GPS at a fixed position, and the other receives corrections via radio.
But I haven't been able to find anything.
My house sits on a large lot (over an acre) and I've wanted to survey it fairly accurately (within a foot at least) to recreate it digitally and be able to plan shops, gardens, landscaping, etc.
Re:Open Source DGPS? (Score:2)
If what you're talking about is free DGPS service, that does exist, but only in certain localities. UW-Madison has set up several beacons and differential transmitters around Madison, WI, and they are free for anyone to use. I believe that the Ohio Department of Transportation has done a similar thing for the entire state, but I'm not sure if t
Re:Open Source DGPS? (Score:2)
The fixed unit is on a known, surveyed point.
The other unit is out and about taking measurements. The fixed unit sends the mobile unit real-time data corrections.
Commercial DGPS equipment works in much the same way, but is very, very expensive.
Perhaps it's not possible to do what I'm thinking using a couple of old linux boxes, a couple off the shelf GPS's, and a means of communication (wi-fi, bluetooth, UHF / VHF radio
Re:Open Source DGPS? (Score:3, Interesting)
Several open source programs / projects are listed here [edu-observatory.org].
I haven't tried whether they work the way I want them to, or whether they provide the accuracy I crave...
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2, Insightful)
That being said, keep i
Re:20-40 meters? (Score:2)
The impression given by this story is that Skyhook are looking to compete directly with GPS. If t
Useless? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Useless? (Score:2)
forget gps? forget you! (Score:2)
Not to mention the tons of other problems such as access points moving and disappearing and the inharently weak signal makes wps less reliable under minor amounts of interference.
it's a neat trick for someone who has nothing better to do but with as advanced as gps is and the ability to track via cellphone I don't see this having any real market.
Not useful for typical GPS uses, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
What this is useful for is grander scale positioning without the need for a GPS device built into a portable device.
For example, timezones are far larger than 20-40ft. Laptops could be configured to automatically adjust the timezone setting to match the closest access points, no GPS device needed. A weather monitor utility could always automatically show the local weather. A star map could be configured to show the local sky. I'm sure many people can think of others.
Re:Not useful for typical GPS uses, but... (Score:2)
What's up with everybody talking about weather applications all the time? You guys don't have windows or something?
Re:Not useful for typical GPS uses, but... (Score:2)
Timezones are not that easily derived from position, you would need a quite large and fairly uptodate database of timezone borders for that.
And your favorite OS may not support timezone changes without restarting the system...
SSID or MACs? (Score:2)
Is that unique identifier such as SSID or access point MAC address (is that even accessible to a client)? Since a large number of people would check "Do not broadcast the SSID"
That's not a security measure... (Score:2, Informative)
What manual says to do this? Turning off SSID broadcast is *not* a security measure in any sense, at all.
For one thing, the SSID is included in every single packet that the access point sends out. Period. So getting it is easy with or without the SSID broadcast.
For another thing, turning off SSID doesn't prevent anybody from connecting to the network. It will prevent stupider displays
Re:SSID or MACs? (Score:2)
Sensationalist FUD (Score:2)
Morgan adds that GPS typically only locates things within a few hundred meters
Huh? I can get down to 6 meters and in AUS we don't have WAAS. This is just FUD.
And what happens if they move a wireless access point?
There are lots of applications that could do with indoors coverage, but this isn't a GPS killer.
I could see something like this being a complementary addition to a GPS. GPS+WPS or somethink like that. But the power of GPS is the ability to locate yourself anywhere on the plane
Top ten list reasons to use GPS instead (Score:2)
2) Better coverage area
3) Not reliant on the masses to provide APs and keep them in a consistent spot
4) GPS probably functions better in a blackout
5) Don't need a laptop (Not sure if WPS requires one)
And to finish off the list, I'm sure if you just scan the rest of the comments you will find 5 more.
Interesting idea, but it doesn't seem like a good bet when there is already a good solut
Inaccuracies (Score:2)
Bye bye war chalking ... (Score:2)
Btw, we've already been there and done positioning using local RF stuff.
I had this app that used a MIDP form to draw the way you moved. It used to go crazy when I was in the lift - but on the horizontal it used to work nicely. I couldn't release it because it uses a few undocumented Ericsson OPA APIs. It used to obtain timing advances of all n
Use taxi's for parasitic navigation. (Score:2)
GPS in Global (Score:2)
Can u imagine?!
Lost (Score:2)
GPS isn't a given (Score:2)
Nice to have a alternative.
Also, most new laptops have WiFi these days - not GPS.
That alone make this useful.
What about RPS? (Score:4, Interesting)
It woud have the following advangates:
Way smaller database
Way more coverage
It should be easy to do with the adevnt of software radio.
The only down side, is that you wouldn't need this company anymore!
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
(* though that's debatable - what if you're in an unfamiliar area, and it's the middle of the night so you can't find anyone to ask?)
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
Until somebody unplugs their AP and the friendly voice tells you the freeway has gone missing.
Really though, it's not like a GPS receiver is going to cost any more than an "WPS" receiver. Even dirt cheap GPS receivers are accurate withing about 10-15 feet, all day, every day.
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:5, Interesting)
You haven't tried to find a specific place in Tokyo or Osaka, have you?
Having a Gps is a life saver. You look up the place you want to go to on an online map, get the coordinates, and you're set. Without it, it's just too easy to miss the right building, mistake streets for each other or get lost in many other creative ways.
You could argue the other way round (and just as stupidly) - since there's one single highway or road in the entire area, why would you need a Gps to know which one you're on?
You've never been to Japan I see! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2, Funny)
I'll get a road map in my car the moment I get a car. I'll put it right next to my dictionary.
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
GPS systems suffer from the same problem too (just not to the same extent). Often, the navigation system can figure out what street you're on, if you were on it before you came near another street, and apply a sanity filter so it doesn't show you popping back and forth across the block. But that would be harder in the city.
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
Once the car fixes you position, there needs to be some serious problem to get lost, even in very tight corners.
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
Want to bet? I use mine most in the city. On my commute of about 30 miles, I hit the backup due to the sideways semi. I take the next exit whatever it it. I let the in car nav (GPS based) route me through the housing complex to get back on past the blockage.
Ever notice how many housing development
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:3, Interesting)
Imagine being able to enter meetings in your PIM software by saying to someone "Let's meet here tomorrow at five" and having the computer know where "here" is (it would also know who you're talking to, using facial recognition, but that's a different to
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
Imagine knowing where you are, and just saying "Let's meet in front of the main campus building tomorrow at five", without even having a computer with you...
(it would also know who you're talking to, using facial recognition, but that's a different topic...).
Imagine knowing who you're talking to without a computer...
Imagine your computer rem
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2)
Real men do NOT ask for directions!
Real men rely on technology.
Re:but there's really no point! (Score:2, Funny)
Determine your location in a building with an accuracy of somewhere inside 40 meters. Oh yeah, that's useful. Which floor again? Which room? Eh?
Re:Oh man. (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's see, a near-absolute positioning system based on immobile and unchanging (or extremely slowly) data, or something based on what could probably be described as a chaotic system? Not to be a jerk about it, but "Forget GPS"? More like "Ignore WPS".
Re:Oh man. (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, but my iPaq has Wi-Fi not GPS. And the screen can show a good map.
I could ensure I'm always carrying a GPS reciever or just a city map but you know what, I own both these and only carry them when I know I need them. Which in the case of GPS, is never.
Re:Oh man. (Score:2)
Re:Oh man. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Oh man. (Score:3, Insightful)
Assuming people don't get swap-happy and trade access points all over the place, the reliability should be very high, too.
Well, that would be an issue, wouldn't it? And, unlike, say, a system you own, other folks own and control these datapoints that your system depends on.
I have to say that I regularly reconfigure my WAP becasuse, well, it's mine, and I chose to use it like a toy. I notice that a great many of my neighbors have WAPs of their own, but, not so surprisingly, I find that everytime I look
Re:...what? (Score:2)
Re:Karma whore (Score:5, Funny)
I'm worried less about privacy, and more about how I'm going to tape my wireless access point to my roomba just to mess with them.
But then, with such poor accuracy, it's not like anyone will be worried about 40 or 50 feet here and there.
Re:The Positioning Sledgehammer (Score:4, Funny)
They only way a free AP sponsor would be interested if any of your friends are within 6 blocks would be to suggest you all meet at Starbucks.
Re:The Positioning Sledgehammer (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Positioning Sledgehammer (Score:2, Insightful)
All this effort to develop technology to determine your location is great if the reason for finding your location is because you're lost. But, otherwise, it seems like another case of the technology industry developing a new market for devices of questionable usage.
Wow, I've gotta really disagree here. If GPS were cheap enough, I can think of a lot of legitimate uses for it other than when I'm lost. Basically, it's useful for tracking things (where did I park my car? where did the car thief take my ca
Re:Cellular towers (Score:2)
They already do that.. that's how E911 works. My audiovox cellphone has it.. calculating my position based off the cell towers.
E911 (Score:2)
The fact that cell towers are in fixed positions and broadcast with strict timing requirements is why E911 works even when signals from less than 3 GPS satellites are available - the towers themselves are essentially used as "pseudolites" in the position calculations.
Re:Cellular towers (Score:2)
My phone has a menu in it that tells me what where I am, and where my nearest shops are (bank, petrol station, police station.. the kind of stuff you're likely to want in an unfamiliar city).
Re:Anyone need a job ? (Score:2)
I wouldn't reccomend making a long term career bet on this one...
Re:Forget GPS? (Score:2)
Do you have GPS in-building?
Re:Old news, with GSM this has been possible for a (Score:2)
http://www.zone-mr.net/?act=CellTrack [zone-mr.net]
The downside is that accuracy sucks. Even the 50m you gave is wishful thinking, and probably assumes a city with a high density of cells, and nice linear relation between signal strength and distance.