On Fri, 28 Mar 2008 12:27:56 +0100, Andy Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

| What's the advantage of the other ways of locating yourself (GSM, WiFi)
| over GPS?

Power, and they work inside buildings away from windows.

Inside a building your essential location (as read from the GPS receiver the last time before entering the building) stays the same. Once you've come home, you're staying home until you go outside and get a GPS signal that tells you're somewhere else.

GSM at least will be powered anyway in the normal case, so polling that
every 10 minutes

Or whenever we get an interrupt from the accelerometers -- you can't really move if you don't accelerate.

or whatever is relatively cheap.  WLAN just needs to
come up long enough for a scan and can go back to sleep if not already
in use.  It can use GPS as an input too, I don't know the power
consumption but I know in my work room anyway where I spend most time,
at least the proprietary satnav we have here cannot get a signal unless
I go outside.  I guess it is the same in most buildings and that is
where people are most time so it can't be relied on I think.

That's the point: while you're inside a building, all you have to know is that you're still inside.

I really would love WLAN to scavenge open connections as well at the
same time (Holger mentioned this idea but I already cherished it).  So
if you walk down a street and you didn't have Internet connection for a
while, it keeps seeing new APs each scan and on the basis it deduces you
are moving, it can increase the frequency of waking for scan and trying
for association and DHCP on anything it finds, update mail and rss,
maybe alert you it scored a connection.

One has to be careful about that. IANAL, but it might be illegal in some countries to use someone's private network even if it's left unencrypted (compare: if an apartment door is left unlocked, it doesn't mean that it's ok for everyone to come in). Also, in many public places you'll get a page telling you that you have to pay or log in instead of any web page you request, and it can confuse the RSS parser, screw up page caches etc.


--
Alexey Feldgendler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[ICQ: 115226275] http://feldgendler.livejournal.com

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