I take back question #3: Why does the same source code create
different results?
It's because of the css-files, that habe to be stored locally.


On Jul 2, 8:35 am, Rolf Dohrmann <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I want to use the w3c geolocation service in android browsers. I
> tested with HTC Hero android 2.1.
>
> Here is the Google sample map that shows how geolocation should work:
>
> http://code.google.com/intl/de-DE/apis/maps/documentation/javascript/...
>
> Result: Map is shown. Infowindow: Location found using W3C standard.
>
> That's how it should be. But the infowindow points to a place on the
> map that is (probably) the next cell tower and not my precise
> location. It seems as if the GPS data are not processed.
>
> I decided to do some testing and copied the source code of the page
> and put it here:http://speibl.com/samples/v3-tutorial-17-geolocation1.html
>
> When I open this page in my smartphone then the screen shows nothing
> but a white browser viewport.
>
> My questions are:
>
> Should andorid 2.1 be able to do geolocation with GPS data?
> Why is no GPS data used for geolocation in the sample?
> Why does the same source code create different results?
>
> Any help is highly appreciated. If this can't be fixed I have to stop
> writing webapps and switch to native apps instead, hoping that
> geolocation works better with native apps.
>
> Thanks a lot,
> Rolf

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