June 28, 2006
With a Cellphone as My Guide
By JOHN MARKOFF and MARTIN FACKLER

Think of it as a divining rod for the information age.

If you stand on a street corner in Tokyo today you can point a  
specialized cellphone at a hotel, a restaurant or a historical  
monument, and with the press of a button the phone will display  
information from the Internet describing the object you are looking at.

The new service is made possible by the efforts of three Japanese  
companies and GeoVector, a small American technology firm, and it  
represents a missing link between cyberspace and the physical world.

The phones combine satellite-based navigation, precise to within 30  
feet or less, with an electronic compass to provide a new dimension  
of orientation. Connect the device to the Internet and it is possible  
to overlay the point-and-click simplicity of a computer screen on top  
of the real world.

The technology is being seen first in Japan because emergency  
regulations there require cellphones by next year to have receivers  
using the satellite-based Global Positioning System to establish  
their location.

In the United States, carriers have the option of a less precise  
locating technology that calculates a phone's position based on  
proximity to cellphone towers, a method precise only to within 100  
yards or so.

Only two American carriers are using the G.P.S. technology, and none  
have announced plans to add a compass. As a result, analysts say  
Japan will have a head start of several years in what many analysts  
say will be a new frontier for mobile devices.

"People are underestimating the power of geographic search," said  
Kanwar Chadha, chief executive of Sirf Technology, a Silicon Valley  
maker of satellite-navigation gear.

The idea came to GeoVector's founders, John Ellenby and his son  
Thomas, one night in 1991 on a sailboat off the coast of Mexico. To  
compensate for the elder Mr. Ellenby's poor sense of direction, the  
two men decided that tying together a compass, a Global Positioning  
System receiver and binoculars would make it possible simply to point  
at an object or a navigational landmark to identify it.

Now that vision is taking commercial shape in the Japanese phones,  
which use software and technology developed by the Ellenbys. The  
system already provides detailed descriptive information or  
advertisements about more than 700,000 locations in Japan, relayed to  
the cellphones over the Internet.

One subscriber, Koichi Matsunuma, walked through the crowds in  
Tokyo's neon-drenched Shinjuku shopping district on Saturday, eyes  
locked on his silver cellphone as he weaved down narrow alleys. An  
arrow on the small screen pointed the way to his destination, a  
business hotel.

"There it is," said Mr. Matsunuma, a 34-year-old administrative  
worker at a Tokyo music college. "Now, I just wish this screen would  
let me make reservations as well."

Mr. Matsunuma showed how it works on a Shinjuku street. He selected  
"lodgings" on the screen. Then he pointed his phone toward a cluster  
of tall buildings. A list of hotels in that area popped up, with  
distances. He chose the closest one, about a quarter-mile away. An  
arrow appeared to show him the way, and in the upper left corner the  
number of meters ticked down as he got closer. Another click, and he  
could see a map showing both his and the hotel's locations.

Mr. Matsunuma said he used the service frequently in unfamiliar  
neighborhoods. But it came in most handy one day when he was  
strolling with his wife in a Tokyo park, and he used it on the spur  
of the moment to find a Southeast Asian restaurant for lunch.

The point-and-click idea could solve one of the most potentially  
annoying side effects of local wireless advertising. In the movie  
"Minority Report," as Tom Cruise's character moved through an urban  
setting, walls that identified him sent a barrage of personally  
tailored visual advertising. Industry executives are afraid that  
similar wireless spam may come to plague cellphones and other  
portable devices in the future.

"It's like getting junk faxes; nobody wants that," said Marc  
Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a  
policy group in Washington. "To the degree you are proactive, the  
more information that is available to you, the more satisfied you are  
likely to be."

With the GeoVector technology, control is given over to the user, who  
gets information only from what he or she points at.

The Ellenbys have developed software that makes it possible to add  
location-based tourism information, advertising, mobile Yellow Pages  
and entertainment, as well as functions for locating friends.  
Microsoft was an underwriter of GeoVector development work several  
years ago.

"We believe we're the holy grail for local search," said Peter  
Ellenby, another son of John Ellenby and director of new media at  
GeoVector.

The GeoVector approach is not the only way that location and  
direction information can be acquired. Currently G.P.S.-based systems  
use voice commands to supplement on-screen maps in car dashboards,  
for example. Similarly, many cellphone map systems provide written or  
spoken directions to users. But the Ellenbys maintain that a built-in  
compass is a more direct and less confusing way of navigating in  
urban environments.

The GeoVector service was introduced commercially this year in Japan  
by KDDI, a cellular carrier, in partnership with NEC Magnus  
Communications, a networking company, and Mapion, a company that  
distributes map-based information over the Internet. It is currently  
available on three handsets from Sony Ericsson.

In addition to a built-in high-tech compass, the service requires  
pinpoint accuracy available in urban areas only when satellite-based  
G.P.S. is augmented with terrestrial radio. The new Japanese systems  
are routinely able to offer accuracy of better than 30 feet even in  
urban areas where tall buildings frequently obstruct a direct view of  
the satellites, Mr. Ellenby said. In trials in Tokyo, he said, he had  
seen accuracies as precise as six feet.

Patrick Bray, a GeoVector representative in Japan, estimated that 1.2  
million to 1.5 million of the handsets had been sold. GeoVector and  
its partners said they did not know how many people were actually  
using the service, because it is free and available through a public  
Web site. But they said they planned in September to offer a fee- 
based premium service, with a bigger database and more detailed maps.  
Juichi Yamazaki, an assistant manager at NEC Magnus, said the  
companies expected 200,000 paying users in the first 12 months.

He said the number of users would also rise as other applications  
using the technology became available. NEC is testing a game that  
turns cellphones into imaginary fly rods, with users pointing where  
and how far to cast. Another idea is to help users rearrange their  
furniture in accordance with feng shui, a traditional Chinese belief  
in the benefits of letting life forces flow unimpeded through rooms  
and buildings.

The market in the United States has yet to be developed. Verizon and  
Sprint Nextel are the only major American carriers that have put  
G.P.S. receivers in cellphone handsets.

"The main problem is the carriers," said Kenneth L. Dulaney, a  
wireless industry analyst at the Gartner Group. Although some  
cellular companies are now offering location-based software  
applications on handsets, none have taken advantage of the  
technology's potential, he said, adding, "They don't seem to have any  
insight."

Sirf Technology, which makes chips that incorporate the satellite  
receiver and compass into cellphones, said they added less than $10  
to the cost of a handset.

Several industry analysts said putting location-based information on  
cellphones would be a logical step for search engine companies  
looking for ways to increase advertising revenues. Microsoft has  
already moved into the cellular handset realm with its Windows Mobile  
software, and Google is rumored to be working on a Google phone.

According to the market research firm Frost & Sullivan, the American  
market for location-based applications of all kinds will grow from  
$90 million last year to about $600 million in 2008.

It is perhaps fitting that the elder Mr. Ellenby, a computer  
executive at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center in the 1970's, is a  
pioneer of geolocation technology. In the 1980's he founded Grid  
Computer, the first maker of light clamshell portable computers, an  
idea taken from work done by a group of Xerox researchers.

A decade later a Xerox researcher, Mark Weiser, came up with a  
radically different idea — ubiquitous computing — in which tiny  
computers disappear into virtually every workaday object to add  
intelligence to the everyday world. Location-aware cellphones are  
clearly in that spirit.


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