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![]() Bill McKee wrote: "TGIF fishing tomorrow" wrote in message news:srScf.78418$An6.5863@trnddc08... "Bill McKee" wrote in message nk.net... "TGIF fishing tomorrow" wrote in message news:9kPcf.33511$Ny6.5779@trnddc06... Cristian Streng has been digging around in his Google Local For Mobile and found the following file "GpsEnabled: false." downloaded to his Nokia 6600 phone. What if it said "true" 50 miles out in blue water, looking for a restaurant, gas station, someone to fix that out-drive. Google Mobile to the rescue. With GPS Google's service becomes a huge threat to many of the companies that already sell handheld navigation system like TomTom and Navicore. The GPS feature could well be waiting for a second release of the service, or waiting for next-gen handsets with a GPS built into them, to become more widely used. There have been rumbles about Yahoo Maps linking up with mobile phone companies too. Won't be long before we can toss the GPS and just use our mobile phones. Has to have a GPS chip in the phone. When I worked as apps engineer for Texas Instruments, I worked with a company that was doing the first GPS and local info content on phones. We, as the phone chip supplier, had embedded a GPS module in a phone. You still have to get the public to buy the phones, and are enough going to spring for a 3G phone? I got a Samsung i730 ($600.00) free with a two year service agreement. If anyone can get product (GPS) in the consumers hands it the would be the communications companies. I paid 250-400 for my first GPS, a DeLorme that I was able to hook to my Palm Pilot. And a 1,000 plus for a Garmin GPSMAP 376C that was stolen after we used it once. What they charge for the connect time is going to be the major impediment. Just another new toy... Connect time only when trying to find local info. The GPS will work most of the time, except inside buildings, etc. Will be a poor receiver compared to a designated GPS. Actually the driving force for the GPS module is the 911 emergency network. Since the phone is not a fixed base, the emergency network has a hard time locating the exact whereabouts. Been a few people who crashed into brush near a busy highway and died waiting for help as they could not be located for hours to days. The cell phone companies can triangulate from the cell towers, but is only a rough guess. Triangulation is actually fairly accurate. More than a "rough guess". By the way, you act like you know what you're talking about, but you failed to mention anything about the phone being used needs to be Java enabled. |
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