Skyhook Wireless launches
Wi-Fi-based positioning system: The company has a new
name, but CEO Ted Morgan said in an interview last week that Skyhook's
intent in the same: using the location of Wi-Fi access points to
pinpoint urban and suburban locations just as a GPS (global
positioning satellite) receiver would. (You may remember Skyhook as
Quarterscope back when they won a cellular industry award in spring
2004.)
Skyhook has assembled a database of information about 1.5 million
access points across 25 major cities in the U.S. by driving every
street in every city. Their software records multiple data points per
sample for directionality. Fire up their software on a laptop, and it
compares the Wi-Fi information it sees with what's in the Skyhook
database, popping out a latitude and longitude within 20 to 40 meters.
The APs they rely on aren't per se public: they're the Wi-Fi gateways
operated in homes and businesses that spew their unique identifiers
and signal characteristics far beyond a home or an office building.
Skyhook tethers itself to the high number of fixed-location gateways
to deliver urban GPS-like reliability with lesser certainty as one
reaches into less-dense suburbs.
Morgan said that in most cities, there are "8 to 15 APs at any given
point to use." The baseline scan they performed is dynamically updated
based on client software, too. If a number of APs can be detected at a
certain location, new APs or ones that don't conform to the data can
be added and updated. This happens constantly. "The user environment
itself is maintaining and updating" the location database, Morgan
said. This means that shifts over time won't affect overall accuracy
and new information will supplement existing baselines. The company
also has contracts with delivery firms they haven't revealed to
perform ongoing scans.
Skyhook's first announced partner is CyberAngel Security Solutions,
which operates a laptop recovery system. The CyberAngel software
already uses Internet protocol address tracing and other tools once a
laptop is powered up. Add in GPS-like location awareness, and
CyberAngel may be able to call the police with a street address to
find a missing device.
Morgan stressed that Skyhook sees itself, as it has throughout its
two-year development process, as a complement to GPS, providing the
same kind of information in areas where GPS works less reliably or
where the cost of a GPS receiver is prohibitive for the purpose.
The company has a trial in Boston of a fleet of 50 vehicles in which
both GPS and Skyhook software is in use to better provide continuous
location and direction information. It's also easy to see this as an
add-on to car navigation systems in which Wi-Fi can be used to
transfer new information to cars along with its use as a sensor, or a
car could even be equipped with a 3G cell uplink that's part of the
overall system.
The Skyhook software requires Internet access to reach the backend
database, but Skyhook will also have versions that compress a kind of
signature of its AP information into about 7 megabytes for more
lightweight devices. 7 MB used to seem enormous, but cell phones are
shipping with gigabyte hard drives and Webcams, so it's not as big a
bar to entry as it used to be.
Morgan also sees a use for his system with voice over IP systems that
now face E911 requirements. He says that Skyhook offers the only
reasonable way for a mobile soft or hard VoIP phone to provide
continuous location information.
Morgan hopes that location-awareness becomes a routine tool that gets
integrated into software and Internet applications. Because so much of
the Internet has become increasingly focused on local content and
targeted advertising, it's of better utility to a user and better
value for an advertiser to know exactly where someone is--but, of
course, only if they want to reveal that.
Sybase Offers Free Linux Database09/09/2004 04:46 PM Sybase is offering a free version of its leading enterprise database
management system for Linux.
Firm offers new tools for database security
Firm offers new tools for database security07/29/2004 03:26 PM Guardium's suite of integrated database security applications will
include an automatic Sarbanes-Oxley compliance function.
Sesame Database Manager Offers New Editions
Sesame Database Manager Offers New Editions03/17/2005 03:36 AM Lantica Software, makers of Sesame Database Manager, today announced
that Sesame Database Manager is now available in three editions. Each
edition includes features designed to address the needs of a different
type of end user. [PRWEB Mar 16, 2005]
MacWorld SF 2004 Keynote Satellite Coordinates01/05/2004 09:41 AM
MacMinute posts the satellite coordinates for the MacWorld San
Francisco 2004 Keynote speech.
Ku-band Analog
-- Galaxy 3C Transponder 18 K
...
Why Pay for Your Database?03/20/2003 01:05 PM Despite the availability of open source databases that can be
downloaded for free or purchased cheaply with documentation and
support, most enterprises choose to spend big bucks on the big guns --
Oracle's 9i or IBM's DB2 -- for mission-critical applications. But
Oracle's databases can cost as much as $60,000 for a single license.
DNA Database
DNA Database03/19/2003 10:26 PM The world's first DNA database for missing persons offers new hope for
families and law enforcement alike.
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), sponsored by the
Institute of Education Sciences (IES) of the U.S. Department of
Education, produces the world’s premier database of journal and
non-journal education literature. The new ERIC online system, released
September 2004, provides the public with a centralized ERIC Web site
for searching the ERIC bibliographic database of more than 1.1 million
citations going back to 1966. Effective October 1, more than 107,000
full-text non-journal documents (issued 1993-2004), previously
available through fee-based services only, will be available for free.
This has been added to Research Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog. This will also be added to Academic Resources
2004-05 Internet MiniGuide and Education and Distance
Learning Resources 2004-05 Internet MiniGuide.
KDE Image Database 1.0.1
KDE Image Database 1.0.112/10/2003 09:06 PM A tool for indexing/browsing/searching large numbers of images.
Database deathmatch?01/19/2004 05:03 AM An article on Techweb reports on a just-published Evans study survey
of 550 database developers that shows Microsoft Access and SQL Server
use increased by 6% last year. At the same time, MySQL use increased
by 30% among the same group -- impressive, even counting that MySQL
started from a smaller base. Is MySQL poised to beat Microsoft in the
database arena?
Database applications with PHP04/11/2005 03:27 AM Learn how to use the Unified ODBC extension for PHP with Apache 2.
This article shows you how to Write database applications using the
Unified ODBC extension. The Unified ODBC extension for PHP offers a
common interface for developing PHP applications that connect to
databases through an Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) driver.