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Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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Take the examples above: Almost all of them can be used for free with the current infrastructure. It's a matter of software, not databases. Wikipedia is a high quality source of location based information and is free. XMPP-based chat services can exchange the locations of users for free, all we need is a client that goes 'beep' when someone's near you. (I live in Europe, too, and I know quite a lot of people who'd get excited about this.) So what we don't yet have (or do we? I don't know) is the free database for shops and cash machines. Such a database would be much easier to create than a complex project like, say, openstreetmap, so I'm very confident it will be available once people see the need for it.. (I mean, geourl even sorts websites by location, why wouldn't someone come up with "yellow pages" in wiki-style with latitude/longitude?) |
Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
Well you can always search then parse yell.com and then do a lookup of the postcode lat/long, so the data is actually already available.
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Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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btw, Nokia has ALREADY patented the location/contact synergy idea. |
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About a free database for shops, only one word comes to mind: spam. If you know quite a lot of people who would get excited about a location-based XMMP client, then why don't you start a project? At least, it could be made really private, with strong encryption ensuring that only the people you want have access to your location. (I am painting everything in black here, but I think I am raising valid arguments. And when everyone gets excited about a project, someone has to play the devil's advocate. ;) ) |
Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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Roger. |
Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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Yes, I am saying just that. You severely underestimate the difficulty in maintaining a database like this one. For Wikipedia, the articles do not need to be revised every second week. Restaurants, shops, internet cafes with wifi access etc... come and go all the time. Commercial offers like the ones from teleatlas and navteq have the same problem and their databases (e.g. the one for wifi you have on Nokia maps) are severely outdated. What is the use of location based services if the database is full of obsolete links? Openstreetmap has this problem as well, and the quality of their user drawn maps is also poor. The good quality maps which are sometimes available almost always come from other sources (like publicly available survey data) and even then when you actually go on the spot, you often find out that things have changed. Navteq and teleatlas redo their maps 4 times a year and they have links to the road planning authorities in most countries who inform them of planned changes, aerial photography and have a fleet of gps equipped cars to roam the streets. |
Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
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When I think of such a database, I think of the quality standards set by commercial sources now, like for example the POIs I bought with my navigation software. And they are low. Really low. When there's 50 restaurants and cafés near you, they'll show 10. They don't show shops at all, there's no category for them. They don't provide any means to update even the sparse data they have in real time, you get new POIs when new map data is available, usually every 3 months or so. In fact, the whole thing is a mess. Still it's useful for me. It's not complete, it's out of date, but it's good enough for every day use. (FCS, we used to have printed city guides, how up to date and complete were they?) Community-driven projects on a wiki-style basis cannot get any worse. The aim is not to have an entry in the database for each and every shop in the world. The aim is to have at least some useful data mainly for the more populated areas, and this should be fairly simple. The only challenge is to overcome the chicken-egg problem: People first need to use a service, and then some of them might want to improve it by contributing themselves. We're not even at a stage right now where people have the hardware to consume the data (=hardware that knows where you are and is always connected to the internet). Some cell phones, yes, but they're new and not wide-spread. The N810 is such a device, too. But it will take more time until there's the critical mass. |
Re: Maemo 5: HSPA is good for location based services
Whenever I try to think of the usefulness of location based services I start thinking of Minority Report, and the urge goes away quickly.. ;)
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