I thought that the Smithsonian was working with ... someone on this. Maybe 
Google since they are mapping the insides of some of our museums. The process 
they used goes something like this:

They send a person to walk around the building with a laptop measuring the 
varying strengths of signal from all of the wifi access points from many 
physical locations in the building and record that info into a database. Then 
as a person walks around the building, they know where they are based on the 
relative strengths of the various devices. If a device moves or is replaced, 
then you have to measure again to get a new database. 

You don't actually need to connect to the access point to know the strength of 
signal from it. Retail stores are also starting to use this technology to track 
what parts of the store people spend time in. They can track the location of a 
particular wifi device even if it's not connected to the network. So the tech 
exists, to work both ways. :) 

--Joel


Joel Richard
Lead Web Developer, Web Services Department
Smithsonian Libraries | http://library.si.edu/
(202) 633-1706 | richar...@si.edu

________________________________________
From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] on behalf of Cary Gordon 
[listu...@chillco.com]
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2015 11:52 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Wi-Fi location triangulation

It shouldn’t be impossible, but it would be tricky. Normally, users connect to 
one access point at a time. To locate a user would require connecting to two or 
three. I am sure that there is some utility library to do this, but it would 
need to be incorporated in an app and loaded on the user side.

Cary

> On Jan 18, 2015, at 7:24 AM, Fleming, Jason <flemi...@uncw.edu> wrote:
>
> Has anyone used Wi-Fi to determine a user's position within the library to 
> help them zero in on a book's location using their mobile browser?
>
> I've seen a number of interesting articles and posts, but haven't come across 
> any actual use cases. I'm wondering if all the metal shelving in a library 
> would make this impossible?
>
> Jason Fleming
> University of North Carolina Wilmington
> flemi...@uncw.edu

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