Angelo Zanetti wrote:
Marcus Bointon wrote:
On 18 Jul 2005, at 20:56, Sebastian wrote:
The phone would have to have GPS capabilities..
Not true. The network knows what cell the phone is in(and cells are
pretty small in cities), and it knows where the cell is. This is the
mechanism that's
Marcus Bointon wrote:
> On 18 Jul 2005, at 20:56, Sebastian wrote:
>
>> The phone would have to have GPS capabilities..
>
>
> Not true. The network knows what cell the phone is in(and cells are
> pretty small in cities), and it knows where the cell is. This is the
> mechanism that's used for loc
On 18 Jul 2005, at 20:56, Sebastian wrote:
The phone would have to have GPS capabilities..
Not true. The network knows what cell the phone is in(and cells are
pretty small in cities), and it knows where the cell is. This is the
mechanism that's used for location dependent services (especia
Yea that would be very very hard.. besides if your friend would do the
trip in the usa, I doubt he can access the network at all ;)
In any case, the most realistic choice would be to buy a GPS-enabled
phone and write a nice Java app that does the job for you (maybe even
flash-lite can do it).
The phone would have to have GPS capabilities..
Ethilien wrote:
I think that would require tapping the cellphone network, which I
doubt they would let you do since it be a major violation of privacy,
because you could track the general location of anyone on their network.
Thomas wrote:
Hi
Hi
I did hear of a gps feature that's been tested here. Basically you subscribe
to a service by your provider and then you choose where to forward the data.
I've seen it in use in some company that tracks it's least selling
representatives (with their approval, off course).
With kind regards
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