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Skyhook says: Who needs GPS?

Skyhook says: Who needs GPS?

Rafe Needleman Former Editor at Large
Rafe Needleman reviews mobile apps and products for fun, and picks startups apart when he gets bored. He has evaluated thousands of new companies, most of which have since gone out of business.
Rafe Needleman
2 min read

Many companies are trying to position themselves as leaders in the geolocation field this week, which makes sense since the sure-to-be-fascinating Where 2.0 conference kicks off next week. My favorite pitch from these companies so far is from Skyhook Wireless, which makes a geolocation system that uses Wi-Fi, not GPS satellites.

Here's how it works: Every Wi-Fi access point (every Internet device, in fact) has a unique, fixed-in-hardware machine identifier, which is transmitted whenever it is on. If you have a database of these AP identifiers and their physical locations, you can use the Wi-Fi radio in your laptop or PDA to triangulate against that data. It's solely a metropolitan solution, since lonely interstates tend not to be populated by access points. But there are big advantages to Wi-Fi over GPS. For one thing, more people have Wi-Fi radios than GPS receivers. Also, Wi-Fi works indoors, where GPS often fails.

Keeping the database of what's where up-to-date is the trick. Skyhook employs a fleet of 200 full-time people who have the job of "wardriving" up and down city streets in cars equipped with GPS receivers and Wi-Fi scanners, mapping the location of hot spots and access points. CEO Ted Morgan told me Skyhook has mapped 8 million access points in the top 100 metro areas.

What's this mean to you? Skyhook has a consumer application, Loki. It's a toolbar add-on for Firefox or Internet Explorer that will pinpoint your physical location on a Google map and, if you want, also connect you to other "geotagged" databases of restaurants, photos, people, and so on. This data will also enable location-focused online advertisements, which might be more relevant than current ads. It might also creep you out to get an advertisement that knows where you are.

Here in San Francisco, Loki nailed my location both at my home and the CNET office. In contrast, Microsoft's Location Finder (part of Windows Live Local) got my house right, but missed the CNET office location entirely, placing me in a residential neighborhood.

At Where 2.0, the company will release its APIs so that even more developers can tap in to the geolocation data the system can gather. Many of the services I've covered recently would benefit from having location data. Etsy could automatically display artisans close to you; SwapTree could coordinate trades with people nearby; and TurnHere could select videos shot close to where you are. Community sites and social networks are also going to eat this up.