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Writing Messages In Empty Space With GPS

meiocyte writes: "This New Scientist story about leaving messages in empty space seems very cool. You upload a message (or perhaps a picture, audio clip, etc.), it gets tagged with your GPS coordinates, and then anyone else who goes there gets to see/hear it. Every GPS-resolvable parcel of empty space will have its own web site!" Combine this with user-forums, and restaurant ratings could take on a whole new dimension. Update: 01/20 23:28 GMT by T : Oops -- looks like I duped Michael. Sorry.

5 of 278 comments (clear)

  1. I don't like it... by JanneM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great - we can get spammed on GPS as well... Just imagine someone like a soda manufacturer buying a stretch of highway for a month, for example. If you use GPS navigation in your car, you'll get incessant harping about how thirsty you are, and how that particular brand of soda apparently makes your life better in one way or another.

    /Janne

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    1. Re:I don't like it... by H310iSe · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why be so negative, I've been waiting for this since I first heard the idea (it was somehow related to Douglas Adam's website, I think he was talking about actually making a hitchhiker's guide to the earth w/ this type of technology)

      The solution to your objection is simple, you create competing services - a BLOG-style service will leave personal notes ("I was looking up right here when I notice the tree limb above me was 1/2 sawed through. you might want to hurry along"), adverts (I really do want to know where the nearest beer is sometimes), etc. You'd 'subscribe' to the sites that interest you.

      I can't WAIT to write impressions, all the weird things I see when I walk through my day and read what other people are thinking about/seeing standing wherever I am. Architecture and history tutorials / commentary (think if the guy from the movie "cruising" got one of these, I'd *subscribe* to his channel!). And truely helpful tourist tips, imagine Lonely Planet's offerings?!?

      Come on, this is Amazing Technology We Want, don't dismiss it as another method for delivering advirtisements.

      --
      closed minded is as closed minded does
  2. pirates! by lowtekneq · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yar ho ho, maybe i can use it to hide my Mp3/divx booty! X marks the spot. Kinda wierd how history repeats itself (in a way)

    --
    Carpe meam simiam!
  3. Some Research @ Cornell by Tony.Tang · · Score: 5, Informative
    Interesting. The HCI group at Cornell has done some work in this area. Their project involved GPS as well, and allowed students to "tag" objects with information. The project, called "CampusAware" was conceived as a system for tours; that is, a person on a tour could bring around a device, and it would beep when one came around a "tagged" area. A button press would reveal the information that was tagged there.

    The idea was that students could tag places as they saw fit.

    You can read more about the projects here, and here.

  4. How this would work in the world by maggard · · Score: 5, Interesting
    First of all folks seem to think this would somehow be embedded in GPS - it wouldn't be. Nor would there necessarily be a canonical database of these, rather folks would likely subscribe or otherwise get access to many databases.

    Your phone company might offer one as a premie for use with the phone. Of course it would likely have all of the restrictions that a phone company would impose (basically no content but for hotlinks to merchants and a few public services websites.)

    Your local mainstream and alternative papers might offer their own with reviews and schedules and of course links. Stand in front of a bus stop and see its schedule, wander in front of a theater and see the show times and buy them with a click. Walk into a store and you can look up their advert or just get dumped to their website (or whoever paid for those coordinates on that database.)

    Business and schools would use these to tag their own space. There'd likely be an IS database with notes on the hardware closet one is next to, directions for following a cable run through the building. University students would doubtless have their own databases with tips for which corners are good for sex and that the pizza in that cafe is rumored to have rat bits.

    Credit cards would likely love these. Use Amex and you'd have access to the Amex database listing only merchants who take their cards and likely a copy of the Zagats guide or something.

    Sure lots of graffiti could be a problem in some public databases, as with intrusive or inappropriate advertising. That's why I expect to see multiple databases with some sort of pruning or content enforcement mechanism (heck, /. moderation for tags.) The same as the web the useful ones would flourish, the others wither away, and need to find a funding source.

    We've already seen something like this for the web. I've lost track of their names but a few years ago there was a spate of plugins that would allow folks to annotate webpages. If you had BrandA plugin when you went to a webpage with a note "attached" it could appear superimposed. They weren't actually on the webpage but served from the plugin's host database and left by other visitors. There was much outcry but what really killed the whole thing was the graffiti.

    However I expect that there are ways around the graffiti problem (paying folks to keep the database clean or even moderation, and of course commercial ones) and we could see space tagging work be a breakthrough product for phones.

    My own list of dream apps:

    • Restaurant reviews from the local papers
    • Traffic news relevant to my location
    • Public transit schedules from where I'm standing or the nearest station/stop with estimated times & delay notification
    • Find the nearest ATM on my network
    • Browse the website of the store I'm in and easily jump to their competition down the street's website
    • Advertise my need for a cab to my location and see who shows up first
    • Maintain a list of personal notes attached to places: Where we first kissed, the salesperson I liked here was "Sue" etc.
    • Share notes with my friends & family: The chocolate mousse in this place is gelatinous...
    • Stand outside a bar or sit on a train and look up if anyone I like has listed themselves as being nearby (by their choice on our circle-of-friends tagsite.)
    Again, these wouldn't all be in big public databases but in a variety, some general public others subscription and some private.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.