On the Spot Systems was designed to help restaurants and other businesses gain immediate feedback from customers. The idea: you find a survey based on your location and take it “right there” on you smartphone. Now, the provider has tapped into what I understand is an existing TSA customer survey (not this one, is it?), allowing those at the correct airport (based on GPS in the iPhone) get to the questionnaire directly. Ideally, you can’t fill out the survey for Dallas if you are (or the phone thinks you are) in New York.
There’s a free iPhone app; those on other platforms, Android and Blackberry, need to use a mobile browser to go to surveyonthespot.com and enter the TSA survey code to take the survey, The company says it’ll pass all info on to TSA, but it seems TSA is not involved. But then, they are busy with other things.
- press release
by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 06:00 AM |
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The Web is abuzz about the latest Apple patents apps made public on the last day of last year: Location Indcator, 20090325603 and Position Fix Indicator, 20090326815
Abstracts:
Location Sharing: Abstract - Geographic location data is sent from a first device to a second device with a modified message to signal the presence of geographic location data associated with the message. The message can include (or attach) the geographic location data or file, or the message can include a link to a network-based resource which the second device can use to obtain the geographic location data. In some implementations, when a user of the first device views a location on a map display of the first device, a graphical user interface is presented to allow the user to select an option to share the geographic location with the second device. The second device receives geographic location data or a link from the first device which can trigger a map display on the second device showing the location of the first device and, optionally, the location of the second device.
Position Fix Indicator: Abstract - In some implementations, a method includes: obtaining a first position measure at a mobile device indicating a geographic area where the mobile device is located, presenting a first graphical indicator on a user interface representing the geographic area; obtaining a second position measure at the mobile device, indicating a location associated with the mobile device, and within the geographic area; and presenting a second graphical indicator on the user interface representing the location within the geographic area.
- via Patently Apple, Into Mobile and reader Larry
by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 06:00 AM |
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Brentwood, TN is facing a challenge many municipalities are: cell phones replacing landlines. The challenge for public safety staff is how to contact those without landlines when a neighborhood situation (utility outage, crime, lost child, etc) pops up. Brentwood is asking residents to register their cell phone numbers, along with their addresses, to insure they are called via the reverse 911 system on those devices.
The one comment to the article is concerned about that sort of registration meaning the city knows where you are all the time.
- The Tenneseean
David Mark, GIS Manager at the City of Vancouver is not about to step on the toes of hackers who built a garbage day calendar and reminder message service. An app built during a “hacker event” has 150 subscribers and many using a calendar feed. For now, says Mark, “By and large we do our share by making the data available,” and won’t link his site to the app or build one like it.
- Vancouver Currier
Johnston, IA has new sign markers on its trails equipped with numbers that represent a GPS coordinate. The idea is that in case of an emergency, a caller could give the numbers to 911 operators. Eagle Scout candidate Lucas Dunshee put up the markers.
- Des Moines Register
by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 06:00 AM |
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I’m not sure what’s gotten into the geocommunity of late, but education maps are popping up all over. While all of them didn’t start out as demos, some are indeed demos of new technology.
First off, there was Google’s College Finder demo for its new spatial search API in the Google Map Data API. (via Google Geo Dev blog)
Then, there is GeoTech’s ESRI ArcGIS Server Community College Geospatial Program app built on the Sample Flex viewer (c 2008). (via @gletham, via ESRI Edu Blog)
Finally, the LA TImes updated its California Schools Guide to include spatial search using GeoDjango. The app finds public, private and parochial schools within 2 or 4 miles of an address. (via @latimes)
by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 06:00 AM |
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The app includes a legend (with legend in the title) which not only reveals what the symbols on the map mean, but also the two letter codes for each type of crime searchable in the query box.
I’m not sure at all what *Incidents are relative to the point on the Map* means. That statement is above the legend. Perhaps it means the location data are “fuzzed up” a bit?
I was unable to produce a query that put dots on the map. The error message told me that either there were no results OR there was an error in the input data. I was unable to determine what was causing my problem.
The app has the typical toolbar of giant icons - each of perform an operation or open a dialog box. I do like that only one dialog box can be open at a time, but I found it hard to shut any single one down - without opening one to replace it. Said another way, there’s no “x” or “close” on the dialog boxes. One other interface concern in the query dialog (aka Incident Search - with a police map icon on the toolbar): the Map Incidents button, which means, “go do the query” is not distinguished in any way from the Clear Search or Clear Map buttons.
A “block of text” discussion of how to use the app pops up at start up - but I could not find a way to get back to this “help” once in the app.
I hope this feedback will help those behind the app to improve it. My setup: Mac OSX, Safari, Silverlight already installed.
- Holland Sentinel (I reported to the paper that it had a bad link to the app in its coverage.)
by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 05:48 AM |
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