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Context based computing LBS Thoughts

Context based computing

I’ve been thinking over the last few weeks that at last LBS (Location Based Services) is becoming a real market, what with the release of iPhone 2.0 and the imminent release of the first Android phone with its location platform. It has taken much longer then any of us would have expected, but applications using location are finally becoming mainstream.

At the same time however I have also been thinking that the term itself may no longer be appropriate. Actually location is just one signal that application and service developers can use to understand context, ie what is happening at any point in time to an individual and therefore what information is most relevant to them.

I quite like the term “context based computing” to describe this, as it encapsulates what we understand as LBS today but also extends into the future use of other types of sensors and devices to provide services relevant to specific activities we carry out in our daily lives.

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A great example of the type of service I mean is the soon to be released fitbit, which was a runner up in this weeks Techcrunch 50 event. Fitbit is a small device which measures your activity during the day and night and reports back to your computer whenever you are in wireless network range of it, building up a profile of the calories you burn, how much time you sleep and the quality of your sleep.

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Very neat !

Written and submitted from the Google Office, London.

Categories
Android LBS

Android competition entry demos augmented reality

From the Wired blog a demo of Enkin; still a work in progress, but potentially this is the LBS interface of the future..


Enkin from Enkin on Vimeo.

Written and Submitted from the Google Office, London.

Categories
iphone LBS

iPhone 2.0 api includes core location component.

Much like the Google Android platform, yesterdays annoucement from Apple includes news of a Location API as part of the iPhone OS which will allow third parties to develop location based applications, and most importantly enable any iphone application to make use of location.

iPhone Core Location API

Seen alongside Android there is now a critical mass of developers building moble applications which use location, and hopefully we will see the same level of innovation we have seen from the web in general.

For the geospatial industry this is fantastic news !

Written and submitted from home, using my home 802.11 network.