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#1 |
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macrumors bot
Join Date: Apr 2001
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Improve iPhone's 'Locate Me' Accuracy
![]() Apple posted a Knowledge Base article points to this SkyHook Wireless page that allows you to enter corrections to Skyhook's wifi mapping. Skyhook provides the GPS-like location features in the iPhone and iPod Touch. It accomplishes this by a combination of Wifi and Cellular tower locations. To seed their database, Skyhook sent out teams of drivers to correlate hotspot locations with their geographic location. Over time, as Wifi base stations are moved, the accuracy can drift. Skyhook's submission system allows you to correct these incorrectly labeled Wifi basestations. Article Link |
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#2 |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Saint Augustine, FL
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"Teams of Drivers"? They paid people to just drive around the world for a few months? How did they manage that! Seems like it would cost a fortune to build that database.
I wonder if the iPhone "automatically" can do this. That is, when you spot a wifi, AND you're being triangulated, publish that result, and eventually, you'll get a "good guess" as to where the wifi radio is. |
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#3 |
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macrumors 6502
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Miami, Fl
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yet another way for apple to track where you are.
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#4 |
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macrumors 65816
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-PPC_Michael 17" MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo + 23" Cinema Display // 16GB iPod Touch |
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#5 |
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macrumors Demi-God
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I doubt they need to tell you they know by showing you.... they can find out behind the scenes.
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iMac 3.06 GHz | 4GB RAM | 500 GB ::: Unibody MacBook 2.4 GHz | 4GB RAM| 250GB 80 GB Video iPod ::: 16 GB iPhone 3G |
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#6 |
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macrumors 6502a
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I was really wondering why this wasn't available from the get go.
I have two wifi points in a very porely mapped neighborhood and I am certain that some one would appretiate a way around. Not to mention the more we build the data base the more we can shut-up those voyager users. |
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#7 |
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macrumors 65816
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May as well do my part and map out the places around me.
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White MacBook (9400m), 2.0 GHz, 160GB HDD, 4GB RAM iPhone 3G 16GB White www.mintapps.com |
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#8 |
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macrumors 6502
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Seattle
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MAC address needed
I just added my home router, but prolly won't be able to add any others I frequent, because the submission form requires you to add the MAC address of the router. Does anyone know of a way to get a router's MAC address if you don't have physical access to it, or can't log into the router's admin page?
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24" Aluminum iMac 2.8GHz/4GB/500GB+1.5TB External HD MacBook Black C2D 2GB/160GB 8GB iPhone |
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#9 | |
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Mar 2008
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Quote:
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| wcbarksdale |
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#10 | |
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macrumors 6502
Join Date: Jan 2007
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Quote:
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#11 | |
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macrumors Demi-God
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Quote:
Here's one way to get any wireless router's MAC Address: First, you need to find out the router's IP address. Usually, it is the first address in the subnet, so if your address is 192.168.0.x, probably the router is 192.168.0.1. Now, you can either run the Mac OS X Network Utility (in /Applications/Utilities) and click the "Netstat" tab, then select "display routing table information" and click "Netstat" below, OR you can open a Terminal window and type "netstat -r" followed by <return>. Either way you will get an output like this: Code:
Routing tables Internet: Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire default 10.0.1.1 UGSc 15 53 en1 10.0.1/24 link#6 UCS 1 0 en1 10.0.1.1 0:1c:62:d1:1b:b1 UHLW 12 6 en1 899 10.0.1.39 localhost UHS 0 0 lo0 10.37.129/24 link#7 UCS 0 0 en2 10.37.129.2 localhost UHS 0 0 lo0 10.211.55/24 link#8 UCS 0 0 en3 10.211.55.2 localhost UHS 0 0 lo0 127 localhost UCS 0 0 lo0 localhost localhost UH 2 8470 lo0 169.254 link#6 UCS 0 0 en1 Note that the above is NOT my router's MAC, I garbled it up for security reasons.
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iMac 3.06 GHz | 4GB RAM | 500 GB ::: Unibody MacBook 2.4 GHz | 4GB RAM| 250GB 80 GB Video iPod ::: 16 GB iPhone 3G |
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#12 |
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macrumors 65816
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Has anyone noticed if this is instant? I think what I'll do is add a bunch of the routers in my Universities area and I'll add a bunch around my house when I'm there. If everyone keeps adding these from time to time it can only get better.
Sure it's not real GPS but I've never had problems with it. It would seem like if you don't know where you actually are you have bigger fish to fry than finding directions to the nearest Caribou. The only thing I would like about GPS is it announcing directions as you go through the trip, but I get by just fine without it.
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White MacBook (9400m), 2.0 GHz, 160GB HDD, 4GB RAM iPhone 3G 16GB White www.mintapps.com |
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#13 |
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macrumors member
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When I did it, the confirmation email said it might take a couple weeks depending on how many requests they get.
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#14 | |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Sep 2007
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This is what it looks like:
Quote:
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MacBook Pro 2.16 GHz Intel Core Duo, 2GB RAM iPod Touch 16gb |
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#15 | |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Mar 2005
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Quote:
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#16 |
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Lincs, UK
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Why not just put a GPS chipset in the phone and be done with it - would be much more accurate and wouldn't require user feedback to maintain.
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#17 |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Jan 2003
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Yep. This is a pretty sorry substitute for GPS. I have an iPhone and a BB8800. I never use the iPhone for location because it's not good.
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#18 |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Sherman Oaks
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I have some left over aluminum hats if you need one.
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17" MacBook Pro 2.33 - Dual G5 w/ Pro Tools iPod Gen1 - Nano Gen1 - iPhone Gen1 - iPhone 3G DA42 G1000 Gen1 BE G58 (2008) |
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#19 |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Why is everyone so crazy to GPS on the phone .... so imagine how hard it will be to drive with a device that plays your music, places calls - and gives directions --- what a mess!!
No thanks, my Garmin is just fine .... and larger screen. |
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| GravityEyes |
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#20 |
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macrumors regular
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: South Pasadena, CA
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Actually, they pay $20 per hour for this. They just posted an ad in my area looking for drivers. They provide the scanning device and I have to methodically drive around in a grid pattern as the scanner logs all hotspots that it sniffs out (protected or not.)
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My Music Projects on iTunes Music Store: jido-genshi and StarDotStar Latest toy design: http://www.KrickyTheAlienFrog.com/ |
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#21 |
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macrumors 65816
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: North-East, UK
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I've just added my router.
Would it be legal to add other peoples routers on there? |
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#22 | |
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macrumors newbie
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Quote:
I've added around 20 of them since I first read this article, granted these are placed I frequent and I know where I am... but hopefully it'll help someone else. I also posted to the Skyhook support site (on Satisfaction), and they said if you're the admin for a large number of routers (like at a university or mall for instance) you could send them a list of all the mac addresses of your routers and they could add them all at once into the system for you. |
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#23 | |
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macrumors 6502a
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: St. Petersburg, FL
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A weird anomalie?
Quote:
Although Locate Me has worked well for me in many places, it locates my house one county, three cities and eight miles from its actual location. It does this with wifi on and with wifi off. I reported my router's MAC address to the company three weeks ago.(SEE NOTE AT BOTTOM) Still no change. I'm more interested in WHY and HOW this can happen, than i am with the fact that it IS happening: If it can happen here then ANY time i use Locate Me i should allow for an eight mile margin of error (I should add i'm in a suburban residential area of Greater Cincinnati). One theory was that my next door neighbor (or I) might be using a router that was located in that eight-mile-away-spot when the mapping was done. But we both bought our routers new from stores, stores not in that area, incidentally. Could it be some weird cell tower situation that screws up the triangulation? Dunno, but i'd like to. The error is embarrassing when displaying my iPhone to friends at my house (I'm otherwise a big fan) and undermines confidence in the feature wherever i am. NOTE: Ten houses away in any direction i get an accurate read. On one occasion I've gotten a precise location only 100 feet from my lot line. But thru about a dozen other tests at different times i've never been able to replicate that single "hit". Any ideas? NOTE: i used iStumbler (thank you wcbarksdale) tonight and it sniffed a different MAC address for my router than the one labeled on it. I re-submitted that MAC address and four others it identified and we'll see whether my results have improved in several weeks. Last edited by rtdunham : Mar 13, 2008 at 11:50 PM. |
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#24 |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Essex, UK
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This is great, I added the router I use at home a few days ago and just tested the locate me when using wifi and it found my house. Before I added it, it circled a massive area which was useless
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| RevolutionOne |
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#25 |
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macrumors 68040
Join Date: Nov 2005
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Actually, it works better than GPS in a few places. GPS doesn't work well in major cities, when you are enclosed from all sides by tall buildings and don't get decent reception. And that is exactly the situation where it is most likely that some router is nearby and you get your location that way.
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| gnasher729 |
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