Friday, 20 August 2021 10:57

Navigate inside tunnels with Bluetooth Beacons

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Satellite navigation has revolutionized the way we get around. It’s cheap, fast and easy to use. But there’s one fatal flaw in the system: It simply can’t work underground.

GPS requires line of sight to satellites orbiting the planet. The great advantage of this is that it works seamlessly all over the world, without needing to be connected to a cellular or Wi-Fi network. This works well in open areas but in built-up areas with tall buildings, or in underground tunnels, the system can fall apart.

Enhancements not enough
Combining GPS with phones allowed ‘Assisted GPS’, which uses cell-tower data to increase speed and reliability in built-up areas. Further enhancements have also been made using Wi-Fi hotspot location data and ‘inertial navigation’ – you know where you were when you lost the signal so you can work out roughly where you are now – but no one has been able to accurately and affordably solve the problem of tunnels. Until now.
Waze, the crowd-sourced traffic routing app company, has set about fixing this problem using Bluetooth beacons. The idea is simple. By equipping tunnels with Bluetooth beacons, which can be detected by smartphones, you eliminate the GPS blind spots....

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