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Internet search leader Google Inc. is testing technology that
will find the location of people using its mobile mapping service,
even if the phone making the connection isn't equipped with a
GPS receiver.
The new tracking feature introduced Wednesday is being touted
as an added convenience because it will enable people on the go
to skip the task of typing a starting address on a mobile handset's
small keys when they turn to Google's maps for guidance.
Using the technology, dubbed ''My Location,'' simply requires
pressing zero on a mobile handset equipped with the new software.
The sender's location shows up as a blue dot on Google's mobile
maps.
The tracking system isn't set up to collect a user's phone number
or any other personal information that would reveal a person's
identity, said Steve Lee, product manager for Google's mobile
maps. As a safeguard, the feature can be turned off at any time
by simply clicking on a link in the help menu.
Those assurances probably will alleviate privacy concerns raised
about the new service, said analyst Greg Sterling of Sterling
Market Intelligence.
After trying out ''My Location'' on a Blackberry device, Sterling
predicted people will embrace it. He called it ''an incremental
improvement but still meaningful.''
Unlike GPS, Google's tracking feature works while handsets are
indoors. ''My Location'' also drains less power from a phone's
battery than a GPS receiver does.
On the downside, Google's service isn't as precise as GPS. In
most instances, Google hopes to get within one-quarter to three
miles of a user's location, close enough to provide helpful ''neighborhood-level''
information, Lee said.
The database that identifies the location of a mobile phone is
still under construction, so the service still sometimes draw
a blank. The company expects to fill in the holes as more people
use the service, Lee said.
The tracking system's database currently spans more than 20 countries,
including United States, much of Europe, Australia, New Zealand,
the Russian Federation and Taiwan. It doesn't yet work in China
or Japan.
By knowing more about a mobile phone's location, Google conceivably
could make more money displaying ads from nearby businesses hoping
to lure in more customers. The Mountain View-based company currently
doesn't plan to show ads on mobile maps but may in the future,
Lee said.
Already the owner of the most lucrative advertising network on
the Internet, Google eventually hopes to do a better job of mining
profits from the mobile Web.
To help realize that goal, Google plans to introduce a new mobile
software package called Android next year in an attempt to make
its online services more accessible to people while they're away
from computers at home or the office.
Although a growing number of so-called smart phones come with
GPS receivers, Google estimates that about 85 percent of mobile
handsets now in use don't have the satellite-powered technology.
Google's alternative will work on most smart phones, including
the Blackberry and the latest generation of Nokia handsets. But
it's still not compatible with the iPhone, Motorola Q, Samsung
Blackjack and Palm Treo 700w and other models.
Source: Associated Press
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