Book Image

Windows Phone 7.5: Building Location-aware Applications

Book Image

Windows Phone 7.5: Building Location-aware Applications

Overview of this book

Windows Phone 7.5 has met with some great initial reviews from all mobile critics. It is poised to be the '3rd' eco-system for mobile, joining Apple's iOS and Google's Android platform. With Microsoft and Nokia working on multiple devices based on Windows Phone, the platform is a no-brainer enterprise success. Microsoft Office, Email, Skype and a fresh new mobile operating system has been a great champion of a cause for both Microsoft and Nokia. "Windows Phone 7.5: Building Location-aware Applications" will teach you to divein to the new Windows Phone Experience. No more 600 page bibles - just the right mix of text and lots of code to get you started!"Windows Phone 7.5: Building Location-aware Applications" covers location based services and maps, and focuses on methods of location detection and maps. Powered with this information, two real-world applications are covered. In short, this is a concise book on building location aware apps for Windows Phone.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
Windows Phone 7.5: Building Location-aware Applications
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Life without GPS: Cell-ID positioning and cell tower triangulation


Low-cost or price-sensitive mobile phones often come without GPS or Wi-Fi. These phones are meant to do what mobile phones are intended to be used for Talk. However, location of the user can still be detected on such phones using cellular towers. Cell-ID positioning and cell tower triangulation are two different ways to get location information from cell towers. Cell-ID result accuracy is only 200-1000 meters; hence it is used as the last option for most location-detection methodologies.

Cell-ID positioning uses your mobile network's cell tower to find your location. This involves the nearest tower to which your phone connects when you place calls. Cell tower triangulation on the other hand uses all the cellular towers around you to calculate your position, based on the signal strength your phone receives from each of the towers. Triangulation is more accurate, however it is a slower process.

Note

It is important to acknowledge privacy and security issues for end users while developing your applications and choosing the type of location-detection and storage. In July 2001, CNET discovered that Microsoft had collected the location data from millions of smartphones, laptops, and other Wi-Fi devices, which was easily accessible on the Web (http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20085028-281/microsofts-web-map-exposes-phone-pc-locations/). Microsoft rectified it in response to the CNET report (http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2011/08/microsoft-locks-down-wi-fi-location-service-after-privacy-concerns.ars) but this has been an eye-opener for user privacy and security watchers.