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Is GPS alone the answer for better E911?

Is GPS alone the answer for better E911?

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 17 Jul 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Polaris Wireless CTO Marty Feuerstein outlines what he thinks the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to update Canada’s wireless 911 policy

If the CRTC wants to improve Canada’s wireless-enabled 911 services, the regulator should mandate carriers to develop hybrid location-based service networks, according to Polaris Wireless Inc.

Marty Feuerstein, CTO at the Santa Clara, Calif.-based wireless location technology firm, said that despite the public’s perception, GPS technology does not solve all location identification problems.

“There is a realization finally happening that wasn’t about four or five years ago, and that’s GPS doesn’t work indoors,” he said. “Sure, if you’re by a window, door, or in a single story wood home, it’s probably going to work. But if you’re in an office building in the city, it’s not going to work.”

The answer, Feuerstein said, lies in a blended system that utilizes the strengths of handset-based GPS with the power of network-based tracking technology. These technologies include real-time locating technologies such as TDOA (time difference of arrival) and Polaris’ own WLS (wireless location signature).

Polaris’ WLS is a software platform that uses radio frequencies to determine a mobile user’s location. To find this location, WLS uses measurements such as neighbour cell signal strength, time delay and other network parameters.”

“With some carriers, we’ve deployed this as the sole 911 solution,” he said, adding that implementation and operating costs are minimal. “There’s no GPS, no hardware in the bay stations, no radio network overlay. This is a software only approach.”

Using network-based software such as WLS in conjunction with GPS, Feuerstein said, would create a ubiquitous location tracking system.

But without clear and specific guidelines that mandate the type systems wireless carriers use, the adoption of new kinds of location-based service technologies could lead to more harm than good.

Feuerstein said that when public safety officials talk about consistency and accuracy, it means that they need to be able to trust the point on the map or address that shows up, whether it comes from Rogers Communications Inc., Telus Corp. or Bell Canada Enterprises Inc.

“That’s not happening in the U.S. right now,” Feuerstein said. “Different carriers have different technologies and legacy systems.”

“What I’m told is that call takers at public safety organizations have a little sheet on the wall that tells them, ‘if you get a fix from such and such operator, don’t trust it, but if you get a fix from this other operator, you can trust it.’”

In the U.S., Feuerstein said, there has been an unwritten requirement that carriers need to conduct about five percent of their location tracking tests indoors. But with about 55 to 60 per cent of wireless calls now being made indoors, he added, the FCC is hoping carriers dedicate more time to resolving indoor tracking issues.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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