Sujet : Re: How will the police find me.
De : bradshaw (at) *nospam* gci.net (Bill Bradshaw)
Groupes : comp.mobile.androidDate : 21. May 2024, 17:49:15
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <lb41kcFc3h2U1@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.5931
Frank Slootweg wrote:
Bill Bradshaw <bradshaw@gci.net> wrote:
micky wrote:
Going hiking tomorrow. Finally realized I was sending my location
to my ex-GF, but I hadn't told her how to see it. Assuming the
worst, that I break my leg and can't get off the trail, but the
phone is broken or stolen, and assuming she actually notices it's
6PM and I still haven't texted her to say I'm done, she can see my
phone's location using the simple instructions I found on the web.
>
When I am out alone I always run a track on my GPS (not phone) which
I can follow back so I do not get lost because I am 78 years old.
If you are really worried you should look at something like a Garmin
inReach.
>
We also have an old (non-phone) GPS (Garmin), which can lay
'breadcrumbs' for backtracking. Got us out of a mess in outback
Australia where there was a maze of non-signposted dirt tracks and our
maps (paper and offline smartphone ones) failed us.
>
Two-way (text/SMS) satellite communication like the Garmin InReach is
of course better, but also more expensive, because of the monthly
costs for the subscription.
>
When we're in the boonies of Australia, we have a PLB (Personal
Locator Beacon). That gives only a signal - not a message - and your
location to the satellite, but doesn't need a costly subscription.
>
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_position-indicating_radiobeacon#Personal_Locator_Beacon>
I am sending this to you and Andrew. If you do not have cell phone service
how can you send somebody your location and problem?
<Bill>