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Using Vertical Location in Public Safety IoT

2022-09-20
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Illustration: © IoT For All

On a recent trip using my phone to navigate, my Google map was showing buildings in 3D – a wonderful tool to showcase the relative height of buildings around me and ensure that I had a better sense of where I was. This feature was introduced back in 2021, and now they are even moving into an “immersive view” with 3D. I’m old enough to remember the days of paper maps as my primary navigation tool when I had a rental car and had to write down exactly where I needed to go on a separate piece of paper so that I wouldn’t get lost when finding my way somewhere in an unknown city. But within the city itself, there were people in certain professions that I simply expected to be able to navigate their way around – including a taxi driver, a delivery person, and a first responder – all of whom were reliant on knowing and understanding geolocation to get someone or something to where it needed to go. Often, these groups of people need to not only find a building, but also a particular floor within a building. First responders, in particular, need vertical location data to enhance emergency services and public safety.

'Without precise vertical location, 3D maps are really just empty shells. Luckily, there are technologies that exist today that can bring in floor-level vertical location' -NextNavClick To Tweet

GPS & its Shortcomings

GPS is an incredible technology that was designed in the 1960s during the Cold War for military purposes. We now use it on our phones for countless applications, from ridesharing apps to delivery apps to gaming to wayfinding in a city. We are so reliant on it and the geolocation services that it provides that, in many cases, we don’t even recognize all of the shortcomings of GPS technology. For example, in urban areas, signals can bounce and be very imprecise (ever seen the really big blue dot?). Occasionally, the map might put you somewhere further away than you actually are because there is no clear line of sight to the satellites that make up the GPS signals your phone needs to receive. Maps have also historically always been 2D (including many Google and Apple maps still), but with more and more people living in urban areas (approximately 82 percent of US residents), getting the x and y coordinates alone of where someone is is not enough.

What many people don’t realize is that emergency services and public safety were the driving force behind GPS getting onto our cell phones for all of the applications we now use today. It was the proliferation of mobile phones – and the onset of people making emergency 911 calls from those phones – that was the push to get chips small enough to fit inside them. With more landlines being “cut” over the years, now more than 80 percent of emergency calls are made on cell phones. Location coordinates from GPS from phones can now provide the x and y coordinates in an emergency.

Z-Axis Vertical Location

We often think about needing to call 911 when we might have an emergency at home, but an emergency can strike anywhere, anytime. Even outside of one’s home, emergency calls are made from schools, office buildings, and hotels – multistory buildings where precise location matters, beyond the x and y, where the vertical location may be essential to saving lives. During a heart attack, an acute asthma attack, or an active shooter incident, an emergency caller is unable to provide their location or address. While our public safety answering points (PSAPs) now have technologies to generally locate the x and y coordinates of a caller and make sense of it into an actual address, if someone is in a multistory building, the vertical “floor-level” z-axis location of a caller can be a critical life-saving piece to finding a person in need.

Unfortunately, GPS coordinates and even crowdsourced WiFi are quite poor at providing the floor-level location. The FCC now has a requirement that wireless carriers now need to be providing the “floor-level” location of an emergency caller in the Top 25 major US markets, with an accuracy of at least 80 percent. This will enable our emergency operators and first responders to find emergency callers much faster – saving thousands of lives each year.

The good news is that z-axis vertical location technology exists today – and can be used in more than just the Top 25 US markets. In addition to GPS chips on phones, nearly all cell phones, wearables, and IoT devices have barometric pressure sensors. As high school physics taught us, atmospheric pressure can be measured – and changes constantly. When you go up in an elevator, the pressure goes down (and that’s why your ears might pop). And, when a rainstorm rolls through or there is even strong wind, the pressure changes then, too. But, by leveraging the pressure reading on one’s phone, and subtracting the immediate weather effects in the area, a precise floor-level location can be provided – even inside buildings.

The Importance of Precision

Digital maps replaced paper maps. As our maps start to turn 3D, and we increase our expectations for what smart buildings can do, let’s not forget the role that precise geolocation needs to play – in particular, floor-level location – in our future applications for IoT and beyond. Real-time, precise location information (including altitude) will ultimately be what makes smart buildings smart – and smart buildings can actually become participants in emergency response, helping emergency responders get to people in need faster and track the first responders as well – ensuring enhanced safety for them in complex, multistory buildings. Without precise vertical location, 3D maps are really just empty shells. Luckily, there are technologies that exist today that can bring in floor-level vertical location to make emergency services, mobile apps, and wearables using geolocation even better.  

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  • Emergency Response
  • GPS
  • Indoor Navigation
  • Location Technology
  • Outdoor Navigation

  • Emergency Response
  • GPS
  • Indoor Navigation
  • Location Technology
  • Outdoor Navigation

参考译文
垂直定位在公共安全物联网中的应用
在最近一次用手机导航的旅行中,我的谷歌地图以3D形式显示了建筑——这是一个很好的工具,可以展示我周围建筑的相对高度,并确保我对自己的位置有更好的感觉。这项功能早在2021年就推出了,现在他们甚至开始使用3D技术“沉浸式观看”。我已经足够大了,我还记得那些把纸质地图作为我主要导航工具的日子,那时我租了一辆车,必须在另一张纸上准确地写下我需要去的地方,这样当我在一个未知的城市某处迷路时才不会迷路。但在城市内部,有些从事特定职业的人,我只是希望他们能够导航,包括出租车司机、快递员和急救员,所有这些人都依赖于对地理位置的了解,把某人或某物送到它需要去的地方。通常情况下,这些群体不仅需要找到一栋建筑,还需要找到建筑中的某个楼层。急救人员尤其需要垂直位置数据,以加强应急服务和公共安全。GPS是一项不可思议的技术,它是在20世纪60年代冷战期间为军事目的而设计的。现在,我们在手机上使用它来完成无数应用程序,从拼车应用到送货应用,从游戏到城市的导航。我们如此依赖它和它提供的地理定位服务,以至于在很多情况下,我们甚至没有意识到GPS技术的所有缺点。例如,在城市地区,信号可能会反弹,而且非常不精确(见过那个真正的大蓝点吗?)有时候,地图会把你放在比你实际位置更远的地方,因为没有清晰的视线可以看到构成你手机需要接收的GPS信号的卫星。地图历史上也一直是2D的(包括许多谷歌和苹果地图),但随着越来越多的人生活在城市地区(约82%的美国居民),仅靠x和y坐标来判断某人所在的位置是不够的。许多人没有意识到的是,紧急服务和公共安全是推动GPS进入我们手机的所有应用程序的动力。正是手机的普及——以及人们开始用手机拨打911紧急电话——推动了芯片的小型化。随着近年来越来越多的固定电话被“切断”,现在80%以上的紧急呼叫是通过手机拨打的。手机上的GPS定位坐标现在可以在紧急情况下提供x和y坐标。当我们在家里可能有紧急情况时,我们经常想要拨打911,但紧急情况随时随地都可能发生。即使在家庭之外,紧急呼叫也来自学校、办公楼和酒店——这些多层建筑的精确位置很重要,而不是x和y轴,垂直位置可能对拯救生命至关重要。在心脏病发作、急性哮喘发作或枪击事件期间,紧急呼叫者无法提供他们的位置或地址。虽然我们的公共安全应答点(paps)现在拥有的技术通常可以定位呼叫者的x坐标和y坐标,并将其转换为实际地址,但如果有人在多层建筑中,呼叫者的垂直“楼层”z轴位置可能是找到需要帮助的人的关键救生部件。不幸的是,GPS坐标甚至众包WiFi都不能很好地提供楼层位置。美国联邦通信委员会(FCC)现在要求,在美国前25个主要市场中,无线运营商必须提供紧急呼叫者的“底层”位置信息,准确率至少要达到80%。这将使我们的急救人员和急救人员能够更快地找到紧急呼叫者,每年挽救数以千计的生命。 好消息是,z轴垂直定位技术现在已经存在,而且可以用于美国前25个市场之外的其他地方。除了手机上的GPS芯片,几乎所有的手机、可穿戴设备和物联网设备都有气压传感器。正如高中物理教我们的那样,大气压力是可以测量的,而且是不断变化的。当你乘电梯上升时,压力会下降(这就是为什么你的耳朵会胀痛)。而且,当暴风雨袭来或甚至有强风时,气压也会发生变化。但是,通过利用手机上的压力读数,并减去该地区的即时天气影响,可以提供精确的楼层位置——甚至在建筑物内。数字地图取代了纸质地图。随着我们的地图开始转向3D,我们对智能建筑的期望越来越高,让我们不要忘记精确地理定位需要发挥的作用,特别是楼层定位,在我们未来的物联网应用和其他应用中。实时、精确的位置信息(包括海拔高度)最终将使智能建筑变得智能——智能建筑实际上可以成为紧急响应的参与者,帮助紧急响应人员更快地到达需要帮助的人身边,并跟踪第一个响应人员——确保在复杂的多层建筑中增强他们的安全。如果没有精确的垂直定位,3D地图就只是空壳。幸运的是,现在有一些技术可以引入楼层垂直定位,使紧急服务、移动应用程序和使用地理定位的可穿戴设备变得更好。
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