Qusay H. Mahmoud
Tuesday, 05 July 2005
This article introduces you to the field of LBS and to the Location API for J2ME
(JSR 179), a set of generic APIs that can be used for developing location-based
services. In addition, the article offers guidelines for designing location-based
services.
This article reprinted with permission by java.sun.com
Location-based services (LBS) provide users of mobile devices personalized services
tailored to their current location. They open a new market for developers, cellular
network operators, and service providers to develop and deploy value-added services:
advising users of current traffic conditions, supplying routing information, helping
them find nearby restaurants, and many more.
What Location-Based Services Do
Location-based services answer three questions: Where am I? What's around me?
How do I get there? They determine the location of the user by using one of several
technologies for determining position, then use the location and other information
to provide personalized applications and services. As an example, consider a wireless
911 emergency service that determines the caller's location automatically. Such
a service would be extremely useful, especially to users who are far from home
and don't know local landmarks. Traffic advisories, navigation help including
maps and directions, and roadside assistance are natural location-based services.
Other services can combine present location with information about personal preferences
to help users find food, lodging, and entertainment to fit their tastes and pocketbooks.
There are two basic approaches to implementing location-based services:
- Process location data in a server and deliver results to the device.
- Obtain location data for a device-based application that uses it directly.
This article focuses on device-based location services.
Determining the Device's Location
To discover the location of the device, LBS must use real-time positioning methods.
Accuracy depends on the method used.
Locations can be expressed in spatial terms or as text descriptions. A spatial
location can be expressed in the widely used latitude-longitude-altitude coordinate system. Latitude is expressed as 0-90 degrees north or south of the
equator, and longitude as 0-180 degrees east or west of the prime meridian, which
passes through Greenwich, England. Altitude is expressed in meters above sea level.
A text description is usually expressed as a street address, including city, postal
code, and so on.
Applications can call on any of several types of positioning methods.
- Using the mobile phone network: The current cell ID can be used to identify the Base Transceiver Station (BTS)
that the device is communicating with and the location of that BTS. Clearly, the
accuracy of this method depends on the size of the cell, and can be quite inaccurate.
A GSM cell may be anywhere from 2 to 20 kilometers in diameter. Other techniques
used along with cell ID can achieve accuracy within 150 meters.
- Using satellites: The Global Positioning System (GPS), controlled by the US Department of Defense,
uses a constellation of 24 satellites orbiting the earth. GPS determines the device's
position by calculating differences in the times signals from different satellites
take to reach the receiver. GPS signals are encoded, so the mobile device must
be equipped with a GPS receiver. GPS is potentially the most accurate method (between
4 and 40 meters if the GPS receiver has a clear view of the sky), but it has some
drawbacks: The extra hardware can be costly, consumes battery while in use, and
requires some warm-up after a cold start to get an initial fix on visible satellites.
It also suffers from "canyon effects" in cities, where satellite visibility is
intermittent.
- Using short-range positioning beacons: In relatively small areas, such as a single building, a local area network
can provide locations along with other services. For example, appropriately equipped
devices can use Bluetooth for short-range positioning.
In addition, location methods can connect to a mobile position center that provides
an interface to query for the position of the mobile subscriber. The API to the
mobile position center is XML-based. While applications can be fully self-contained
on the device, it's clear that a wider array of services is possible when a server-side
application is part of the overall service.
Some applications don't need high accuracy, but others will be useless if the
location isn't accurate enough. It's okay for the location of a tourist walking
around town to be off by 30 meters, but other applications and services may demand
higher accuracy.
The Location API for J2ME
The Location API for J2ME specification defines an optional package, javax.microedition.location, that enables developers to write wireless location-based applications and services
for resource-limited devices like mobile phones, and can be implemented with any
common location method. The compact and generic J2ME location APIs provide mobile
applications with information about the device's present physical location and
orientation (compass direction), and support the creation and use of databases
of known landmarks, stored in the device.
JSR 179 requires the Connected Device Configuration (CDC) or version 1.1 of the
Connected Limited Device Configuration (CLDC). CLDC 1.0 isn't adequate because
it doesn't support floating-point numbers, which the API uses to represent coordinates
and other measurements. The Location API doesn't depend on any particular profile
-- it can be used with MIDP or the Personal Profile.
The hardware platform determines which location methods are supported. If it
doesn't support at least one location provider, LBS won't be possible. Applications
can request providers with particular characteristics, such as a minimum degree
of accuracy. Some location methods may be free; others may entail service fees.
The application should warn the user before any charges are incurred.
It is up to the application to determine the criteria for selecting the location
method. Criteria fields include: accuracy, response time, need for altitude, and
speed. Once the application obtains a LocationProvider instance that meets the criteria, it can use that object to obtain the location,
in either of two ways:
- Invoke a method synchronously to get a single location.
- Register a listener and get periodic updates at application-defined intervals.
The Location class abstracts the location results. Its object contains coordinates, speed
if available, textual address if available, and a time stamp that indicates when
the location measurements were made.
Coordinates are represented by either of two classes:
- A
Coordinates object represents a point's latitude and longitude in degrees, and altitude
in meters.
- A
QualifiedCoordinates object contains latitude, longitude, and altitude, and also an indication of
their accuracy, represented as the radius of an area.
The following segment of code demonstrates how to obtain the present location
of the device synchronously:
...
// Set criteria for selecting a location provider:
// accurate to 500 meters
horizontally
Criteria cr= new Criteria();
cr.setHorizontalAccuracy(500);
// Get
an instance of the provider
LocationProvider lp= LocationProvider.getInstance(cr);
//
Request the location, setting a one-minute timeout
Location l = lp.getLocation(60);
Coordinates
c = l.getQualifiedCoordinates();
if(c != null ) {
// Use coordinate information
double lat = c.getLatitude();
double lon = c.getLongitude();
}
...
Landmarks
A landmark is a location associated with a name and a description. Landmarks can be stored
in a device-based database, where they can be shared among all J2ME applications.
Landmarks can store frequently used locations: home, office, favorite restaurants,
and so on. Each is represented by a Landmark instance, and the database by a LandmarkStore. You can create multiple named LandmarkStores to group locations into categories such as cinemas, museums, or customer sites.
If the device includes a compass, the application may be able to determine not
only its location but its orientation, which is useful in navigational applications.
The Orientation class represents the device's azimuth as an angle from due north, which the
application can easily convert to a compass direction.
Security and Privacy
Many users consider location information to be highly sensitive, and are concerned
about a number of privacy issues, including:
- Target marketing: Mobile users' locations can be used to classify customers for focused marketing
efforts.
- Embarrassment: One customer's knowledge of another's location may lead to embarrassing situations.
- Harassment: Location information can be used to harass or attack a user.
- Service denial: A health insurance firm might deny a claim if it learned that a user visited
a high-risk area.
- Legal restrictions: Some countries regulate the use of personal data.
For these and other reasons, users must know when their location is given to
an application.
Guidelines
Keep the following guidelines in mind when designing location-based services:
- Handle unavailability of services gracefully. The user's location may not always
be available, for any of several reasons.
- The device is cut off from any of the location methods it supports, in a tunnel
or on an airplane for example.
- The user withholds permission to release the information.
- No location provider that the device supports is available.
- Depending on the method used, determining the location may take a long time.
The delay may be so long that the end result isn't useful in, for example, a navigation
application. Keep the user informed.
- Location service fees, typical of network-assisted location methods, can add
up quickly, so don't overuse fee-based services.
- Be sensitive to privacy concerns.
- Tell customers about the information being collected on them and how it will
be used.
- Offer customers the choice of what location information to disclose, and when
appropriate an option not to participate.
- Allow customers to review their permission profiles so that they know what they
are permitting.
- Protect location information so that it cannot be accessed by unauthorized persons.
You should also take full advantage of the MIDP 2.0 security framework, which
restricts the application's access to location data to cases in which the user
explicitly confirms permission.
Summary
Through the Location API for J2ME, you can use information about the user's position
to build new kinds of applications and services for mobile devices such as cell
phones and PDAs, and to enhance existing services. JSR 179 specifies a generic
API for obtaining locations, and thus makes porting LBS applications to a wide
range of devices much easier. The critical issue that LBS developers must address
is the privacy of the customer. To ensure privacy, follow sound programming guidelines
and use the security framework in MIDP 2.0.
For More Information
- J2ME
- Mobile Information Device Profile 2.0 (JSR 118)
- Location API for J2ME specification (JSR 179)
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to Gary Adams of Sun Microsystems, whose feedback helped me improve
this article.
About the Author: Qusay H. Mahmoud provides Java consulting and training services. He has published dozens of articles
on Java, and is the author of Distributed Programming with Java (Manning Publications, 1999) and Learning Wireless Java (O'Reilly, 2002).
Copyright (c) 2004-2005 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
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