FYI: The proper reference for this article is : Economist (March 15-21, 2003)
Carl Reed OGC
----- Original Message ----- From: "Anthony Quartararo" <ajq3@spatialnetworks.com> To: <gislist@geocomm.com> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 8:27 AM Subject: GISList: Interesting and highly relevant article in Economist.com
This was sent to me today, thought it would be of interest to the list members at large:
"THE REVENGE OF GEOGRAPHY
It was naive to imagine that the global reach of the internet would make geography irrelevant. Wireline and wireless technologies have bound the virtual and physical worlds closer than ever
IN THE early days of the internet boom, there was much talk of the "death of distance". The emergence of a global digital network, it seemed, would put an end to mundane physical or geographical constraints. There was some truth in this. E-mail made it cheap and easy to stay in constant touch with people, whether they lived around the corner or on the other side of the globe. Companies could communicate with customers and employees no matter where they were. And like-minded individuals who shared a common interest could get together online from all round the world.
Actually, geography is far from dead. Although it is often helpful to think of the internet as a parallel digital universe, or an omnipresent "cloud", its users live in the real world where limitations of geography still apply. And these limitations extend online. Finding information relevant to a particular place, or the location associated with a specific piece of information, is not always easy. This has caused a surge of innovation, as new technologies have developed to link places on the internet with places in the real world--stitching together the supposedly separate virtual and physical worlds.
The first step in this process was to map the internet's physical infrastructure, and in particular the locations of the end-points on its edges, where users are connected. A number of companies, including Quova[1], Digital Envoy[2], NetGeo[3] and InfoSplit[4], offer "geolocation services" that enable websites to determine the physical locations of individual users. This is done using a database that links internet protocol (IP) addresses of users' computers to specific countries, cities or even postcodes. Groups of IP addresses are assigned to particular universities, companies or other organisations, which often have known locations: providers of internet access allocate specific IP addresses to customers in particular regions. When you visit a website that uses geolocation technology, your IP address is relayed to the geolocation provider's server. It looks up where you are and passes the information back to the website, which can then modify its content accordingly.
Once your location is known, existing demographic databases, which have been honed over the years to reveal what kinds of people live where, can be brought into play. Targeted advertising is the most obvious application for geolocation, but it has many other uses.
It can help, for example, to determine the right language in which to present a multilingual website. Or e-commerce vendors and auction houses can use geolocation to prevent the sale of goods that are illegal in certain countries. Online casinos can stop users from countries where online gambling has been outlawed from gaining access. Rights-management policies for music or video broadcasts, which tend to be based on geographical markets, can also be enforced. The pharmaceutical and financial-services industries, both of which are subject to strict national regulation, can be confident that, when offering goods and services for sale online, they are staying within the law. So much for the borderless internet and the death of distance.
Geolocation finds the physical location corresponding to an internet address, but it can also be used to do the reverse: to find the internet-access point nearest to a particular location. The necessity of doing this arises from the growing popularity of 802.11b or Wi-Fi technology, which provides wireless internet access to suitably equipped laptops within 100 metres or so of a small base-station, or "hotspot". Many of the thousands of hotspots around the world are deliberately made available to anybody who happens to be passing. Others are run by operators who charge a fee for access in hotels, airports and other places. One operator, T-Mobile, is installing Wi-Fi base-stations in thousands of Starbucks coffee shops in several countries.
But how can you determine if Wi-Fi coverage is available in a particular area--or, if not, the location of the nearest hotspot? A number of websites, such as wifinder.com[5] and 80211hotspots.com[6], have sprung up that act as global directories of Wi-Fi base-stations. Type in a postcode or street address, and you can see where they ar
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