Google Gears uses WiFi to geolocate your laptop

Google Gears, a browser extension that empowers web applications by giving them offline capabilities and more, can now tell websites where you are — or at least, where your laptop is. The new version of the Gears Geolocation API uses your laptop’s WiFi signal to pinpoint your location within 200 meters.

Previously, Google says the Geolocation API just worked with mobile phones, but now any website can take advantage of the API to add location-based functions. Basically, this could eventually bring an end to ever manually entering your location onto websites.

Instead, when you want to see local news stories on ITN or nearby hotels on lastminute.com, you just go to the site and it knows where you are. For this to work, users must have the Gears plugin installed on their browsers. (It’s automatically installed on Google’s Chrome browser and the Android mobile operating system.)

Expect to see many more websites taking advantage of geolocation, and not just due to Google’s announcement. Mozilla previously launched a geolocation plugin called Geode, and added similar capabilities to the latest version of its Firefox browser, which is currently in beta testing.

Privacy advocates who think Google already has too much information about us probably won’t be happy. In its announcement, Google says it doesn’t store your location information, but other websites might. Since sites have to ask for permission before getting your location, Google advises only saying yes to sites you trust.

Next Story: Bring The Beatles to your iPod yourself for $800
Previous Story: Texert brings in $3M for risk management

Bookmark and Share

Tags:

Photo of Anthony Ha

About the Author, Anthony Ha

Anthony is VentureBeat's assistant editor, as well as its reporter on enterprise technology, cloud computing, and tech policy. Before joining VentureBeat in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.

  • Bah too much information. Can you image how useful this could be if your laptop was stolen? It would be so easy to track it down...
  • Hey, you're right! Didn't think of that ... very cool.
  • I loaded google gears and tried it. It is pretty cool - in a toy like fashion.

    Google gears for android and iphone will be cooler - it wants to be a mobile application. We were thinking that it would be a great tie in to zhiing. When a person gets a zhiing and is on their way somewhere, it would be great to see restaurants, gas stations, coffee shops, and other places that would make their trip convenient.

    I know that my wife would get more flowers if I could easily make a stop on the way.
  • edhardy622
    British law student sues Abercrombie-Fitch for disability discrimination.
    http://www.abercrombieonsale.co.uk