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GPS Sneakers Soon To Hit Retail Stores

The Isaac Daniel designed GPS Sneaker.
by Jocelyne Zablit
Washington (AFP) March 16, 2007
Isaac Daniel hopes the next time someone wears his sneakers, the footwear may prove to be life saving. The 38-year-old engineer and one-time United Nations scientific analyst has developed a line of running shoes with a tiny Global Positioning System (GPS) chip that can locate the wearer anywhere in the world with the press of a button.

Daniel said the 350-dollar (265-euro) sneakers, which he believes can help save children in trouble or even Alzheimer patients, will hit stores in May or June with more than 30,000 orders already pouring in from retailers worldwide.

About 2,000 people who have placed orders online are expected to receive the shoes in April.

A children's line is due out this fall.

Military and health care officials in several countries have meanwhile expressed interest in the product.

Daniel said he got the idea for the GPS shoes after his eight-year-old son in 2002 was mistakenly listed as missing from school.

"After that incident I began doing research on missing children and I found that this happens mainly with children ages eight, nine, 10 and teens," Daniel, who is based in Miami, Florida, told AFP. "I just kept going with the research until I found a solution."

The solution was a line of men's and women's sneakers in 19 color combinations outfitted with a GPS chip that communicates with four international satellites.

In the event of trouble the wearer can activate the chip by pressing a button on the sneaker for at least six seconds. The emergency signal is then transmitted to a 24-monitoring service that costs 20 dollars a month.

Daniel said once the alarm is raised the monitoring service notifies authorities.

He said in the event of a missing child or Alzheimer patient, a parent or caregiver can call the monitoring service which can activate the GPS remotely to pinpoint the whereabouts of the wearer.

"When you press the button it has to be an emergency because we will call to verify that something is wrong and then we'll send law enforcement," Daniel said. "So people will have to realize how seriously we take that."

He said parents will have to teach their children not to activate the GPS button for fun just as they drill into them the importance of calling the police only in an emergency.

"If the kids push the button for fun, their mom will have to pay for it," Daniel said.

He added that his company was also developing a plug-and-wear version of the sneakers that allows the wearer to remove the GPS chip and fit it into another model.

Next on his agenda, he said, is a "cell phone shoe" and a "game shoe."

The "cell phone" version will have all the technology of a cell phone embedded in the shoe and will allow the wearer to use Bluetooth wireless technology. The "game shoe" will act as a storage base for all of the wearer's game memory, Daniel said.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Sydney, Australia (SPX) Mar 14, 2007
UNSW researchers have developed the first Australian receiver that can pick up both the L1 and L2C GPS frequencies, as well as the signal from the first prototype Galileo satellite. "We are the first people in Australia to design hardware and software that will pick up the Galileo signal," explains Associate Professor Andrew Dempster, Director of Research in the School of Surveying and Spatial Information Systems.







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