Colorado startup solves smartphone GPS positioning issue

November 3, 2023

Colorado-based startup Zephr has claimed to have solved smartphone GPS positioning problems with a networked approach that achieves sub-60cm accuracy.

Zephr’s software development kit (SDK) can be integrated into apps to turn smartphones into a network of GPS base stations. Base stations are high-accuracy, stationary GPS receivers used to broadcast location correction to roving GPS units.

When smartphones running Zephr’s code are within 10 kilometers of each other, they can exchange error data and use it to all get pinpoint accuracy for their locations.

In real-world testing, Zephr said it was able to achieve accuracy within a 1-meter buffer, and often within 50cm. The company said it needs around 10 to 15 devices sharing data within 10 kilometers of each other to get a marked improvement in GPS accuracy.

Zephr’s cofounder and CEO, Sean Gorman, said the company’s technology could be used for a variety of applications, including augmented reality, autonomous vehicles, delivery and ride-sharing services, search and rescue, and other location-centric uses.

Zephr plans to make its SDK available in the first half of next year.

The sources for this piece include an article in TheRegister.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 19, 2025 Anthropic is expanding a set of enterprise tools designed to make workplace AI more consistent, manageable and more...

June 12, 2024 Yesterday we covered a story about how Oracle was now cracking down on licensing Java, which started more...

January 25, 2024 Recent findings from GitClear, a developer analytics firm, indicate that the increasing reliance on AI assistance in more...

January 8, 2024 Microsoft has launched an ambitious program called "AI Odyssey" to train 100,000 Indian developers in artificial intelligence more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn