Kim Kardashian gets 'snubbed' by Anna Wintour during 'awkward' moment after Fendi NYFW show This Morning's Alice Beer is replaced in the Queen's mourners queue after viewers slammed 'disrespectful' interviews where she handed out doughnutsīlake Lively is pregnant! The star, 35, reveals her baby bump in a gold dress as she is set to welcome a fourth child with husband Ryan Reynolds with former rival Bivol soon to re-enter the ring The royals don't want Britain to shut down for the Queenįinal chapter: The Trilogy comes to an end as super-middleweight Canelo faces off against GGG for the last time this week. JANET STREET-PORTER: Please stop this mourning madness. Meghan Markle and Sophie Wessex will follow the Queen's funeral procession in a car while King Charles III and other royal family members walk behind Girl, eight, is left 'crying with joy' as Kate picks her from the Sandringham crowd to place her Corgi toy tribute to the Queen among flowers Sophie Wessex to be given a number of the Queen's royal patronages as a gift from her late mother-in-law who saw her as a 'confidante' Side by side again for the Queen: William and Harry will walk together behind the coffin at their grandmother's funeral it is confirmed Perhaps more troubling is the prospect that anybody who steals or finds the phone will be able to access it and then use it to find the victim's home address - before going there to steal more. However, if the phone is internet-enabled, as almost all smartphones are, then it raises the prospect that hackers could get hold of the information remotely. Here, you will be given access to the rather disturbing amount of data that your iPhone has been collecting on your whereabouts, all without telling you.Īpple has previously stated that the map exists only on each device, meaning the data cannot be accessed by other companies or security services. In order to access the map, users must go to the Settings menu on their phones, before scrolling through to find the Privacy menu.įrom there, go to Location Services, then find System Services and scroll down to find Frequent Locations. The map, called Frequent Locations, appears to be automatically enabled for most iPhone users who are left completely unaware of its existence - unless you know where to look. The feature has existed at least since the launch of iOS 7, which was launched in June 2013 and had been installed on 89 per cent of devices by 2014, according to Apple CEO Tim Cook. The app's description mentions requiring iOS 9 or later with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch compatibility and an 18MB download size.Called 'frequent locations', the map is automatically enabled for most iPhone users, but can be turned off from this menu The app was last updated on October 27, so it had been on the App Store for at least a week before anyone discovered it. The technology is slightly similar to the company's iBeacons software it runs in all of its retail stores, which locates a user's iPhone when entering an Apple Store and updates them on various promotions, classes, and product information.Ĭurrently, Indoor Survey can't be found using the search function on the App Store and can only be discovered via iTunes directly. The indoor location company had developed a way for an app to detect someone's location within a building using Wi-Fi signals, which seems to be on par with Indoor Survey's abilities today. ![]() The new app could be the result of Apple's purchase of WifiSLAM in 2013. The end result is indoor positioning without the need to install special hardware." As you do so, the indoor Survey App measures the radio frequency (RF) signal data and combines it with an iPhone's sensor data. By dropping 'points' on a map within the Survey App, you indicate your position within the venue as you walk through. ![]() "Enable indoor positioning within a venue using the Indoor Survey app. The app is also briefly mentioned on a banner within Apple Maps Connect after signing in, asking users to sign up to the indoor mapping initiative if they represent a venue with a handful of attributes Apple is looking for. When prompted with Indoor Survey's home menu, after entering an Apple ID and password, users will be met with an Authorization Failed message and be barred from further accessing the app's suggested indoor mapping abilities. ![]() The app, however, doesn't appear to be entirely functional as of yet. Spotted by developer Steve Troughton-Smith yesterday evening, the app specifically uses radio frequency signals in concert with an iPhone's various sensor data to successfully map an interior location (via AppleInsider). Apple last week quietly launched a new first-party app called Indoor Survey, which allows its users to map out the interior space of a building using their iPhone.
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