The iPhone supports geolocation in mobile Safari via the following call:
navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(
function(pos){
var lat = pos.coords.latitude;
var long = pos.coords.longitude;
},
function(){
/* Handler if location could not be found */
}
);
I'd like to build a good list of devices that have one of the following:
- support this feature out of the box, or
- support this feature with an upgrade, or
- support geolocation with equivalent fidelity of data with some other snippet of Javascript.
I'm only familiar with my own device, so this is my list so far:
Out of the box:
- iPhone 3GS
Supported, but only with an update
- iPhone 3G
- iPhone 2G (?)
- PC or Mac computer with Firefox 3.5
Supported with some other snippet
?
What is the level of support in Blackberry, Android phones, etc?
From a similar more recent topic:
"I'm working on an open source library that supports all javascript location capable phones with the W3C standard. So far it supports iPhone, Android, BlackBerry and some fringe browser platforms running in a browser. The lib can also be used when writing web stack standalone apps for Nokia OVI and the Palm WebOS.
http://code.google.com/p/geo-location-javascript/"
Although I think it's a great practice to standardize on the (draft, by the way) W3C Geolocation API, it's worth noting that there are a few other options in the browser, which can be particularly helpful if you need to target an older platform.
navigator.geolocation
with very similar syntax.The W3C version works on android 2.*. On android 1.6 you can fallback to gears, which will work pretty much the same way. In theory the W3C standard should also work on Firefox mobile (Fennec), which currently is available for Nokia's Maemo devices and will be standard on MeeGo.
You don’t have to have the newest mobile phone to use GPS and Geolocation API. Almost every mobile browser (without proxy server) can be used to read position from buidin GPS. If You have Java and GPS in Your phone – You can use mobile-gps-web-gate – see at http://code.google.com/p/mobile-gps-web-gate/
Franson's GPSGate is a commercial product that can expose a Windows machine's hardware GPS to any browser through javascript. The interface is a little different from the W3C's implementation though.
Update: the Express (lite) version of GPSGate is free.
As of today, the W3C Geolocation API (widely associated with, though not technically part of, HTML 5) is support in the following major desktop browsers:
There are at least two mobile browsers that implement the Geolocation API:
On all of these platforms, you should be able to use navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition, etc.