7

I am considering building an iPhone GPS app to assist runners. It would need to get an accurate speed reading (within 1mph) every 10 seconds. Is the iPhone 3GS or the new iPhone 4 capable of giving a reading this accurate?

4
  • There is already built-in support with Nike to achieve something very similar. Worth noting: apple.com/ipod/nike/run.html Jun 27, 2010 at 16:13
  • @Chris, The Nike app uses a sensor in your shoe, not just GPS.
    – Jon-Eric
    Jun 27, 2010 at 16:43
  • Does the Nike app work by guessing based on the pedometer?
    – Gattster
    Jun 28, 2010 at 1:12
  • 2
    Yeah, the Nike app uses the pedometer. RunKeeper uses the GPS, and seems pretty accurate to me, but I'm not sure how often it samples or how much smoothing it does under the hood. Its "real time" display seems accurate and quite responsive, though. And RunKeeper is probably the app you have to compete with when it comes to GPS-enabled running apps on the iPhone. -- Matt (web guy for Splendid Things, creators of Get Running for iPhone, and a RunKeeper user...) Jul 5, 2010 at 12:30

7 Answers 7

4
+25

In terms of accuracy it's possible (as long you don't lose the signal of course). Especially since GPS is much more accurate in relative positioning (i.e. it might have 10m uncertainty in positioning you on the map, but it'll detect it if you move for 1m). For periods that there's no signal, you'll just get an average velocity or something.

However note that leaving the GPS on like this will dramatically eat up the battery so it might not be very satisfactory for your customers if used for a long period.

You might want to use other technologies or ask for the user's assistance and use the GPS less often. For example, you could sample the location every minute or so, and then use the map API to guess how the user moved from A to B (or ask the user if it's not possible).

2

It's possible but you couldn't depend on it 100% because of the possible inaccuracies of the gps. And your timing would need to be such that it's gaugeing on straight line distances so 10 seconds apart might work but you could also capture a point every second or two then figure the distance between all the points in that 10 second spread and use that against the starting timestamp and ending timestamp. Best option is to put something together and test it.

1

You may be better off counting shake events as each shake will correspond to a foot-strike. Then use the GPS as a means of calibrating the runners average stride length every 10 seconds or so. Over time, you may be able to correlate frequency of foot-strikes and GPS data with the average stride length. I would expect a more tired runner to use a shorter stride and fewer foot-strikes per second.

1

Does the iphone have an accelerometer? You could do it that way. Also, there is a very similar app that I personally use that works very well, but it's not for iphone due to various OS limitations.

http://velocomputer.com/

1

Yes, is probably the short answer. Download a similar app like Trails Lite to test it for your needs.

If you average your location samples over 10 seconds then you will end up with a pretty accurate speed reading. Think of it like the needle of a speedometer in an old car, bouncing around with every pothole. If you look at it for a split-second, then you can't tell what speed you're doing, but if you study it for 10 seconds (and I don't recommend trying this) you can get a much better idea.

As has already been pointed out, the accuracy of absolute positioning may only be accurate to 40m or so, but relative positioning is much more accurate, and that's what you need.

0

As some people have noted, you'll run into the problem of spots in service. This can be accounted for, though I wouldn't call it fixed, by keeping track of their average speed for the past minute/few minutes and apply that to the "gray zone."

This keeps them moving forward at what can be somewhat safely assumed as their current speed, as long as they're not stopping and starting often. This fallback number can be kept up to date and swapped for the realtime number in instances where service isn't available, and then swapped out again when service comes back. You could possibly incorporate the accelerometer to make sure they're still running when the fallback number is being shown.

-1

Doubtful over time. Maybe for a few cycles. But between sleep, GPS lag, and accuracy issues I think it will be challenging. It's also worth asking how many people run with their iPhone?

6
  • 4
    The same people who used to run with their ipod now run with their iphone. Jun 27, 2010 at 6:30
  • Fair. I just personally wouldn't as a runner. It's worth noting that this type of app comes with challenges, both technical and marketing. That's what Gattster was asking. Jun 27, 2010 at 15:01
  • 1
    Jason, I run and cycle with my nexus one using the endomondo app and it works just fine at telling me speed and distance. It is crazy accurate which would indicate that it is constantly getting gps coordinates. And having played a little with the iphone getting gps and judging distance, i can tell you that you can get fairly accurate results. And it seemed like half the people in a half marathon i recently ran had their iphones on them (There were 23,000 people in that race)
    – AtomRiot
    Jun 28, 2010 at 3:49
  • Offtopic, but it wouldn't happen to have been the Huntington beach Marathon?
    – Gattster
    Jun 28, 2010 at 7:33
  • I never said impossible. I said challenging. I have made several apps dealing with CoreLocation and MapKit for the iPhone. There are many variables with gathering GPS data. Personally, I'd be reluctant to develop and market an app where the core function relied on incredibly accurate GPS data. Say for example, charting a runners route with statistical data. I've thought about building such an app, and I felt I couldn't reliably meet the user's expectations. I am not trying to be the nay sayer here. So don't let my feedback stop you. Jun 28, 2010 at 22:42

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.