I'm designing an application where application in server side need to be continuously aware of user location. I'm thinking to create an Android service that run in the background and continuously query user location and send the result to an application in the backend server. However, I wonder if this is the best approach in terms of battery saving. For example, in iOS, there is something called "Significant-Change" to serve such purpose, does Android have similar thing.

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on iOS, this "significant-change" is not what you might think. a significant change may occur while the device is switching between cell towers, and not actually occurring after a change every x in distance. When using this significant-change feature, you will receive location updates not often enough for practical use(unless you want to track only a few locations) – binnyb Nov 30 '11 at 22:25
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up vote 5 down vote accepted

I suggest to create a background Service which just uses the NETWORK_PROVIDER and the PASSIVE_PROVIDER. You can use the minTime and the minDistance parameter to avoid draining the battery. Doc

And Reto wrote a great post about obtaining users location http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2011/06/deep-dive-into-location.html

Regarding to your comment you have to start your service sticky: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Service.html#onStartCommand(android.content.Intent, int, int)

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Thanks ... in this case, how could I make sure that the system will not kill my service, or at least, how could I know if the service is killed so that I could run it again? – user836026 Dec 1 '11 at 8:15
edited answer :) – Dominic Bartl Dec 4 '11 at 18:35
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