Soldier spends own money to develop military iPhone app

“Captain Jonathan J. Springer reached into his own pockets to produce the $26,000 needed to develop a new iPhone app, one specifically designed for American soldiers battling the Taliban,” Terrence O’Brien reports for Switched.

“The 31-year-old soldier worked with programmers to bring his idea of a navigation and targeting app to life,” O’Brien reports. “The result, called ‘Tactical Nav,’ should soon be available in the iTunes App Store for $0.99… The app is currently awaiting approval from Apple, but, once it’s approved, Captain Springer may start work on an iPad edition.”

O’Brien reports, “The app allows soldiers to snap photos of waypoints, and plot them on a map. These reference photos and coordinates can then be sent to other units to coordinate attacks and artillery fire. The app can be used not only to direct artillery, but also to call in helicopter support.”

Read more in the full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Paul G.” for the heads up.]

32 Comments

  1. Umm, that’s great, but any reasonably funded enemy, and that includes the Taliban, can just buy it too. If any western military force is going to use the iPhone for military specific apps then they should not be in the open domain of the iTunes App Store. The whole idea of soldiers using iPhones is fraught with danger – any soldier’s iPhone falling into enemy hands contains a treasure trove of information for enemy intelligence gathering. This is pretty basic soldiering stuff. On ops you don’t carry ANYTHING personal – not letters, not diaries, not photos, not music, not marked maps, etc.

  2. @ Milint,

    “On ops you don’t carry ANYTHING personal – not letters, not diaries, not photos, not music, not marked maps, etc.”

    I guess that would rule out my custom made, monogramed condoms. ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”smile” style=”border:0;” />

  3. @ thedude : According to Apple, the iPhone 4 uses a combination of “GPS, Wi-Fi, and cellular towers” to accurately determine location. However, I suspect that the US military will be using add-on GPS receiver hardware in lieu of the “Wi-Fi and cellular towers.” These are already commercially available from such manufacturers as TomTom.
    @ Milint: I suspect in this case that all crucial data will be held behind not only the initial iPhone passcode, but inside apps offering their own level of encryption. Not only that, but don’t forget the remote wipe feature of contemporary smart-phones such as the iPhone. Isn’t it possible that this can be automatically activated when out of range of a portable relay, for example? Salling Clicker have offered similar mechanisms for a _long_ time.
    Do some people on this forum deliberately expose their lack of ability to consider viable solutions because they want to be made to appear foolish? Answers on a postcard.

  4. Just a FYI.
    If you go to the app store and search for tactical nav, there IS an app called tactical navigator already up there, different app and different developer. It’s $2.99
    Keep that in mind if you are keeping an eye out for the app in the article.

  5. Don’t be an ass, it was a very good question, anything can be hacked thease days, and if you don’t think it can’t you are a fool.
    All the encryption in the world will not save a bloodthirsty people from doing what they live to die for.
    So understand your enemy first, before you start laughing at what posibly could be a reality.
    They very well could steal and crack the code of of a iPhone and it’s Apps, if they can build God forbid a mass distructive weapon, don’t close your eyes to a real pisibility of the impossibile.

  6. If this app gets out there without adequate safeguards, Capt Springer may be done for “aiding and abbetting the enemy”. I repeat, sharp end soldiers (not talking about the base huggers), carrying iPhones is potentially a security nightmare.

    @What? No, custom monogramed condoms are OK and to be encouraged. In fact the good looking camels wouldn’t have it any other way!

  7. There will be safeguards…
    You think everyone has access to call in an airstrike?
    And it probably isn’t going to be a “press here, airstrike incoming 10 seconds later” like a video game.
    It will be more likely something that will give the user the exact coordinates etc. They will then have to use the normal channels to call it in, basically time saving and more accurate targeting.

  8. After re-reading the article
    “The app allows soldiers to snap photos of waypoints, and plot them on a map. These reference photos and coordinates can then be sent to other units to coordinate attacks and artillery fire. The app can be used not only to direct artillery, but also to call in helicopter support.”

    Sounds to me like augmented reality crossed with google maps.

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