iBeacons may prove to be Apple’s biggest new feature for iOS 7

“Thanks to a really detailed discussion by Daniel Eran Dilger at AppleInsider [June 19, 2013], we can now see the full implications of the iBeacons ranging and micro-location capabilities included in iOS 7,” Anthony Wing Kosner writes for Forbes.

“iBeacons is an implementation of the Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) profile which enables very precise micro-location triggers for events in iOS 7 apps,” Kosner writes. “Already an industry is mobilizing to create hardware and software services to take advantage of these new geofencing capabilities… BLE is already in iPhone 4S and 5 as well as iPads, Mac computers and many high-end Androids. The way iBeacons works is that the mobile device is both a sensor and a signal. A BLE enabled iPhone running iOS 7 will be able to receive location-specific messages based on its proximity to a local network of iBeacons. And that phone can act as an iBeacon itself, transmitting messages to others.

Kosner writes, “iBeacon builds on top of last year’s Passbook feature in iOS and now means that you might see a sale offer on your lock screen as you crossed the threshold of a store and then have checkout information appear as you approach the cashier.”

Read more in the full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “David E.” for the heads up.]

Related article:
Apple v. Android: Bang per watt – Apple’s massive advantage – August 13, 2013

33 Comments

    1. Apple HR dept.
      We’ll take you on but if you so much as hint that an iPad would benefit from a few live tiles you’ll be taken out the back and executed.
      Oh, and If you try to touch-swipe an iMac screen we’ll blow-torch your fingers. Have a nice day, glad you could join us.

    1. Great idea! I’m going to patent a stainless steel fabric case for iPhones to prevent the evil hackers and the NSA (so I can get both groups of paranoids) from tracking you through your iPhone! Now, if only I could get that transparent aluminum…

      😆

      1. Tell HR, “No seriously, it’s the ads. I can’t help it, they keep popping up all over the place. I think my computer must have a virus. No someone else logged in. I wasn’t at my desk when that happened. Hm? I don’t know, beats me.”

    1. No, MDN shows roughly the same ads to everyone, but somewhat randomly. Has always been that way. Besides that, tailored advertising is a largely mythical business. I’ve found that most ads on most websites have very little to do with my interests or online viewing habits, unless the ads are related to the website content on the very site I’m visiting.

      1. If you use Google or Gmail, ads will definitely reflect your browsing habits. I was bored one day and followed some links to site that sells handgun training, a site that I had never seen or heard of before. For months after that ads for that site popped up on seemingly every site I went to.

        And Gmail is worse, the ads are based on the content of your email! If you get a message from a friend asking you to meet them at McDonalds, the ads next to the email, in the web app for Gmail, will be for Big Macs and Happy Meals.

        Creepy. Always browse with AdBlock and Ghosterly.

    1. Apple just bought a couple of public transit mapping companies, so that’s coming. Street View is strictly Google and you’ll never get it back unless you want a bunch of Apple iCars cruising around the world taking photos of you.

  1. This will be great news for any moronic war mongering country. I mean just think of the thousand of innocent Iraqis that would be alive if iBeacon was around to precisely locate the true culprit of the second 9/11 terrorist act.

    It’s a huge win for snipers, shoplifters, rapists, kidnappers and any sort of government that lacks any moral fiber whatsoever by being willing to spy on it’s very own citizens.

  2. Useful for the sort of halfwit who spends their entire waking life with a phone clutched in their grubby little hand.
    Utterly useless for the normal person who keeps their phone in their pocket except for when they need to use it for something important.
    This will be turned off, or hidden, like many other functions that are mostly useless.

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