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Rabu, 14 Februari 2018

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Surveying | Grid overlay | what3words - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

What3words (stylized what3words) is a geocoding system for the communication of locations with a resolution of three metres. What3words encodes geographic coordinates into three dictionary words. For example, the torch of the Statue of Liberty is located at "toned.melt.ship". This differs from most other location encoding systems in that it displays three words rather than long strings of numbers or letters. What3words has a website, apps for iOS and Android, and an API that enables bidirectional conversion of what3words address and latitude/longitude coordinates.


Video What3words



History

Founded by Chris Sheldrick, Jack Waley-Cohen, Mohan Ganesalingam, and Michael Dent, what3words launched in July 2013. Sheldrick and Ganesalingam originally conceived the idea after Sheldrick struggled to get equipment and bands to event locations on time due to inadequate addressing while working as a concert organizer. The company was incorporated on March 5, 2013 and a patent application for the core technology filed on April 19, 2013.

In November 2013, what3words raised $500,000 of seed funding, and in March 2014 the company raised a second seed round of $1,000,000. On November 3, 2015, what3words closed a $3.5 million Series A funding round led by Intel Capital, with Li Ka-shing's Horizons Ventures participating. On June 29, 2016, what3words closed a $8.5 million Series B round led by Aramex.


Maps What3words



Design principles

what3words uses a grid of the world made up of 57 trillion squares of 3 metres by 3 metres. Each square has been given a three-word English address. what3words has named the world's landmass with three words in various other languages. As of December 2016, what3words addresses (as well as web and iOS app user interface) are available in Arabic, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Mongolian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish; the iOS app also supports Swahili (Kiswahili). With announced plans for 14 more languages to launch at the start of 2018: Chinese, Indonesian, Zulu, Japanese, Korean, and Hindi. The company has also mentioned Greek, various languages of Nigeria and India, including Bengali, Farsi, Hindi and Urdu.

Each what3words language uses a wordlist of 25,000 words (40,000 in English, as it covers the sea as well as land). The lists go through multiple automated and human processes before being sorted by an algorithm that takes into account word length, distinctiveness, frequency, and ease of spelling and pronunciation. Homophones and variant spellings are treated to minimise any potential for confusion, and offensive words are removed.

The what3words algorithm actively shuffles similar-sounding three-word combinations around the world to enable both human and automated error-checking. The result is that if a three-word combination is entered slightly incorrectly and the result is still a valid what3words reference, the location will usually be so far away from the user's intended area that it will be immediately obvious to both a user and an intelligent error-checking system.

The what3words system uses a proprietary algorithm in combination with a limited database, meaning that the core technology is contained with a file around 10 MB in size. What3words originally sold "OneWord" addresses, which were stored in a database for a yearly fee, but this feature has been canceled.

The main claimed advantage of what3words is memorability, error-detection and unambiguous nature of words for most everyday and non-technical uses.

Festival Medical Services - How 3 simple words help festivals ...
src: what3words.com


Critiques

Supporters of open standards denounce the what3words system for being controlled by a private business and the software for being copyrighted and thus not freely usable. The fact that similar addresses are purposely far away from each other is also seen by some as a disadvantage. What3words reserves the right to change their list of words and will not be responsible for the consequences. The square size is fixed, limiting location accuracy to 3 metres, which is not accurate enough for all use cases that what3words claims it supports. The grid is two-dimensional, so the addressing scheme does not distinguish between floors in a building. The system supports 14 languages, although each language covers the world's entire land areas.


What3words provides an address for every person and point on ...
src: inhabitat.com


Users

Asset management

  • in2care - mosquito trap maintenance in Tanzania
  • Metcom - fire hydrant management in Colorado
  • Pollinate - energy solar lighting installation in the slums of India
  • Videre - solar lighting installations in Botswana

Partners | what3words
src: what3words.com


Awards

  • Grand Prix for Innovation at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity
  • The Tech Awards Sobrato Organization Economic Development Award
  • D&AD Black Pencil
  • FT/IFC Transformational Business Awards commendation for Achievement in Transformational Technology
  • KPMG Best British Mobile Startup
  • PWC Great Innovation Challenge Winner
  • Accenture Consumer Innovation Award
  • BT Tech for Good Award

What3words provides an address for every person and point on ...
src: inhabitat.com


Parodies

A number of parody sites have been created to rebel against what3word's proprietary nature, including:

  • What2Numbers - uses WGS84 coordinates
  • What3Fucks - uses swear words
  • what3ducks - uses ducks

Kiribati's first home deliveries with Kiribati Post and what3words ...
src: what3words.com


Competitors

Alphanumeric competitors include:

  • Open Location Code (2014)
  • Makaney Code (2011)
  • Geohash (2008)
  • MapCode (2008)
  • Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate system
  • Zippr

What3words Wants To Change The World's Addressing System
src: popupcity.net


References


What3words provides an address for every person and point on ...
src: inhabitat.com


External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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