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Article
GPS Tethering for Energy Conservation
Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), 2015 IEEE
  • Yuepeng Qi, North Carolina State University
  • Chansu Yu, Cleveland State University
  • Young-Joo Suh, Pohang University of Science and Technology
  • Si Young Jang, Pohang University of Science and Technology
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
1-1-2015
Abstract

Due to the low-speed GPS transmission and poor signal quality, localization is considered an expensive operation in battery-operated smartphones. This is even worse for apps that need a single location fix such as Foursquare and Flickr rather than continuous navigation because it cannot exploit the less-demanding “warm start” mode of GPS operation. This paper proposes GPS-Tether (GTR) which shares and reuses the known GPS coordinates among mobile devices in the proximity. Benefiting from unremitting Wifi discovery behaviors of smartphones, GTR does not need an additional protocol and does not disrupt operations of non-GTR clients. Experiments based on Samsung Galaxy smartphones and Monsoon Power Monitor show that GTR can extend smartphones battery usage as much as 19% compared to Assisted GPS (A-GPS). One important design goal is that it should require minimal changes for the implementation of GTR, which has been accomplished by incorporating the Wifi virtualization technique.

DOI
10.1109/WCNC.2015.7127660
Citation Information
Yuepeng Qi, Chansu Yu, Young-Joo Suh and Si Young Jang, "GPS tethering for energy conservation," in Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), 2015 IEEE, 2015, pp. 1320-1325.