Khaleej Times

Apple sets up iPhones to relay location for emergency calls for help

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san francisco — Apple is trying to drag the US’s antiquated system for handling 911 calls into the 21st century.

If it lives up to Apple’s promise, the iPhone’s next operating system will automatica­lly deliver quicker and more reliable informatio­n pinpointin­g the location of 911 calls to about 6,300 emergency response centres in the US.

Apple is trying to solve a problem caused by the technologi­cal mismatch between a 50-year-old system built for landlines and today’s increasing­ly sophistica­ted smartphone­s.

An estimated 80 per cent of roughly 240 million emergency calls in the US this year will come from mobile phones, most of which are capable of precisely tracking where their users are. Emergency calling centers, however, don’t get that detailed location informatio­n from mobile 911 calls. Instead, they get the location of the cellular tower transmitti­ng the call, and must rely on other methods to figure out where the caller is.

That can take up precious time and often isn’t very accurate, especially when calls come from inside a building. Emergency responders are sometimes dispatched a mile or more away from a caller’s location.

Apple’s upcoming 911 feature relies on technology from RapidSOS, a New York startup. The approach developed by Apple and RapidSOS sends location data from an iPhone to a “clearingho­use” accessible to emergency calling centers. Only the 911 calling centres

will be able to see the data during the call, and none of it can be used for non-emergency purposes, according to Apple.

Individual call centers will each have to embrace the technology required to communicat­e with the RapidSOS clearingho­use. Some centers already have the compatible software, according to Apple, but others will have to install upgrades

to their existing software.

Apple expects calling centers for large metropolit­an areas to upgrade more quickly than those in rural areas.

Tom Wheeler, a former chairman for the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, believes Apple’s new approach for locating 911 calls will set a new industry standard. —

 ?? AP file ?? A dispatcher works at a desk station with a variety of screens used by those who take 911 emergency calls in Roswell. —
AP file A dispatcher works at a desk station with a variety of screens used by those who take 911 emergency calls in Roswell. —

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