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Communications Iphone Apple

iPhone 14 Satellite Feature Saves Stranded Man In Alaska (macrumors.com) 49

Apple's iPhone 14 Emergency SOS via Satellite Feature was put to the test in Alaska yesterday, when a man became stranded in a rural area. MacRumors reports: In the early hours of the morning on December 1, Alaska State Troopers received an alert that a man traveling by snow machine from Noorvik to Kotzebue had become stranded. The man was in a cold, remote location with no connectivity, and he activated the Emergency SOS via satellite feature on his iPhone 14 to alert authorities to his predicament. Apple's Emergency Response Center worked with local search and rescue teams and the Northwest Arctic Borough Search and Rescue Coordinator to send out volunteer searchers directly to the GPS coordinates that were relayed to Apple using the emergency function.

The man was rescued successfully and there were no injuries. The area where he was located is remote and on the fringes of where satellite connectivity is available. Apple says that satellite connectivity might not work in places above 62 degrees latitude, such as northern parts of Canada and Alaska, and Noorvik and Kotzebue are close to 69 degrees latitude. Troopers who helped with the rescue were "impressed with the accuracy and completeness of information included in the initial alert," with the Emergency SOS via Satellite feature designed to ask several questions ahead of when an alert is sent out to expedite rescue missions.

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iPhone 14 Satellite Feature Saves Stranded Man In Alaska

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  • Good! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Arethan ( 223197 ) on Friday December 02, 2022 @08:29PM (#63098230) Journal

    It's about time we started to solve the 'no service' problem in respect to contacting emergency response teams. Too many people needlessly die because cell signals are terrible masters when things go pear shaped in the wilderness.

    I'm glad Apple stepped up to (finally) close the emergency service connectivity gap. There have been alternate solution proposals, but this one makes a lot of sense as a consumer-facing product.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Saving rich people from the perils of their own adventures, yes what a huge act of philanthropy Apple is doing here. You can only outrun Darwin for so long though.

      • by spudnic ( 32107 )

        In most cases, I'd agree with you. However, nowhere does it say that this was some rich guy out on some adventure. If he was a regular guy living up there, using a snow machine to get to a store, doctor, or whatever over long distances would be a normal part of life.

        Good that he's ok.

    • It's about time we started to solve the 'no service' problem in respect to contacting emergency response teams. Too many people needlessly die because cell signals are terrible masters when things go pear shaped in the wilderness.

      When you go into the wilderness you take on the possibility of dying. It is not up to the world to rescue you.

      • Re:Good! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Arethan ( 223197 ) on Friday December 02, 2022 @09:12PM (#63098312) Journal

        At a basal level, I do agree with you here -- I was raised old school, so I tend to take my own wilderness jaunts quite seriously. The modern masses are generally dumbfucks when it comes to bear-season style problems (ie, we have bear season, so there are less bears, so dumbfucks usually die less in the woods).

        However, the population is steadily growing, and the pro-nature campaigns are putting more and more people into the wilderness without sufficient survival training. So we have a choice - supplement existing consumer tech with useful lifesaving features, or let the fools die and hope the rest of the masses don't just scroll over their death-story lesson, because the latest Taytay ticketing fiasco is obviously a "more important" use of their reading time.

        Hm. When I put it exactly like that, it does seem difficult.

    • Now, if only we can solve the problem of rescue aircraft becoming unstuck in time when they approach on the wrong bearing.
    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      It's about time we started to solve the 'no service' problem in respect to contacting emergency response teams.

      I've been using my Spot GPS for this purpose since it first came out I think in 2009. Wikipedia says it's led to 6,000 rescues up to 2019. I don't understand why people are gushing over Apple, while Spot has been providing a (in my mind) better and cheaper service for years...

      1. Ever 10mins it sends my GPS coordinates via GlobalStar satellite to a website, so friends and family can track my progress, and I can get a GPS plot of my path upon my return to civilization.
      2. It has an "emergency to friends+family" butt
      • Re:Good! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Tom ( 822 ) on Friday December 02, 2022 @11:30PM (#63098470) Homepage Journal

        That's great if you go out routinely.

        This is a consumer-grade solution aimed at people who didn't expect to be in an emergency. Either because they're morons, or because they found themselves in a situation unexpectedly. Like breaking down in the middle of nowhere when you were just passing through.

        • This is a consumer-grade solution aimed at people who didn't expect to be in an emergency.

          The guy in question was going from Noorvik to Kotzebue. No one "passes through" this area and if he didn't have his toy on him he'd qualify for a Darwin award for not having an emergency beacon. This isn't a quick trip down the road where you just happen to not have 5G service.

      • Re:Good! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Saturday December 03, 2022 @11:23AM (#63099172)

        I don't understand why people are gushing over Apple, while Spot has been providing a (in my mind) better and cheaper service for years...

        Because Spot is good if you routinely go out into the wilderness and thus buy one.

        But there are plenty of situations where you don't anticipate being stranded, or you go camping for a week once a year as the most "wild" you ever get and thus buying a Spot and activating it and keeping it activated for that infrequent use isn't really practical.

        Perhaps you're on a road trip, and then your car breaks down in the middle of nowhere with no coverage. I can bet 99% of the people who travel those roads don't have any form of beacon, Spot, satellite phone, or other mechanism to contact someone in case of emergency. It's just something people don't think about.

        Spot devices are wonderful yes, there are plenty of situations where they're useful - there are plenty of pilots out there who carry them because they will easily fly out of cellular coverage and thus need to be prepared. But your average family driving cross country on a road trip?

        • If you go out in the wilds (which includes between settlements by snowmobile) in Alaska in winter (or anywhere else like that) you should carry a PLB and if you do not then you are foolishly under-equipped for an 80km journey off-road in winter within the Arctic Circle.

          A PLB, when activated, will send your coordinates to a satellite using the well-tested COSPAS/SARSAT system.

    • The solution exists and is called a Personal Locator Beacon, which sends a signal to satellites dedicated to search and rescue. I don't think I'd want to be alone in remote, disconnected terrain without one.
      • by Shag ( 3737 )

        Nifty devices! And only $250-$400 for one more thing to carry.

        Though of course it's a thing with batteries that you're not going to exhaust by talking, texting, taking pictures, etc. -- which is why I'd expect PLBs/EPIRBs to remain popular with the most extreme 1% of wilderness-going folk.

        But I just saw a story yesterday right here on Slashdot about how smartphones have taken 97% of the pocket-digital-camera market. People will buy product A that they use all the time, even if it only has "most of" the fe

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      It's about time we started to solve the 'no service' problem in respect to contacting emergency response teams. Too many people needlessly die because cell signals are terrible masters when things go pear shaped in the wilderness.

      There is no 'no service' problem. There is only people who needlessly die because they go somewhere unprepared and ill-equipped. Apple didn't invent satellite emergency beacons. They only packaged them in a more fragile device marketed at people who prefer to spend money on shiny toys rather than on basic emergency equipment. Proper gear isn't expensive and is built to actually last, unlike say the battery of an iPhone in Alaskan weather.

      Alternate headline: "Apple lowers quality of the gene pool and denies

  • Apple says that satellite connectivity might not work in places above 62 degrees latitude, such as northern parts of Canada and Alaska, and Noorvik and Kotzebue are close to 69 degrees latitude.

    Something I think hardware and software have in common is that you spend ages crafting a feature then the very first ways it gets used are what in the design phase you all considered an extreme outlier...

    Congrats on it actually working rather than the alternative of discovering if FindMy works when the phone is insi

    • by Shag ( 3737 )

      Congrats on it actually working rather than the alternative of discovering if FindMy works when the phone is inside a bear!

      And if it does work when the phone is inside the bear, then the really hard question is just how do you make that loud chiming sound stop coming from the bear?

  • with first poster:

    "Too many people needlessly die because cell signals are terrible masters when things go pear shaped in the wilderness."

    Advertise much?

    You're implying that since 1 person died traveling beyond the reach of technology, BECAUSE cell networks don't cover every square inch of the earth, that we must all buy iPhones for our "safety".

    Network coverage is not a human right. It is circumscribed by the tremendous cost in money, environmental damage, and human suffering. I'm not saying networks and

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