Fire Eagle: Location-Aware Applications Without the Hassle

Tom Coates said it best yesterday morning at ETech: people have been touting ‘location-aware services’ as the next big thing for years. However, they’ve never taken off.

What’s been holding them back: acquiring reliable location data about users is a hard problem for developers to solve.

With yesterday’s release of Fire Eagle, that problem is now a whole lot easier to solve.

Ride the Fire Eagle Danger Day!

So what is Fire Eagle? It’s not Twitter for location, that’s for damn sure. Here’s how the Yahoo! copywriting wizards describe it:

The secure and stylish way to share your location with sites and services online while giving you unprecedented control over your data and privacy. We’re here to make the whole web respond to your location and help you to discover more about the world around you.

At the diagram to the left shows, the Fire Eagle platform acts as an broker for your location data. One or many applications can set your location, and, provided you give them access, any other service can access this data.

This is one giant piece in the puzzle for location-based services. Users set their location in one place, and any number of other services are able to then act on this data however they please.

The other piece in the puzzle: a Fire Eagle updater that requires absolutely NO user interaction. If I’m carrying around my iPhone in my pocket all day, why can’t it tell Fire Eagle where I am?

Of course, Erica Sadun has already whipped up an unofficial iPhone app to ping Fire Eagle called firefindme. Installation isn’t the easiest thing in the world – it assumes some launchd skillz to setup automatic updates. However, I’m sure a user friendly iPhone updater is coming very shortly ;).

Developing Location-Aware Applications, Sites and Services with Fire Eagle

I’ve got a full-on tutorial coming detailing how to make your Rails app talk to Fire Eagle, but in the meantime, check out my Fire Eagle Ruby Gem:

sudo gem install fireeagle

If Ruby’s not your bag, don’t worry – there are libraries for working with Fire Eagle in javascript, php, perl and python.

Proof-of-Concept Twitter Bot

Just like last time, I’ve created a proof-of-concept twitter bot for testing out Fire Eagle: firebot.

First off: you need an invite to talk to Fire Eagle right now. Luckily, firebot is handing out a few. follow firebot on Twitter, and then direct message it with ‘invite’

  • d firebot invite

Once you have an invite, direct message firebot with ‘auth’:

  • d firebot auth

firebot will then reply with a link. You’ll need to visit that link, authenticate with your Yahoo! account, and then authorize firebot with Fire Eagle.

Once that’s done, you can update your location with a direct message to firebot like so:

  • d firebot u Atlanta, GA
  • d firebot u Belize
  • d firebot u 30022
  • d firebot u 123 Anytown USA
  • etc

To look up the location of someone else using firebot:

  • d firebot q jnewland
  • d firebot q cjmartin
  • d firebot q plasticbagUK

Disclaimer

By telling firebot your location, you agree to share your location information with all other users of firebot. All direct messages you send to firebot are stored permanently at Twitter. If at any point you’d like all of your information deleted from firebot, please contact @jnewland.

What’s next?

Get hackin’ on your awesome location-based web app! Extra bonus points if you use the Fire Eagle Rubygem. If you’ve got a great idea for a Fire Eagle app and don’t have an invite, just ask firebot for one!

PS: If you hack up a Fire Eagle javascript sidebar widget that works on pages served as application/xml (preferably using the brilliant wedje technique) AND embraces the draft geo microformat, I’ll buy you a pony. Seriously.

Comments

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  1. JJ had this to say Fri, 07 Mar 2008 23:18:16 GMT

    That is way cool. It teaches programs to adapt to the code that is used? Did I get it right? Then this reduces the chance of bugs or at least lessens them.

  2. David Janes had this to say Sun, 09 Mar 2008 12:52:45 GMT

    Any chance of an invite here please? davidjanes (at) blogmatrix (dot) com … thanks.

  3. theregoesdave had this to say Fri, 21 Mar 2008 18:32:39 GMT

    Any chance you have more Fire Eagle invites? I’ve been lusting and since I found out that Navizon has a bridge, I’m dying to upgrade my location-based blogging map and google gadget.

  4. theregoesdave had this to say Mon, 24 Mar 2008 00:45:41 GMT

    Did you know that you can use Navizon to update your location from iPhone, Windows Mobile or Symbian phones using cell triangulation, wifi or gps?

  5. Dan Harrelson had this to say Fri, 11 Apr 2008 22:26:15 GMT

    Very cool app, thanks for releasing Firebot to the world. I find it ironic that the maps returned upon a query are links to Google since Fire Eagle is a Yahoo! product ;-)

    Feature request: Use tinyurl or another URL shortening service for the returned map links to Twitter.

  6. xxdesmus had this to say Thu, 05 Jun 2008 12:47:35 GMT

    Do you have any invites for Fire Eagle by chance? I’d love to try it out. xxdesmus @ Google’s email service.

  7. aweisbe had this to say Sat, 07 Jun 2008 18:42:44 GMT

    CAn I get a Fire Eagle invite…please?

  8. Seznam had this to say Fri, 11 Jul 2008 13:24:30 GMT

    It seems very good, is it possible to get an invitation?

  9. dofus kamas had this to say Mon, 10 Nov 2008 14:43:25 GMT

    GOVERNOR BELLINGHAM, in adofus kamas loose gown and easy cap- much as elderly gentlemen loved to endue themselves with, in their domestic privacy-walked foremost, and appeared to be showing off his estate, and expatiating on his projected improvements. The wide circumference of an elaborate ruff, beneath his grey beard, in the antiquated fashion of King James’kamas dofus reign, caused his head to look not a little like that of John the Baptist in a charger. The impression made by his aspect, so rigid and severe, and frost-bitten with more than autumnal age, was hardly in keeping with the appliances of worldly enjoyment wherewith he had evidently done his utmost to surround himself. But it is an acheter kamaserror to suppose that our grave forefathers- though accustomed to speak and think of human existence as a state merely of trial and warfare, and though unfeignedly prepared to sacrifice goods and life at the behest of duty- made it a matter of conscience to reject such means of comfort, or even luxury, as lay fairly buy kamaswithin their grasp. This creed was never taught, for instance, by the venerable pastor, John Wilson,

  10. Anon had this to say Tue, 16 Dec 2008 21:19:15 GMT

    This is an awesome application that I’ve been using for a while now. Thanks for the info!

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