英国发明了一套厕所卫星定位系统,帮助逛街的人们解决内急问题。您只需发一条短信到指定号码,卫星就会定位您的位置,几秒钟之内就能告知您最近的厕所位置。
First came SatNav, the
satellite system that helps guide even the most
hapless drivers home - now the "SatLav" has been unveiled, to guide shoppers to the nearest
toilet .
Its inventors feel that it will be an
invaluable asset to anyone who is caught short while shopping or working far from home.
The new system uses
satellite technology to pinpoint the
whereabouts of the anxious user and then sends them details about their nearest convenience.
It is one of a growing number of services available to mobile phone users, who can already use their handsets to get directions or find taxis, plumbers or even recycling centers.
The technology used in SatLav is similar to that in modern GPS systems. The user simply sends a text message with the word '
toilet' to 80097, and a
satellite pinpoints their
location.
The
satellite picks up the mobile phone's signal and uses it to find the
location of the nearest phone mast.
From that it establishes the post code in which the user is standing, which it sends to a database containing all of the
toilets registered with the scheme.
The database then
automatically finds a
toilet that matches the postcode and sends a text message back to the user with the information. The entire process takes just seconds.
Robert Thurner, commercial director of mobile technology company Incentivated, which developed SatLav and maintains the database of
toilets, said that the latest mobile technology was "making residents' lives easier".
He said: "Whether they want to pay the congestion charge via their mobile or find their nearest recycling centers or licensed minicabs, mobile can offer an immediate solution, at any time and anywhere."
It is currently only available across 8.5 sq miles of Westminster in London and will cost 25p to use, with Westminster council paying a further nine pence.
The scheme could be rolled out across other parts of the country if it proves successful.
SatLav was developed by the council with Incentivated and is the brainchild of student Gail Knight, who entered the idea into a council competition.
Miss Knight, 26, said: "When I am out with friends we are always ducking into McDonalds or department stores to use their loos but we feel a bit bad about it."
She added: "I thought a text service would be really useful for people on the move."
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