- Oct 9, 1999
- 21,019
- 156
- 106
I thought this was pretty cool. Rather than long strings of numbers (coordinates) to identify a location, what3words.com can identify ANY 3 meter-by-3 meter location on the planet, using a string of 3 words, and has mapped the earth into 57 trillion areas.
In densely populated areas, the words tend to be smaller, and vice-versa.
Using words makes it less likely to get a location wrong. A mis-typed number could refer to a wrong location, but a misspelled word will simply go unrecognized. And even if an errant plural is used where the word should be singular, it will be pretty far from the desired location indicating a mistake.
zeal.pound.pint = Statue of Liberty (well, part of it) but zeal.pound.pints = in England
You can zoom way in on the map on their site and see the grid pattern and it will display the 3 words assigned to where the pointer is.
In densely populated areas, the words tend to be smaller, and vice-versa.
Using words makes it less likely to get a location wrong. A mis-typed number could refer to a wrong location, but a misspelled word will simply go unrecognized. And even if an errant plural is used where the word should be singular, it will be pretty far from the desired location indicating a mistake.
zeal.pound.pint = Statue of Liberty (well, part of it) but zeal.pound.pints = in England
You can zoom way in on the map on their site and see the grid pattern and it will display the 3 words assigned to where the pointer is.