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March 3, 2009 8:41 AM PST

Twitter and iPhone help find lost skier

by Caroline McCarthy
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In a bittersweet conclusion, a missing skier in the Swiss Alps was rescued with the help of Twitter and an iPhone, but it appears that his fellow skiing companion was found deceased after the two were separated from the rest of their group.

Tracking Twitter search for the term "verbier" (the region of the Alps where the two went missing) has brought much of the news together.

Blogger Robin Blandford of ByteSurgery.com rounded up some of the messages: one member of the ski trip Twittered that two members of the group were missing, and another posted a tweet requesting the cell phone numbers of the missing skiers to attempt to contact them. From what it looks like, the GPS coordinates of their iPhones were used to pinpoint their location, but when one of them was found alive, he had become separated from his companion.

The Swiss news source Le Nouvelliste reported on Tuesday that, unfortunately, the second skier had been found deceased.

Blandford updated his blog post to say that the two skiers worked for a start-up called Dolphin Music, and that a number of other tech entrepreneurs were in the same British ski group.

UPDATE at 8:53 a.m. PST: We have more information, and in English now, thanks to the U.K.-based Evening Standard. The two missing skiers were actually on snowboards, and have been identified as Jason Tavaria and Rob Williams, the 29-year-old co-founders of Dolphin Music.

Tavaria was found alive after he was located with GPS on his iPhone, but Williams was found dead, and according to the Evening Standard, had fallen about 66 feet and landed on rocks.

Blizzard conditions at Verbier had made the search and rescue process difficult.

Originally posted at The Social
Caroline McCarthy, a CNET News staff writer, is a downtown Manhattanite happily addicted to social-media tools and restaurant blogs. Her pre-CNET resume includes interning at an IT security firm and brewing cappuccinos. E-mail Caroline.
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by Kev_Orng March 3, 2009 9:23 AM PST
Meanwhile, in Canada, a man stamps a giant "SOS" into the snow and the Mounties ignore it for three days, before finally saying "FINE! We'll go check into the giant SOS stamped in the snow." But it's too late, the man's wife has already died of hypothermia.<br /><br />Maybe they should have been up on their Twitter? Nah, the SOS was perfectly visible and reported multiple times; The problem was people, not technology. Send a Tweet or light a bush on fire, it's up to the rescuers to decide whether or not to pay attention.
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by lusciatti March 3, 2009 9:33 AM PST
This is absolutely incredible! I can't believe that an "SOS" would be ignored by anyone charged with protecting the well being of people in their vicinity. I just can't believe this would happen and then to hear the outcome, I am very saddened!
by net40 March 3, 2009 9:32 AM PST
Since 9/11, the RCMP has lots of money to create crimes using stoolpigeons, and then ride in victoriously : they always get their terrorist. Why bother risking a flat tire in Rockies when you can fight crime on your laptop at Tim Hortons instead?
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by ausernamenoonehaschosen March 3, 2009 11:40 AM PST
Maybe it's just because I had a long day at work today, but if they tracked him with GPS, then that means he was getting cell reception. If he was getting reception, why didn't he just call someone? I guess he was knocked out from a fall?
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by dudeonguitar March 3, 2009 2:02 PM PST
The iPhone doesn't use Cell towers for its GPS....it has a dedicated GPS chip.
by FroZone March 3, 2009 6:54 PM PST
Um, nothing uses Cell towers for GPS...
by mbenedict March 4, 2009 12:32 AM PST
He was actually already on VOICE call with the rescuers. He used the Google Maps on his iPhone (after enabling the GPS) to provide his location to the rescuers.<br /><br />Strictly speaking, even with a normal cell phone the rescuers could probably have tracked him just through the cell towers (by triangulation.) I believe that's how the deceased snowboarder was found... they tracked his cell phone but unfortunately the guy was already dead.
by WeCanDoBIZ March 4, 2009 12:56 AM PST
You are correct in saying that the iPhone doesn't use cell towers to find GPS location, but to send that information to other people it DOES use the cell towers of course.<br /><br />Ian Hendry<br />CEO, WeCanDo.BIZ<br />http://www.wecando.biz
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by March 4, 2009 3:12 AM PST
Actually the iPhone DOES use cell tower triangulation when determining its position. The device performs aGPS (assisted GPS) and it gets the GPS data from nearby cell towers to narrow down the number of GPS satellites to look for. With an active cell connection, the phone can determine its location in 30 seconds to two minutes. Without it, it can take much longer or fail entirely-- this happened to me several times last month in Seoul, where there are no GSM operators and therefore no cell signal for the iPhone. The iPhone can take 15-20 minutes to get its position without a cell connection.
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by kinderguy March 4, 2009 10:04 AM PST
In New York City St. John's University professor &#38; Award winning Off Broadway laywright has written an ingenious play about twitter called "TWITTER THEATER" <br />HE is hoping to direct an international playwriting program at the University where he s taught for 20 odd years. MYERS is a distinctyive adventurous voice in the American theater &#38; his plays are produced frequently <br />awesome as younger folk might say!!! many twitter &#38; blog about this cutting edge dramatist
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by kamyark2002 September 4, 2009 5:18 PM PDT
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