I was thinking about how I could fit a simple computer to my dad's car so he could use AutoRoute Express as a kind of cheap GPS system when I had a curious thought:
Could I use wi-fi and NeoTrace to track a car?[/b]
I mean, there are wifi hotspots all over the place, right? And as soon as it got into range of a public router the computer would hook itself into it. So in theory I could set the computer to ping the IP of one of the comps on my home network every 10-15 seconds for as long as the computer had power (IE, the car was running).
If someone stole the car, the computer would be pinging away and as soon as it got into range of a public wifi network (which are supposedly fairly widespread now) I'd start getting pings coming in.
Then, in theory, I could use NeoTrace Pro to identify the hotspot it was using and track it down to within a few thousand feet. Not exactly a perfect system, but it'd narrow things down from searching the whole country to searching one district of a town or city. After that it wouldn't be too hard to get a visual.
It'd cost maybe £100 as a one-off and you could reuse all the stuff if you ever got sick of it. Not bad compared to £300 specific-use equipment and a £50/month subscription to some locator service.