For All of You Pet Owners... Wireless Collars by AT&T To Track Your Pets

A General Discussion forum for cars and other topics, and a great place to introduce yourself if you are new to NICO!
User avatar
lino
Posts: 3533
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 7:48 am
Car: 1991 Q45a Fed-Spec, IQP/White, Texasoil 9 Accumulator Recharge, '93 TCU 1st Gear Start, JWFSB, B&M 70268 Transmission Cooler, BBS Forged Wheels, DRLs, Silverstars, Tint, Very Well Serviced.
Contact:

Post

LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - With most Americans already toting cellphones, AT&T Inc now wants to target their dogs.

A wireless dog collar set to hit the market this year is just one of a plethora of new devices the telephone company hopes will catch on with U.S. consumers.

The collar could send text messages or emails to the owner of a pet when it strays outside a certain area, or the device could allow continuous tracking of the pet.

Other gadgets include a pill box that uses a wireless connection to remind people to take their medicine, e-readers, a device that tracks product pallets for shipping companies, and entertainment systems for people riding in cars.

When all these are connected to other devices or the Internet, they will connect using AT&T's network -- meaning more revenue for the company. AT&T expects they will bring in about $1 billion in annual services revenue in about five years.

"We see opportunities in dogs, in pallets, in cars and how you take your pills," Ralph de la Vega, the head of AT&T's mobile business, said at the CTIA annual wireless trade show.

After talking up wireless dog collars for more than a year, the No. 2 U.S. cellphone company said on Wednesday that it is almost ready to reconnect dog owners with their lost pets.

It is for those people out there who care as much about their dog as they do about their children, joked Glenn Lurie, who heads AT&T's emerging devices business.

Showing off a red collar designed for bigger dogs, the company said the device could work for virtually any size of dog, but would not reveal where it would go on sale or how much it would cost.

De la Vega noted that even if many of the emerging devices only use the wireless network infrequently, it could end up providing a lot of service revenue if millions of devices are connected.

However, the dog collar -- developed by Berkeley, California-based Apisphere -- may end up with a bigger market than expected. One person asked if it could track teenagers.

"My wife shot me a note and said she wants to get one for me," said one executive who asked not to be named.

(Reporting by Sinead Carew; Editing by Gary Hill)

Source: http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/reu...ollar


User avatar
MinisterofDOOM
Moderator
Posts: 30928
Joined: Wed May 19, 2004 5:51 pm
Car: 1962 Corvair Monza
1961 Corvair Lakewood
1974 Unimog 404
1997 Pathfinder XE
2005 Lincoln LS8
Former:
1995 Q45t
1993 Maxima GXE
1995 Ranger XL 2.3
1984 Coupe DeVille
Location: The middle of nowhere.

Post

I've always wanted to put a periodic transponder of some kind on my cats to see exactly where the smeg they go when they're not around. I'm definitely NOT interested in real-time alerts or service fees, though. GPS data I can gather later is more than enough for me.

User avatar
sx moneypit
Posts: 8911
Joined: Wed Aug 26, 2009 2:54 am
Car: 2010 Nissan 370Z
1986 Toyota MR2
Location: Memphis,Tn.

Post

Tiger Woods wife could get him the dog collar.

User avatar
lino
Posts: 3533
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 7:48 am
Car: 1991 Q45a Fed-Spec, IQP/White, Texasoil 9 Accumulator Recharge, '93 TCU 1st Gear Start, JWFSB, B&M 70268 Transmission Cooler, BBS Forged Wheels, DRLs, Silverstars, Tint, Very Well Serviced.
Contact:

Post



Return to “General Chat”