Lookator uses augmented reality to find the best wi-fi signal

picture-41Score!

Any mobile worker knows the keys to a good environment are coffee, power outlets and an absolutely perfect high-speed Internet connection. The problem is that it can take too long to duck in and out of coffee shops to figure out which ones have good wi-fi.

Lookator is a nifty augmented reality-based solution to that. Hold up your phone, and you’ll see scores of wi-fi signals around you with their relative strengths.

The app comes from Loft Developers, a three-person team based in Tel Aviv, Israel that’s self-funded at the moment. The app uses vector-based models that continuously update as the user moves around to figure out the direction and strength of wi-fi access points. The team is planning to add features that show which wi-fi networks are password-protected and that allow users to click-to-connect. The app is built for Google’s Android platform but Loft is working on getting it to the iPhone.

There’s a competing app called WorkSnug, but it relies on user reviews to create a database of good places to work. Lookator finds wi-fi connections directly.

Augmented reality is a growing field that allows apps to superimpose information over the real world in a phone’s viewfinder. We’ve seen some augmented reality apps that are a bit frivolous at this point, but occasionally one will show up that promises to be pretty useful. Lookator could be one of these.

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About the Author, Kim-Mai Cutler

Kim-Mai was born and raised a stone's throw from Apple headquarters in Cupertino by a devout Hewlett-Packard family. After attending UC Berkeley, Kim-Mai worked for Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires in New York, Los Angeles, London and Buenos Aires. Follow her on Twitter at @kimmaicutler, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • Hi There

    Many thanks for your comments on WorkSnug - But I do need to correct your comment. You mention that we need user reviews to create a database. In fact that's not true. The whole value of our app is that we have walked the streets of many major global cities, actually visiting and reviewing public workspaces. Our users can also add their own reviews, but it starts with a very rich dataset based on some serious legwork.

    In that sense I'd argue that WorkSnug has a significant advantage over WiFi finder type apps - Which I think I'm correct in thinking are based on public domain information which has not been physically verified.

    WiFi finders tell you if there's WiFi - WorkSnug tells you if it's a good place to do some work.

    Thanks
    Richard Leyland
    Founder, WorkSnug.
  • Russ
    Very interesting application - I hope they put up the extra features soon and make the application a one-stop app for wifi-access.

    WorkSnug - the legwork you guys did is greatly appreciated!
    One small correction - Wifi Finders like Lookator use the phones Wifi card to display the wifi access points that are actually being detected by the phone - making them extremely useful with real-time and verified information. I use Lookator to know where to go to improve my wifi access because it tells me where the signal strength is stronger.

    Come to think of it - you might want to look into collaborating with the guys who made Lookator.

    Russ
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