Skip to main content

What 3 Words is literally putting everyone on the map

what 3 words app what3words 1
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Most people don’t think of having a postal code or a street address as a luxury, but for the nearly four billion people who live in an area with a poor or non-existent official location system, it really is.

You need an address to vote, have access to government services, and, perhaps most important, receive mail. What 3 Words, a London-based company, has provided a way for all of these people to finally be on the map.

The firm has divided the earth into three-meter by three-meter squares, fifty-seven trillion squares in total. And each square has been assigned a series of three random words as a moniker to give every location on earth a unique positioning code.

The app is available for free across all smartphone platforms. It simplifies the process of locating a particular place. The three-word code is far easier to remember than a complicated set of GPS coordinates or addresses. Also, the words they use are simple and all effort is made to ensure the ease of use.

This system isn’t just useful in rural areas, it can greatly help in big developed cities. You can precisely tell your friends your three-word location code and they can find you within a very small area. No more wandering around crowded shopping centers or sports arenas, this will allow you to identify a very precise location easily.

While What 3 Words uses latitude and longitude to pinpoint locations, users only need to know the three-word code to find places. Alternately, they can search a well known location to find its three-word code. The app uses GPS and doesn’t require access to a data plan.

What 3 Words has been translated into ten languages and the interface is simple for anyone to use — I’m already planning my next trip to nodded.both.couple.

Anthony Thurston
Anthony is an internationally published photographer based in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Specializing primarily in…
You can now move WhatsApp messages between Apple’s iPhones and Google’s Pixels
Google Pixel 6 Pro in Sorta Sunny color.

Switching between iPhones and Android phones has never been easier, with both operating systems offering tools to move your apps and as much data as you can between devices. Now, Google just made the switch even more painless as it now lets you transfer WhatsApp chats between iPhones and Pixels with a new update.

Despite SMS and iMessage's popularity in the U.S., WhatsApp remains a widely used messaging app in every other country. While the service makes moving to new phones in the same ecosystem seamless, it's often been impossible to switch between devices running on different operating systems. A switch between an iPhone 8 to an iPhone 13 might work fine, but trying to move your WhatsApp account to a Pixel 6 would mean leaving all your messages behind.

Read more
WhatsApp’s online backups are getting end-to-end encryption
The WhatsApp logo.

Facebook is tightening WhatsApp's security by extending end-to-end encryption (E2EE) to cloud backups via an update to the app on iOS and Android. This was already allowed this on local WhatsApp backups, but the company will extend these security tools to online backups made to iCloud and Google Drive.

"Starting today, we are making available an extra, optional layer of security to protect backups stored on Google Drive or iCloud with end-to-end encryption. No other global messaging service at this scale provides this level of security for their users' messages, media, voice messages, video calls, and chat backup," the WhatsApp team shared this week.

Read more
Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram are back after several hours offline
facebook hacked

Well, here's one way to start a week off on the wrong foot: Facebook, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and Instagram were all down for several hours on Monday. Yes, completely down. Starting at roughly 9 a.m. PT, Downdetector started to show a sharp spike in reports of outages -- though as we look back, users were discussing unsent messages and broken apps even earlier.

As of 4 p.m. PT, the services had for the most part returned to working order, albeit with some cobwebs left to shake out, leaving everyone collectively scratching their heads and wondering how an outage of this scale happened.

Read more