Every three-meter square on Earth has been assigned a unique three-word address by What3Words, a London-based company. Chris Sheldrick, co-founder of What3Words, divided the world into 57 trillion three-meter squares and assigned each one three random words to use as an address. What3Words addresses are being used by emergency responders, delivery companies, and organizations like the UN and Red Cross to more easily locate places that lack standard addresses or are difficult to find otherwise. Sheldrick hopes to continue expanding use of the three-word addresses for navigation and deliveries on the ground and potentially in space.
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The Telegraph & what3words
1. Monday 22 February 2016
息 TELEGRAPH MEDIA GROUP LIMITED 2016 Reprinted with permission by The Reprint and Licensing Centre. (www.rl-centre.com / 0207 501 1086).
Not to be reproduced without authorisation.
Three words that say I know just where you are
L
oving.buns.luxury is a
grassy spot measuring
three metres by three
metres in the middle of
Kensington Gardens,
somewhere between the
Peter Pan statue (pinks.pines.minute)
and the entrance to the Serpentine
Gallery (prime.trendy.water).
All these three-word combinations
identify places in the London royal
park that would otherwise be much
trickier, if not impossible, to locate.
They are where your friend has laid
out the picnic blanket, or where your
partner proposed, or where youve
stumbled upon a person who needs
urgent medical assistance.
What3Words, a three-year-old
company based at index.home.raft in
Westbourne Park, has divided the
entire planet into 57 trillion 3-metre
squares and named them with a
combination of three random words.
Almost random, that is.
Homophones such as hear and
here are excluded, as are potential
insults and words that are spelt
differently in the US and the UK. Busy,
built-up places are given short,
common words and trickier words are
used for more remote locations.
In London and New York, youll
find words like table, in the northern
forest of Russia youll find words like
hypochondriac and in the sea youll
find even more obscure words, says
Chris Sheldrick, co-founder and chief
executive of What3Words. Go to the
Namibian desert and youll find some
pretty interesting stuff.
Indeed, a randomly selected spot in
south Namibia comes up as tuxedos.
accruing.realtor.
Theres a What3Words app and a
website with an explorable map that
will give you the three-word address
for where you are, where you want to
go and everywhere in between.
For an entrepreneur who has built a
company out of three-word
combinations, Sheldricks ambitions
Town all of whom live without
official street addresses.
Here in the UK, each postcode
contains an average of 15 delivery
points so even when you give a
delivery company, a taxi driver or an
emergency responder your full
postcode, a combination of up to seven
letters and numbers, youve narrowed
the destination to more than a dozen
locations. In a bustling city this might
be limited to half a street, but the
largest postcode region in the UK
HD7 5UZ in West Yorkshire covers
seven roads.
What3Words technology is being
trialled by several first responder
services around the world. It has been
used by Festival Medical Services,
which looks after Glastonbury and
Reading among others, and BlueLight,
the emergency response location
finder, on ski slopes and college
campuses large, crowded areas that
are primed for accidents and crime.
College campuses and ski resorts
only have one main address and then a
lot of landmarks, says Preet Anand,
the chief executive of BlueLight. If
you cant describe a location
specifically, its tough for a responder
to get there on time. Location is one of
the biggest factors in response time,
and response time is the most
important factor in outcome.
Even when its not potentially
saving lives, What3Words has been
used in a number of innovative ways.
The British Museum has tagged
more than a million artefacts with the
three-word addresses of where they
were found, while Geoflyer, a
navigation and tracking app for hikers
and climbers, allows users to mark
routes and points of interest using this
technology.
Sheldrick says the company is
pushing for international recognition
by the end of this year and is talking to
all of the big global logistics firms
think UPS, Royal Mail, Amazon after
raising $3.5m in November from Intels
investment arm and Li Ka-shings
Horizons Ventures.
He says logistics and navigation will
be what drives the companys growth
at this stage.
As indoor mapping and drone
deliveries become mainstream,
Sheldrick envisions the company
adding an optional additional
parameter for height perhaps a
number tacked on the end of the three
word combination so you could have
your lunch delivered to your office
window or straight to your desk.
The possibilities seem endless when
every spot on Earth has its own easily
memorable identifier. What next,
outer space?
There is a lady who got in touch
with us about a project shes realised
that Mars is not yet addressed,
Sheldrick says. So, yeah, were
thinking about it.
are far from simple. Were giving
people in all of the countries in the
world ways to talk about everywhere,
he says.
Sheldrick, who previously ran a live
music events business, started
What3Words after one too many
roadies went to the wrong place. He
would give drivers GPS co-ordinates
instead of street addresses, but that
often left him with undelivered
equipment. One truck driver supposed
to travel an hour south of Rome found
himself an hour north of Rome just
because he mixed up a four and a five.
You realise that GPS co-ordinates
are great if youre a computer or a
robot, but theyre not good for human
beings, he says.
You also realise that not every
address points to the right place when
you type it into an app on your phone.
Big buildings have multiple entrances
and addresses in the countryside can
be two miles away from where they
actually are.
So Sheldrick who met co-founder
Jack Waley-Cohen at the school chess
team at Eton decided to devise a
system where you can name every
couple of metres on the earths surface
with something really easy, way easier
than 16 numbers.
Every three-metre square has a
name in almost a dozen languages and
the immediate benefits for deliveries
and travellers are obvious.
If we go to Moscow, it would be
much easier for us to meet at table.
chair.spoon than trying to work out
what the Cyrillic characters are,
Sheldrick says. And similarly,
[Russians] dont want to work out how
to spell Worcester Terrace in the UK
instead of that street address, they
could use three Russian words.
But Sheldrick says that from the
start he was incredibly aware of the
Every three-metre
square spot on Earth
has been given a
three-word identifier
by a London
company with inter-
planetary ambitions
Line manager:
Chris Sheldrick, the
co-founder of
What3Words, busy
dividing the world
into three-metre
squares
simplicity of what wed come up with
and that it had so many potential
applications we immediately thought
this helps so many people in so many
countries.
What3Words is helping the US
Agency for International Development
collect data for its various health and
development missions in Rwanda,
while a team led by the Red Cross used
its technology to mark contaminated
water locations during a cholera
outbreak in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
The United Nations has
incorporated the technology into UN-
ASIGN, its app for crowdsourcing
information such as the location of
damaged buildings and other hazards
during a humanitarian crisis.
What3Words is also used to deliver
mail to 11.5m people in the favelas of
Rio de Janeiro and to courier
medication to hundreds of patients in
the township of Khayelitsha, Cape
Age: 34
Lives: Queens
Park, London
Education:
music
scholarship at
Eton and studied
music at Kings
College London
Hobbies:
photography and
squash
Little-known
fact: At 23,
severed eight
tendons and an
artery in his left
arm in a
sleepwalking
incident
CV Chris
Sheldrick
LAUREN
DAVIDSON
THE MONDAY
INTERVIEW
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