The service will reportedly be available on Windows and Mac next week, with iOS, Blackberry and Android by October, but speaking of promises, Borislow said plans for the company's legally-ambiguous femtocell are now on hold -- the device can't legitimately muster up enough power without a cellular carrier on board.
TruePosition argued it deserved a hearing before the standards board determining the next generation of location technology for cellular phones, since it is used in about half the phones in the U.S. today.
Ericsson, Qualcomm and Alcatel-Lucent of manipulating a European standards board to keep its location technology out of the next generation of cellular phones.