Signal-sniffing Tech Expands Hunt for Nancy Guthrie

TL;DR Summary
Investigators are using a Bluetooth Low Energy signal-sniffing device to track signals from Nancy Guthrie’s pacemaker in the ongoing search for the 84-year-old, with the unit mounted on a helicopter and potentially deployable on drones to widen the search radius beyond the device’s typical short range; the pacemaker pings every couple minutes, and while this tech can help triangulate a general area, expanding coverage will require more drones, operators, and infrastructure as the search enters its third week.
Topics:nation#bluetooth-low-energy#missing-person-search#nancy-guthrie#pacemaker#signal-sniffer#technology
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- Nancy Guthrie disappearance: Day 17 latest updates FOX 10 Phoenix
- Former Marine created high-tech Bluetooth signal sniffer to find Nancy Guthrie — and now he is creating an app New York Post
- Tucson cardiologist explains how Bluetooth technology is involved in search for Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker KVOA
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