Welcome to PON Codes or "PONC" The New Way of Post Coding Ireland! 

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In Ireland more than 40% of addresses are not unique, causing problems for Emergency Services, Courier and Postal Services, Taxis, Service providers, Visitors to your location etc - that is why we in Ireland spend a lot of time giving directions to drivers and visitors. PON Codes will speed up the reaction times of Emergency Services;- the Efficiency of delivery services and generally make Businesses, Tourist Attractions and any place easier to find.
PON Codes will reduce fuel costs for anyone using our roads, making this service a potentially significant contributor to the reduction of Ireland's carbon footprint! |
In all cases, to start using PON Codes on a SatNav, you must first get a PONC for your destination or your client.. At Present Garmin have adopted PON Codes on the Garmin Nuvi 7xx series (710,760,770) of SatNav's for testing purposes. As a result of testing and positive FEEDBACK from users, PON Codes will be made available on all Garmin SatNav's in the very near future. In addition, as PON Codes do not require a Post Code related database, they can also be easily adopted on Handheld GPS receivers for use by Emergency Services, Search & Rescue Agencies, Civil Defence, Red Cross and even the Military. This is not possible for the Post Code Systems in use in other Countries. Try Out PON Codes On A SatNav If You Already Have a Suitable SatNav: If you have a Garmin Nuvi 7xx series SatNav, please contact us if you want to try PON Codes on it. Contact us at Our: Help Desk or Tel: 1890 350 150 If You Are A Commercial SatNav User: If you use SatNav's to support your business and you want to try out the benefits of PON Codes, we can organise a trial for you. Contact us at Our: Help Desk or Tel: 1890 350 150 How to Use PON Codes on a Garmin Nuvi 7xx Series SatNav Scenario 1: You are heading to Carrigaline in Cork for a wedding and you have booked into the Carrigaline Court Hotel in the town. The kind Lady at Reception in the hotel has e-mailed you the Hotel's PON Code - it is W7M 37T5 or she called it out to you on the phone as "Whiskey Seven Mike Three Seven Tango Five" Now we can use the PON Code in our SatNav. For the time being only, the SatNav to be used must be a Garmin Nuvi 7xx series and the option to use PON Codes must be added. If you want to add it for testing then Contact us at Our: Help Desk or Tel: 1890 350 150
Where To With the special test version of the software loaded, switch the SatNav on and Tap the "Where to?" option as shown. You will then see the "Irish Postal Codes" option as shown.
You may now enter the PONC for the Carrigaline Court Hotel as shown. Tip: The space between the first 3 characters and the last 4 is automatically entered. Now Tap the Done Button on the bottom right of the screen.
The PON Code has now been converted to coordinates and you can view the resulting Latitude and Longitude for the PONC. Tap the "Show Map" option on the bottom of the screen to show the location on the map to confirm no errors have been made.
Tip: You can zoom in/out using the "+" and "-" options on the top left and right of the screen and you can pull the map around the screen with your finger. If you are now happy you can Tap the "Go!" option and be voice guided to the location.
If the Code has been created correctly then the SatNav will advise you as you arrive whether the destination is on the Left or the Right.
Why PON Codes? PON Codes were designed by GPS Ireland to allow road users in Ireland get better and more efficient use of their SatNav's, particularly those in the logistics, tourist and service industries. PON codes help to resolve the ambiguity of Ireland's property addressing system which causes confusion even for the locals. They can also be used by Postal Services and any service which involves navigating to a particular place at any time of the day or night. What Are PON Codes? PON Codes are Position orientated Navigation Codes or PONC (pronounced "Punk") , for short;- meaning a dot or point in the Irish Language. A PON Code is a 7 Character Alphanumeric Code which defines geographic position to within +/- 6 meters of the equivalent Latitude & Longitude or Irish Grid coordinates for the same location. PON Codes are easier to remember and work with than Lat & Long or Grid and, therefore, can be widely used and accepted as a Postal Code type System. The structure of the PON Code or PONC is very simple to understand. The PON Code for Travel Shop Ireland is PK8 582M which can be broken down as follows: The "P" defines a 100km square which covers most of Tipperary. The First Character will always be a letter. The Second two characters of the code "K8" can be either letters or numbers and together with the first letter, "PK8" they define a 3.5 km Square within area of "P".
The following two characters "58" will always be numbers and they are the smallest units of the code defining down to meter level values. Finally the last two Characters, "2M" , combined with the first 3, define a 120 meter square area. PON Codes can immediately be used in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland and could be extended later to other parts of the world if required. The Justification For PON Codes The need for a Post Code system in Ireland is widely accepted. The need for such a code to satisfy the requirements of vehicle logistics and navigation has been long argued by GPS Ireland and the logistics community in Ireland. The adoption of the UK Post Codes by SatNav manufactures has resulted in a significant increase in their use by logistics companies and emergency services with an associated decrease in delivery and response times. It is clear, therefore, that Post Codes are needed in Ireland for all the traditional mail delivery reasons but they also have to support logistics and vehicle navigation requirements. In Ireland, as we are starting with a clean sheet in this area, and with PON Codes all possible requirements are satisfied, taking full advantage of modern technologies such as GIS, GPS & SatNav. There are currently more that 0.5 million GPS users in Ireland, 60% of which are SatNav users. It is conservatively predicated that there will be more than 1 million SatNav users in Ireland by the end of 2010. SatNav users already share positional information widely for the following: - Tourist attractions
- Hotels/Restaurants & Accommodation
- Sports events
- Petrol Stations
- Personal addresses
- Business/Customer Locations
and these are widely distributed on e-mail, by phone, over the internet, in written reports and by voice.
The easiest way to define location is by means of coordinates which SatNav manufacturers already inherently support. However, geographic coordinates in their natural form are cumbersome to handle, are easily misunderstood or misinterpreted, they have too many characters and are not easily memorised. Therefore, whilst geographic coordinates are desirable, they have to be modified to make them user friendly. PON Codes are a user friendly and easily memorised version of traditional coordinates. Who Can Use PON Codes? - Courier Services and Dispatch Riders
- Food & Flower Delivery Services
- Mail/Document Collection & Delivery Services
- Construction Vehicles
- Car Hire Companies
- Shop Delivery Services
- Mail Order and Web Retail Services
- Home Furnishing & White Good Delivery Services
- Service Companies
- Street Furniture & Road Sign Maintenance Companies
- Mobile Sales Forces
- Hackney, Taxi & Transport Companies
- Emergency Services;- Fire, Ambulance, Doctor, Police
- Civil Defence, Order Of Malta, St John's Ambulance etc
- Utility maintenance field crews
- Buy & Sell Services
- Private Drivers; - commuting or finding weddings, functions and funerals.
- Tourists and Tourist services
- The Hospitality Industry; Hotels, Guest Houses, Attractions
- Banks, ATM's Pharmacies, Petrol Stations, Community services
- Billboard Advertising Companies
- Mobile Medical & Screening Services
- Farm Owners/managers
- Boat Owners/Marina Managers
The list is endless: Calculating a PON Code Travel Shop Ireland can provide the service of delivering a 100% accurate reading of your co-ordinates and generate your exact PONC Code or codes if you need more than one for your property, ie visitors entrance and delivery entrance. Information on National Post Codes: A National Post Code At the moment Ireland does not have a National Post Code System. A plan to introduce one by 1st January 2008 did not happen. It is understood that recommendations on the proposals of consultants submitted to Government in 2006 will be re-presented to Government during 2008. If the political will and finances permit, a National System may come to pass by early 2010. An Post has repeatedly stated that it does not need a Post Code system as it operates its own internal one. However, new postal services entering the market as a result of deregulation in early 2010 will need a system so that they can compete with An Post on a level playing field. In the meantime, PON Codes will satisfy the requirements of a significant section of the population and could be considered for the role of National System when the time comes. The National Statistic Board in its document "The Statistical and Policy Value of Post Codes" states that is most desirable to implement a Post Code system which is based on geographic coordinates as follows: "Significant value is added to data when it can be spatially mapped. A point-based postcode system that uses grid reference/GPS technology would provide a relatively clear-cut approach to allocating a postcode to an address.... a geo-coordinates approach would permit an early introduction of postcodes at a relatively low cost. It would also avoid the very difficult task of trying to group households together into small area clusters that are meaningful both to policy-makers and for postal delivery" Unlike the coordinate based Post Code system as designed by GPS Ireland in the PON Code system, the traditional Post Code system such as that used in the UK and Northern Ireland has the following limitations: - They are expensive and resource hungry to implement from scratch i.e. the time, manpower, survey, administrative, technological and financial resources required to map and allocate Codes
- As they are also dependent on a lookup database, deployment on mobile systems such as SatNav's PDA's and mobile phones have the following associated issues:
- Additional memory and processing power is required to handle the database.
- The use of a database on each mobile device must be individually licensed per area covered
- Keeping a deployed database up to date is cumbersome and problematic with an ongoing update costs for the user.
- Non mapping based GPS receivers with limited memory, yet widely used by emergency services, would not be able to use this type of Post Code System;- e.g. Basic Handheld GPS systems widely used by Civil Defence and Red Cross personnel cannot currently handle the UK type Post Code system but could easily implement the GPS Ireland PON Code type system.
- Traditional Post Code systems, because they are related to road and street databases, cannot Post Code streets or roads with no names of which we have many in Ireland.
Traditional Post Code systems, because they are related to road and street databases, are slow to keep up to date with new housing estates and road construction. The following is a quote from a former British Telecom employee on the matter of Post Codes in the UK: I worked for British Telecom for a while and their problem was that a lot of their addresses were new sites where a postcode had not been allocated. The system was good, except for the need to have a geographic converter to convert postcodes into easting and northing co-ordinates, and the inability to cope with new structures. Traditional Post Code systems, because they are related to road and street databases, do not readily support the Post Coding of non structures which nowadays are an important aspect of both commercial and social life. Traditional Post Code systems allocate codes and do this by relating mapped structures to roads. Therefore, if a structure is not mapped a code cannot be allocated. Examples of non normal or non structures which require Post Codes in modern Ireland are: - Grain or fertiliser silos for farming are not normally mapped and therefore are unlikely to be allocated postcodes under traditional systems. In Ireland, deliveries frequently have to be made to such structures when the owner is not on site leading to the possibility of expensive mistakes. The PON Code system would allow the owner to allocate his own code himself and a delivery truck could navigate to it without the need for a related database.
- Sporting Events - GAA, Point to Point, Road Bowls etc.
- Open Air Entertainment Events such as the Barbra Streisand Concert outside Leixlip in 2007 which needed road approaches to be coded to assist in traffic management. The absence of such coding which could have been provided by PON Codes lead to a traffic hold up which cost the organisers large sums of money in refunds, resulted in substantial traffic jams and could have resulted in the loss of life if an accident had occurred on site.
- Accident & Disaster sites - Codes are needed to quickly disseminate an accident location and recommended approaches for emergency vehicles and crews. Traditional Post Codes cannot support this function but GPS Ireland PON Codes can and as a 7 character alphanumeric code, they can be communicated clearly and quickly over voice communication systems making them also suitable for Gardai, Army and Civil Defence who traditionally would have used 12 character Grid Codes which take longer to communicate.
- Mobile services such as Health Clinics, Blood Donor Clinics, Libraries, Mobile Banking Services, Clean Water Distribution Trucks (now a regular feature of Irish urban and rural life) etc
- Construction Site Infrastructure Construction site offices, delivery locations, emergency muster sites, vehicle exits and entrances etc
- Health & Safety Infrastructure muster and safety resource locations for major industrial sites which can be declared in County Emergency plans.
PON Codes can support all of these and much more - if you have any other ideas let us know. Contact us at Our: Help Desk or Tel: 1890 350 150 This is part of our Sat Nav Inclusion Service - Sign Up and Find Out More - Click Here Glenn Pearson
Travel Shop Ireland Content Courtesy of GPS Ireland.
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