- NEW!
Help answer this question below.
Longitude: 118º W
Latitude: 34º N
No..that would involve looking that information up and such..and truth be told..I am too damn lazy to do that..LOL :)
no
Why?
Giving a normal response of N41 12.345 W 77 23.456 (I just made that up) would give you the exact location of a person right down to a radius of 5-15 feet depending on the accuracy of the gps. You would have to remove a few digits to make it less accurate.
82 degrees west, 27 degrees north
If you were pregnant and didn't know before you took the pill what can be the effect on your pregnancy?
by Kimberly426x on July 16th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
What is geocaching?
by charis on June 9th, 2007
| 3 people like this
What shade of makeup am I in Chanel? Pic!..?
by Gregorykheine on July 20th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
free boostmobile music downloads?
by LindaCChamorro on July 3rd, 2010
| 1 person likes this
What do you call a group who participates in Geocaching?
by Carrot and Stick on July 6th, 2008
| 5 people like this
You're reading Without revealing too much info, can you give out the longitude and latitude of your town or home?
Comments
How the hell do you know that?
by Little big mouth on April 26th, 2009
Thats what i was thinking, this guy has his coordinates on stand by!
by Pixie - jeg er elsket on April 26th, 2009
"How the hell do you know that?"
.
Lucky guess? :p
.
Actually, I used Google Earth.
.
If I type in my address, it will zoom to my house.
When I place the cursor on the roof of my house, it will display the exact longitude and latitude of my house at the bottom of the view.
.
Also, if you just go to Google and search for, "Your town, your state geographical coordinates", you should get at least one result on the first page that gives you your coordinates.
by Brian on April 26th, 2009
Brian, there are crazy nuts in this world (I know, I happen to be one of them, lol) NEVER give out your address
by Little big mouth on April 27th, 2009
You're right about that, LBM.
.
That's why I omitted the minutes, seconds, and hundredths of seconds from my exact coordinates.
by Brian on April 27th, 2009