Mr. Smith, the owner of a small computer hardware shop , suspected that his service engineer John was providing vital information about his business like pricing and customer contact details to a competitor Mr. Jones who sold a similar range of products. Though the office computer network was secure, he suspected that John was taking photocopies of important information and handing them over to Mr. Jones after he left office for the day.
To track the activities of John after office hours, Mr. Smith decided to use a GPS tracking system. He asked John to deliver a packet contain some new computer hardware to a new customer Mr. James. Unknown to John, the packet also included the pocket Super PocketTrack, a GPS logging device which could track his movements till the packet was delivered. Mr James was a friend of Mr. Smith, who would return the GPS tracking device to him.
Setting up the Super PocketTrack is easy, the user just has to log in to the website to activate logging. After the device has been returned, it can be connected to a computer using the USB port and the GPS tracking history can be viewed.