I was thinking about this thread last night and wanted to write more about the pros/cons of APRS and exactly how it works so that a laydude or laychick can be more informed as to what it is and how it works.
Simply put, a APRS is a voluntary system put together by amateur radio operators (HAMS) that uses a digital encoding device (TNC) to broadcast information over the radio.
Think of it like an old school dial-up modem, or fax machine that encodes digital information into sound frequencies, but instead of using a phone line to transmit that encoded information, it uses a radio. This is why an APRS signal sounds like a modem or fax machine.
The data transmissions are typically very short, only lasting a second or two, and can be picked up with anyone with a radio and another TNC to decode the information.
APRS is typically used to transmit GPS and weather information, and the receiving end typically consumes that data, rebroadcasts it to extend range (like a repeater), or is relayed to the Internet. The repeater station is called a digipeater, and the station that relays to the internet is called an I-gate.
So, if I have an APRS transmitter in my aircraft that periodically transmits it's location and speed, then any digipeater or I-gate can take that information and relay it to other stations and/or the internet, allowing others to use
aprs.fi or some other website to track my movements.
There was a recent
thread discussing the merits of using an in-reach in place of a PLB (I say in-reach because I think the SPOT is unreliable) so I suppose much of the same arguments apply to APRS, but instead of trusting a private sector satellite network, you are trusting that there is a volunteer i-gate in range.
Also consider, that a spot/in-reach/PLB uses satellites which are above while an I-gate is on the ground, so while APRS might work fantastic at 10k feet, it almost certainly won't on the ground unless you are within a few miles of an i-gate.
I have all three, 406 beacon in the aircraft, in-reach on my person, and have used APRS a bit, but would not trust the APRS solution as a life-line or even secondary life-line as it would be useless beyond last known trajectory.
So, if you want a free tracker that works most of the time, want to get your HAM ticket, and are interested in playing with radios and electronics, APRS is great, but for your average user that just wants a tracker with life-line backup, the in-reach is absolutely worth the cost, and it's simple.
Another factor is the privacy. In the same way that you shouldn't post your vacation pictures on social media (if you have it) until you get back least someone help themselves to your belongings while you are out of town, I don't think broadcasting my position all of the time is wise, which is why my friends and family can see my in-reach map, but it's password protected to keep others out.
In short, APRS is interesting, but I think the reliability and privacy issues prevent it from being a useful aircraft tracker.