A couple of years ago, I saw a demonstration of the Nanotron NanoLOC system. It's an RF transmission system that uses
chirp spread spectrum to transmit data:
The receiver uses a frequency-dependent delay line, after which the signal looks like this:
The advantages of this system are robustness against interference, especially narrowband interference (the frequency sweep uses all of the 2.4GHz ISM band), a pretty good signal efficiency, and the pulses you get after the delay line can be used for very precise timing. Because of those timing characteristics, the signal can be used for triangulation. In that demonstration I attended, they showed 1m accuracy when tracking a couple of dozen tags in an office building, despite heavy 2.4GHz interference. Outdoor range was claimed to be several km, with similar distance measurement accuracy.
So what does this have to do with your cat tracking project? I saw that the chips are available on
Element 14. Maybe you could build a tag for the cat, and 3 receivers positioned at the outskirts of your property, and triangulate?
Seeing how the sender only needs to be active for an instant every, say, 10 seconds, this solution would probably be a lot more power efficient than a GPS/GSM solution, which could result in a lighter collar.
Oh well. I realize that it'd probably be a lot more effort to build something based on this technology rather than what was mentioned before, but hey, maybe you or someone else likes the idea.