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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] GPS is accurate
- Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 14:24:17 +0900
- From: John Fremlin <john@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] GPS is accurate
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Jon Povey wrote:Curt Sampson wrote:Is GPS important to you -- for instance, would you want to track a child? If so, you may want to NOT use softbank. Apparently GPS satellites (of all providers) shift to reposition themselves occasionally. During that time, the GPS information will not be accurate.Someone's fed you a line of total rubbish here.From what I know about GPS this may not be rubbish. (I'm not an expert, but I used to work with some).(1) The GPS satellites are independent of your mobile telecoms service provider.(2) It is true that the satellites are sometimes repositioned slightly. You can read all about it at http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/gps/gps_status_explained.htm(3) However, the original GPS has a SATELLITE IS TEMPORARILY OUT bit in the Navigation Message (sent every 30s) and a warning SATELLITE WILL BE TEMPORARILY OUT bit to indicate when the satellite should not be trusted. The newer GPS signals apparently send a status bit every 6s.So in practice, I would imagine it would be extremely rare for the GPS reading to be incorrect because of trusting a wrongly positioned satellite, My conclusion is that this idea is indeed probably rubbish and needs to be supported with some evidence.GPS satellites are constantly shifting position; they're in orbit, after all. But even when they move from one orbit to another, they always know where they are, and will always provide accurate information which, if you have it from four satellites (or three, if you have an accurate time source), can be used to accurately compute your location. (See Wikipedia or whatever if you want more details on this.)GPS signals have two components; one is the timed signal that you measure delay to work out distance to the sat. The other is almanac data which tells the receiver where the sats are. Normally the almanac data takes a while to completely receive (low bandwidth) which is why cold starts of most GPS receivers take so long to get a position.I *think* cellphones download the almanac over the phone data network to allow faster GPS lock.The almanac and the ephemeris data can both be downloaded over the network. At least my Nokia phone does it and I guess Android will as well as it is much newer. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assisted_GPSI was certainly surprised how fast mine got a position when I tried it. So, maybe the information you get through the phone network can sometimes be out of date compared to what you would get from the sats.. if they just adjusted orbits or somesuch?I highly doubt that, unless someone actually goes up there and sneakily gives the satellites a shove that the operators weren't expecting or something (extremely improbable) like that.So, I'm not sure if this is the case, but maybe if you have an invalid almanac you can get a bad position from GPS.If you have an almanac or ephemeris data that you trust and that is wrong then definitely you will get a bad position but I believe that the engineering safeguards are solid and the chance of this happening is effectively negligible.In practice, Google Maps on my Nokia phone tends to be quite happy to use the Softbank basestations for navigation and doesn't need a GPS lock so this whole discussion is focusing on the wrong thing entirely. . .
- References:
- [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced (was: UQ WiMAX...)
- From: Dave M G
- Re: [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced
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- Re: [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced
- From: Shawn Brown
- Re: [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced
- From: Dave M G
- Re: [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced
- From: Nikolay Elenkov
- Re: [tlug] First Android Phone in Japan release date announced
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- [tlug] The Android Has Landed (was: First Android Phone in Japan release date announced)
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- Re: [tlug] The Android Has Landed
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- Re: [tlug] The Android Has Landed
- From: Shawn Brown
- Re: [tlug] The Android Has Landed
- From: Curt Sampson
- Re: [tlug] The Android Has Landed
- From: Jon Povey
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