US GPS, EU Galileo to Work Together 203
saintory writes "The US and EU are in talks to allow their separate GPS systems to work together. The future uses would allow enhanced location information based on two readings, among other benefits. 'The market probably will drive dual-use receivers. We think probably that single (U.S.) GPS-specific, or Galileo-specific receivers — the market will phase out in time [...] It just doesn't make sense to limit yourself to just one system'."
RAIGPS (Score:5, Funny)
I like the way that sounds!
Inexpensive (Score:2)
Re:RAIGPS (Score:5, Funny)
If it's the latter, maybe we need to have a talk with your parole officer.
GPS is for creating images? (Score:3, Funny)
"work together to provide more accurate images and information"
"would be able to create a more accurate picture especially in areas where reception is weak"
So, farmers ploughing profanities in their fields will be able to use better fonts now.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/05/31/huge_word/ [theregister.co.uk]
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How very... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How very... (Score:5, Interesting)
The only thing this did was to piss off a lot of legitimate users, including the FAA and the Military when the available supply of Military GPS units dried up.
Also, a very modestly inaccurate GPS signal isn't going to deter a terrorist. Rather, it's going to encourage him to build a bigger bomb, which would result in considerably more collateral damage.
Re:How very... (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't forget the US Coast Guard, who developed the Differential GPS system for boaters. It consists of a series of ground-based stations throughout the US that receive GPS signals then re-broadcast a "fixed" signal that DGPS receivers can then use for a more accurate fix. I always thought it was pretty ironic (and laughable) that one branch of the military would degrade GPS and then another branch of the military would remove that error specifically for civilian use.
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http://www.gpsinformation.net/main/gpsspeed.htm [gpsinformation.net]
Defense department regulations prohibit standard consumer GPS receivers from functioning above 60,000 feet and 999mph (simultaneously). Most GPS receivers seem to set hard limits at EITHER 999mph or 60,000 feet.
However, this is all a moot point. The defense department has the ability to selectively degrade the civilian signal in certain geo
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Not to mention that if you can build ICBMs and nuclear warheads in sufficient quantity to actually make you unafraid of retaliation then the cost of adding a navigation package that
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The difference here, I suppose is that the "enemy" in the 70s and 80s had more than enough firepower to obliterate just about everything, not to mention a positioning system of their own [wikipedia.org].
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This is especially promising, considering that the US used to intentionally degrade its own GPS signals available to civilians, for fear that it'd be used by "terrorists".
get your facts straight, from wikipedia:
Selective availability
The GPS includes a feature called Selective Availability (SA) that introduces intentional, slowly changing random errors of up to a hundred meters (328 ft) into the publicly available navigation signals to confound,.........
........During the Gulf War, the shortage of military GPS units and the wide availability of civilian ones among personnel resulted in a decision to disable Selective Availability.
so no, bush isn't sitting in the
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Huh? SA was turned on from Day One - not because of fears of use by 'terrorists', but because it was a military system and it never occurred to anyone that it might have far reaching civilian uses.
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Unfortunately, the military still gets better data than civilians. The degraded civilian signal is dead for now, but the normal accuracy civilian signal is still a lot worse than the normal military and licensed surveying GPS solutions can get, which are accurate to inches (1-18) instead of yards (2-10).
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Surprise, surprise -- the US can degrade Galileo signals as well: http://www.tagesschau.de/aktuell/meldungen/0,1185, OID2734592_REF3,00.html [tagesschau.de] (But commercial GPS jammers are available as well, so it's not clear how significant this actually is.)
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If the EU made the first positioning system and the US made the 2nd, I'd still say making systems that only used the US's would be a bad idea. GPS-only systems will probably phase out slower due to compatibility issues. A lot of hardware out there was designed for
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Yeah; it's good to see that there are actually some sensible people in decision-making positions in some companies. Using both systems might mean an extra antenna, and will certainly mean somewhat more software. But the result should be much more reliable.
And when the US DoD decides to reactivate the "Selective Availability" (using the code t
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Sacked any presidents recently?
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With that said, I think it's a good thing to work together on having a very good global positioning system.
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Misguided or not, the missile shield is not... (Score:4, Informative)
Misguided or not, the missile shield is not intended to divide you. If you want to argue that will be an unfortunate side effect, that's one thing, but if you seriously believe that it's part of a strategy of divide-and-conquer, then I truly think you're putting motives in there that don't exist.
Now, assuming that you merely meant that it would be an unfortunate side effect, you also should realize that Poland and the Czech Republic dearly want us to put the missile shield in their countries (or at least their governments do). I'm not arguing that's a sufficient reason to do so - I'm just pointing out that we're not imposing this on them. They want it. This came out quite strongly after Putin suggested that it be put in Azerbaijan instead, if the goal was truly to protect Europe from a Middle East attack.
Don't ask me (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm just reporting what's been in the news. I definitely wasn't say it was a good idea - I was just trying to clarify the context around it.
OTOH, playing devil's advocate, a missile shield would (theoretically) stop missiles coming from a terrorist group were they to acquire one. It would presumably not be meant to stand alone but rather be part of an entire well thought out system (stop giggling). You could scan for dirty bombs at the border, have great devices for detecting pathogens, make your airline passengers fly naked, but none of that will stop a missile coming towards your country any more than a missile shield would prevent the discreet release of poisons into the drinking water.
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Surely, with the communist nonsense in Russia on the decline it shoul
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For example, you call Russia expansionist (presumably because of the Crimea & Siberia invasions) yet you do not consider the massive Brittish, French, Spanish, and the Dutch colonies all over the World; hell, the US of A used to be a British colony, does that make the UK non-European?)
You mention some wars that evidently make Russia an outsider, yet when I look at how many conflicts t
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It may have been Greek, but it was also Orthodox, and created in Russia from its very roots a somewhat Oriental and Near East direction to its ambitions and interests, which still dominates it to this day. It was this keen interest in liberating Orthodoxy from its failing Turkish overlords that was a driving impetus for th
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Baltic states were parts of Russian Empire for a loooooooong time. But guess what, they were almost independent: they had their own languag
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Nobody is going to believe in "international friendship" anymore. Everybody has their own interests, and right now Russia and Europe just have some common interests. That's OK.
Some people just don't understand how is it possible to work together with Russian without becoming a commie.
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When the U.S. was a fledgling power in the world, it tried to isolate itself from the dominate European powers at the time. The isolationist strategy ultimately failed. I suggest you re-consider history.
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Nah, Western Eurpoe would have lost entirely, and fallen under NAZIism instead.
I don't know about Galileo, but GPS needs help (Score:5, Interesting)
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2-minute miles (Score:2)
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and besides - how does adding additional signals to your already shitty location change anything? If you've got bad multipath problems or narrow FOV problems, more satellites isn't going to change anything.
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Re:I don't know about Galileo, but GPS needs help (Score:4, Informative)
I think Garmin's new handheld units (the GPSmap 60CSx I'm sure of) use the SiRF III chipset. If you're going to carry a GPS receiver for backpacking, get one of those, carry a couple extra sets of lithium batteries, and you're set. I still recommend carrying topo quads and a compass, just in case. Also, bring a ruler along and make sure you understand how to plot GPS readings on the map by hand. It's really not that hard, and a 7.5" quad beats a tiny GPS display any day.
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Amazing chipset (Score:2)
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Re:I don't know about Galileo, but GPS needs help (Score:5, Informative)
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In the past year, I've seen this sort of behavior while driving around in the lowlands of the Boston suburbs. Not off by 100 miles, but I've seen my GPS position off by 15 to 20 miles, for periods of 10 or 15 minutes. In one case, we even had three different brands of GPS receivers, and they all showed approximately the same error.
I don't know the explanation, of course; I'm just reporting some irreproducible observations of m
Re:I don't know about Galileo, but GPS needs help (Score:4, Funny)
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And commenting on the article, if Galileo and GPS don't sync up thier clocks directly, I don't see how it will work.
Of course you can combine them; It's just a question of how much additional information you can get. Worst case is that you have to treat them separately until the position is calculated, and you then combine the two independent readings, which should about halve the variance. That's nothing to sneeze at, and wouldn't require any information at all about relative clock skew. In the best case however, a device could track the long-term clock skew between the two systems (which should stay nearly fixed) b
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The more systems the merrier, if they can be made compatible. That way GPS devices can become ever more accurate while many nations share the cost
I'm sort of underwhelmed (Score:5, Interesting)
But I also think this is nothing more than a recognition of reality. Unless they deliberately enforced licensing restrictions preventing it, I'm quite sure the market would have provided a dual-system device very shortly after Galileo was operative.
US ability to jam .... (Score:5, Interesting)
I thought the reason that Europe wanted their own satellites is that the US basically reserved the right to scramble the signal whenever they wanted, and the EU didn't want to be beholden to US technology. If they broadcast on the same frequency, does this make it easier or harder for the US military to degrade the signal when they wish?
Is this a good thing in terms of assuring access? Or is this a backdoor for the US to exert more control over it? TFA is vague on that point. It would kinda suck if all they've done is water down the reasons they had for wanting to do it in the first place
Cheers
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But, if they broadcast on the same frequency, couldn't they set theirs to just transmit crap on all channels and muddy the signal or lie about which satellite is actually transmitting? [ I'm not asserting this is true, I know very little about the mechanics of satellite transmissions ]
Cheers
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As far as true jamming, the U
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cannot find them in english right now, but what i have found is this [blogspot.com]
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However, there is a legitimate concern about sensitive technology like real-time imaging getting into the hands of somebody you're at war with. If in ANY war in history somebody came along and started selling intel to the highest bidder you can be sure they'd be treated as a military target.
The EU isn't going to let private industry sell anything of
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When you get signals from 3 satellites you look at the differences in times between them. There is only one point on the earth that has the precise time differences corresponding to the data available. Due to error there is some error in the calculated position, which decreases as you get more satellite data.
Now, the GPS transmits the time in the clear, and i
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Four, actually. You have four unknowns (x,y,z,t). You can do it with 3, normally by assuming an altitude of 0.
I thought the whole point.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now perhaps this story refers to times when both Galileo _and_ GPS are working. Would that increase the accuracy so that both systems together are more effective? I don't really think so. I don't think that Galileo (which has an accuracy of 0.1 meters afaik) can be enhanced by some GPS satellites (which has an accuracy of 15 meters). They are way too old, the GPS satellites (at least, most of them).
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Would that increase the accuracy so that both systems together are more effective? I don't really think so.
Statistics says yes. No matter what the variance, any additional unbiased data improves your estimate. It may not improve it a lot, but it will improve it. In the case where there aren't enough sattelites of any one system visible though, it could mean the difference between working rather than failing.
I don't think that Galileo (which has an accuracy of 0.1 meters afaik) can be enhanced by some GPS satellites (which has an accuracy of 15 meters). They are way too old, the GPS satellites (at least, most of them).
Well, it's hard to be newer that satellites which have yet to be launched... Let's revisit the accuracy when there is a Galileo constellation to speak of. Right now, the plans are for the <1m accurac
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"They are way too old, the GPS satellites (at least, most of them)."
Well, which is better: older working models or wonderful new technology that doesn't really exist yet?
EU Galileo Satellites in orbit: 1 of 30 (see also: Vaporware)
US GPS System: 30 known broadcasting satellites. (Some sources suggest t
GPS/GLONASS combo receivers available now. (Score:5, Interesting)
Receivers that use both GPS and GLONASS satellite signals have been available for years. Maxim just announced a new receiver chip [gpsworld.com] which receives both and only costs $2.95 in quantity, so that capability is likely to become more available.
GLONASS was in bad shape after the USSR tanked, but new GLONASS satellites are being launched again, and the constellation is currently about half populated. As of today, 11 GLONASS satellites are functioning, 5 are down, and one new one is being brought into position. 24 operational satellites are a full set.
The earlier GLONASS sats only had a two year design life, but the latest models have a 7 year design life, and they're going for a 10-year model. They launch a new batch every December, so they're starting to catch up.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GLONASS#Current_statu s [wikipedia.org]
As of May 2007, the system is not fully available, however it is maintained and remains partially operational. There were 11 operational satellites in the GLONASS system and one new satellite in its commissioning phase
In recent years, Russia has kept the satellite orbits optimized for navigating in Chechnya, increasing signal coverage there at the cost of degrading coverage in the rest of the world. As of May 2007, GLONASS availability in Russia was 45.3% and average availability for the whole Earth was down to 30.5%, with significant areas of less than 25% availability. Meaning that, at any given time of the day in Russia, there is a 45.3% likelihood that a position fix can be calculated.
In short, that's not exactly what I would call a "global positioning system"
Tinfoil hat time : they want to track your car (Score:2)
Or it could be because Galileo is designed to be more effective in urban areas, which the US have taken to occupying recently.
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Reading the daily mail you might think it's true, but then reading that rag you might think a lot of bullshit things are true.
You can't track anything with gps without a back-channel to send the data - and cars are reasonably short of those (unless you count mobile phones which can be tracked to a few metres anyway).
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i'd think a dword pair would be more than enough for a cars location, we aren't talking about very much data there. The packet overheads would probablly be bigger than the data but we still aren't talking high rates.
How much bandwidth
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What are you talking about, in terms of "like what ships and boats use out at sea"?
A GPS receive
The proposals include a cellular modem (Score:2)
But the key here is still the "GPS" part. Rather than the present efforts which involve number-plate recognising cameras, or my own personal design which utilises RFID enabled number plates and existing pickup loops in the roads (installed for traffic light sensors), this proposed system can (and does) track a road vehicle anywhere it goes. This is somewhat overboard for their stated aim of redu
One system (Score:2, Insightful)
No, what we need is like 500 different systems. Just like in the world of memory cards.
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Ahem. You're forgetting one key difference here: where the memory cards are a mess of incompatible systems, the talks mentioned in TFA are actually about making the systems compatible. This makes all the difference in the world.
Different, incompatible memory card interfaces breed lock-in (MemoryStick is close to this), data loss (once old interfaces cease being supported), energy wasted on converters, reinventing the
Launches? (Score:3, Interesting)
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The truth is all in the numbers (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a military decision... (Score:3, Insightful)
Combined Positioning Systems (Score:2, Informative)
Military use (Score:3, Insightful)
Cool (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing to see, move along (Score:2)
I suspect the EU may be pressing for agreement to help smokescreen the fact that Galileo is badly behind schedule.
Help needed finding GPS (solution)! How ironic. (Score:2)
Real-time data tracking via USB or serial connected to a Linux laptop.
Onscreen display of maps and directions
Destination input via the unit. (Systems like the Garmin Quest only allow you to select places that you have already been to and "Save this Location")
Bonus points if it is mobile.
It _must_ be linux compatable, I refuse to run Windows just to 'unlock' the device.
I am willing/eager to use GPSBabel + Google Maps.
I know of several dev
power (Score:3, Insightful)
If they could somehow make the two systems act as one, and you could read a channel from one system with no extra power cost, then I agree that getting a fix from best available satellites and mixing-an-matching during the process is superior to limiting yourself to one system.
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1. The test satellite is not only alive and well, but all the control systems are being calibrated off it. The company in the same building as me in Ireland are doing data analysis from the (rather large amounts of) information that are coming from that satellite. As a result of this, the control software is also being tweaked for better performance.
2. Yup. Which is why all the problems cropped up in the first place. Loads of companies were meant to buy in (everything
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It's first flight ever was roughly 6 years earlier, from France to Britain. My father worked at Filton on Concorde 002, I even have a B&W photo somewhere of me as a kid inside the hangar as they wired up the airframe.
I love posts like the parent (Score:2)
Whoever said the A380 isn't supported any more? Pure FUD - I love it!
175 orders and counting - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A380#Orders [wikipedia.org] , which for the biggest plane ever manufactured by the human race is pretty good. And before you bring up the delays issue, I would point out the 747 nearly bankrupted Boeing (http://www.aviationexplorer.com/747_facts.htm) - a far cry from Airbus today.
And for fucks sake, grow up - it's entirely poss
I love posts like the parent. (Score:2)
The A380 is NOT the biggest plane ever manufactured by the human race.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Giant_planes_co mparison.svg [wikipedia.org]
It's really uncool to make such basic mistakes when your trying to portray
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I ask because your rant-filled post is so thin on actual factual information, it's incredible.
For example, the US wouldn't be depending on a system that could be shut down anytime someone else wanted, because the existing, US-built and US-controlled network would be part of the alliance and would remain US-controlled. So, control that paranoia, boy.
As others have pointed out, Airbus is alive and well, and one of the world's two major civilian aircraft manufacturers.
And Concorde, for your in
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1. GIOVE-A, the first Galileo test satellite, was launched on 28 December 2005 from Baikonur Cosmodrome. It transmitted its (not it's) first navigation signal on 12 January 2006 and began transmitting complete navigation messages (i.e. with ephemeris and clock performance data) on 2nd May this year. No Frigidaire (just a commercially available satellite bus), no amateur radio (although SSTL, who built GIOVE-A, got
Concorde... (Score:2)
I'm not crapping on the Europeans over Concorde, because the US wanted to make an SST too. It seemed to make sense at the time. But in reality, the demand for such an expensive flight was