~terry
Wed, Aug 29, 2001 (22:59)
seed
What's the best gps for particular purposes, to help navigate the planet?
~terry
Wed, Aug 29, 2001 (23:03)
#1
My friend Flash swears by the "Street Navigator"; but it's a bit pricey, I think $700 street. It's color and tells you when to turn with it's built in synthesized voice.
The StreetPilot III follows in the footsteps of the original StreetPilot and StreetPilot ColorMap as a portable automotive GPS navigation system with electronic map capabilities. But it goes a step further by adding turn-by-turn navigation and voice prompting on a 16-color, higher-resolution display.
Unlike other in-car navigation systems that boast portability, the StreetPilot III does not require monthly service fees, installation, or an external processor. Instead, consumers can download street-level map sets onto a removable memory cartridge, insert the card into the StreetPilot III, mount the system on the dash of any vehicle, and enjoy the ease of stress-free driving. It is the most convenient, portable auto-navigation system on the market, and it's available at a fraction of the price of in-dash navigation systems.
The StreetPilot III offers true turn-by-turn navigation in America's major cities with its auto-routing feature. At the touch of a button, consumers will now have access to the shortest and fastest routes, turn directions, and estimated time of arrival at their intended destination. Along the way, the StreetPilot III provides automated voice prompts, alerting the driver to necessary turns, distance to upcoming turns, course deviation, and distance to final destination.
Please note: The StreetPilot III will be initially available in the America version only. The StreetPilot III Atlantic version (covering Europe, Africa and the Middle East) will be released late 2001.
~terry
Wed, Aug 29, 2001 (23:08)
#2
~MarciaH
Thu, Aug 30, 2001 (15:06)
#3
You can do this much less expensively. My son swears by his $100 hand held which can be attched to the laptop in the car containing the maps. I is so much simpler and when you hit the hiking trail you still have a rudimentart tracing to follow and all of the coordinated you need.
~wolf
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (12:36)
#4
whatever happened to reading street signs? and do they give you enough warning to "turn here"?
~terry
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (14:27)
#5
Sometimes there just not there, they might be in some college dorm room somewhere.
~wolf
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (14:49)
#6
*laugh*
~MarciaH
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (20:35)
#7
They give you pretty detailed maps. You can even specify if you want the nearest gas station... or restaurant. It is all about latitude and longitude which you asked about in mapmaking...
~wolf
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (21:48)
#8
i do understand how the system works, just making a point about us relying too much on electronics than our own brains!
~MarciaH
Sun, Sep 9, 2001 (22:27)
#9
Yup! We were overcharged in a restaurant by some kid hitting the wrong buttons. My dinner partner caught it and asked him to add it up again. Kids cannot even begin to figure if the result on their calculators are even close, let alone correct. I always double check (Excpet for my metric converter. I am lost when it comes to that, and I need all the feedback I can get on it!)
~wolf
Mon, Sep 10, 2001 (20:16)
#10
i usually go divide or multiply by two when dealing with kilometers (gives you a rough estimate)....
i'm not fast with math but i can do it long hand. sometimes doing the money thing messes me up (they're just numbers with dots in them!)
~MarciaH
Mon, Sep 10, 2001 (21:14)
#11
2 1/2 is what I usually did, as I recall in Britain, and we never seemed to get lost! I am plain and purely lousy at math!!
Wolfie, my T's are missing *grin*
~wolf
Thu, Sep 13, 2001 (21:14)
#12
oh goody!
~MarciaH
Thu, Sep 13, 2001 (22:23)
#13
Check visitors here...!
~aa9il
Fri, Oct 12, 2001 (10:34)
#14
Hi yall
I have the 'regular' Garmin GPS III with monochrome maps down to the macro
street level - not the detail of the above units at the start of this
thread. The plan is to interface this unit with a PC running Delorme
Street Atlas or whatever their pc mapping software is called. The other
GPS units I have are older low level things - primarily a 'core' GPS board
with antenna - one unit was made by Delorme to work with a PC and their
software and the other is a Motorola core module. The Delorme sends data
out in NMEA format and the Moto unit spits out their binary format. These
units are intended for APRS tracking (see TAPR.org) while the Moto unit
will be used strictly (?) for its 1 pulse per second output for a clock
reference for locking oscillators to a GPS reference. Total geek out.
73 de Mike
rci
~MarciaH
Fri, Oct 12, 2001 (19:48)
#15
Oooh Mike!! I am going to soon be in California with son who has a Meade 7, GPS, and a laptop to run the mapping programs and the telescope. Best part of all of this is that mom gets to play with his toys - just like I did when he was little.
I will get the $100 version which is entirely adequate for my purposes... as soon as I get done with the wedding, repairing the house... and a myriad of other things which come first.
*Sigh*
~terry
Wed, Jul 17, 2002 (11:09)
#16
July 15, 2002
Digital Angel Miniaturizes GPS Transmitting Technology
Matchbook-Size Device Opens Way To Monitor People, Animals and Objects
Anywhere
SO. ST. PAUL, Minn,-- Digital Angel Corporation (Amex: DOC) said it
has significantly miniaturized the footprint of its wireless GPS
location and alert transmitters, combining the chip sets and antenna in
a package the size of a matchbook.
Digital Angel Corp.'s lightweight one-piece unit, complete with an
ambient temperature monitor, is expected to stimulate development of
numerous applications for industrial, medical and consumer use. The
small unobtrusive size of the device, which employs standard
Internet-accessible GPS mapping programs, makes it an ideal component
for products intended for use in tracking the whereabouts of people,
objects and even pets.
http://www.digitalangel.net/about.asp
~MarciaH
Wed, Jul 17, 2002 (20:20)
#17
What a great idea. I saw GPS working live and direct with my visit to my son's habitat. Everywhere we went, he had loaded maps for the trip and I could plot the course as we went..... and read what was applicable from the Roadside Geology for Northern California
I wish they had it for the state I am visitng!
~aa9il
Tue, Aug 6, 2002 (14:44)
#18
Greetings all
A good amount of information on using the GPS to 'track things'
can be found by going to the Tuscon Area Packet Radio web page
www.tapr.org
Another use for GPS is the diciplining of oscillators (i.e. make them
stable). I recently picked up a gps locked reference oscillator that
came out of a cell telephone site. Interesting question... If gps gets
'turned off', does that mean all the cell sites will no longer function
since they have nothing to lock their oscillators to?
73 de Mike
AA9IL
radio cosmo international
~MarciaH
Tue, Aug 6, 2002 (17:56)
#19
Interesting question, Mike. I'll send it on to my son and get his take on this little problem. The GPS satellite constellation will eventually fail and new ones put into orbit to take their places. I wonder what this will entail for carefully-tuned oscillators and notch filters. If it is a tunable frequency, it should not matter. Just the time taken to replace one with another.
Only you would think of something like that! Excellent question!
~aa9il
Thu, Aug 8, 2002 (14:24)
#20
Hi all
Just something I was pondering... Especially since so many new things
are coming out that include gps as part of the package. Europe is
supposed to be launching their own gps constellation which will work in
the same frequency range and always be on so possibly the worry is moot.
73 de Mike
aa9il
r-c-i
9 days and counting to the 10ghz contest!
~MarciaH
Thu, Aug 8, 2002 (15:31)
#21
Weekend after next? I'll be checking the local hams on the FM band. Alas, my receiver with usb is 6000 miles away. Good luck, CosmoMike!
Interesting about the European GPS constellation going into use. If we can overlap the null date that would be most useful. What sort of meteor shower will they make on re-entry!!! Watch SeeSat for the details.
http://www.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
~aa9il
Thu, Aug 8, 2002 (23:29)
#22
Hi Marci
I take it from the '6000 miles away' that you are still in the lower 48.
There is an article in the most recent copy of 'Wired' magazine describing
the European gps effort.
I guess I should catch up reading the posts for etc, geo mystery, ... been
a bit out of touch as of late. Mostly going through boxes of junk to
pitch or keep although today I did build up a small yagi beam antenna
for 2m ssb. Talk on the email lists that there is some good tropo
going on right now. This usually happens during the transition from
Summer to Fall. Otherwise, just typing on the pc, and listening
to the BBC world service on the shortwave.
73 de AA9IL
Mike
r-c-i
~terry
Fri, Aug 9, 2002 (09:36)
#23
What impact will this European gps standard have on the consumer gps scene, will we have "dual band" gps's now? What are the implications?
~MarciaH
Fri, Aug 16, 2002 (21:57)
#24
(Mike, at least you are not having all your email duplicated by your home ISP to the tune of 4400 plus separate emails, but I do understand the need to go through the accumulation of "stuff" occasionally.)
Interesting question, Terry. Is there any implication or are they completely integtated? Is that too much to expect?!
~aa9il
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (13:48)
#25
Hi Marci
4000+ emails?! Wow, thats either alot of mail to respond to or clean up. I
usually waste alot of time clearing my emails after a trip but since 60%
is spam, its mostly slash and burn. Anyway, hope your Summer is going well.
Re the gps, I think the two gps satellite groups will transmit near each
other and can be picked up on a regular gps receiver so if our gps ever
gets 'cut off' for any reason, we could still use the other gps signals
(unless they are being jammed).
73 de Mike
AA9IL
~MarciaH
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (14:06)
#26
I subscribe to lots of services. However, since I had them delete all before August 6th, nothing has been coming through. How truly frustrating. Another email goes back to them
They "JAM" gps signals? Why?????????
~aa9il
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (15:22)
#27
Hi Marci
Know about subscribing to lots of services - I ususally will have 300 to 400
emails over a weekend from the various radio/digital groups - thank goodness
for journal mode.
Anyway, the gov has the ability to disable gps signals when they see fit - everything from turned off to introducing errors (dithering). If the European services go on line, then there is the need to jam those signals as required.
i.e. - if the general public is locked out of 'our' position signals, then
the 'European' signals should not be available either (security and all that).
I have several gps receivers (for personal use and providing reference signals)
but a compass or sextant with ephemeris tables will still allow me to determine my location. Cant easily 'jam' the stars or a sun shot (unless, of course, it
is cloudy....)
73 de Mike
~aa9il
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (15:36)
#28
And Hi Marci again...
Just was at the geochaching website - I might create a couple of 'goody'
caches in the surrounding forest preserves!
73 de Mike
~MarciaH
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (16:03)
#29
At least it is OUR government doing the jamming and not some malefactor. I am sure at times like this it is necessary to take extraordinary measures. Just when they removed the 100 mile (or was it ten?) built-in error so you could not pinpoint a target, they have to go back to jamming.
Off to check your geochaching comment. I'd love to be on one of those.
~aa9il
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (16:37)
#30
Most gps systems are jamming resistant - I think it is more of the 'selective
error' to introduce discrepancies in non-mil systems. Also, the old error was
100 meters. This could be overcome by differential gps or by standing REAL
still and averaging out the error.
73 de Mike
~MarciaH
Mon, Aug 19, 2002 (22:44)
#31
Gps do not employ notch filters as a feature on theie equipment? Could one be made to lock it within the 100 meter range? I'm sure they have good reasons for this selective jamming. They ARE supposed to be keeping me safe!