European Space Agency Developing GPS Rival 360
nbrimhall writes "The International Herald Tribune has a story here about the European Space Agency's plans to create a alternative to the U.S. controlled GPS. It includes some interesting information regarding the cost and possible contributors (including Canada and Russia)."
Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1)
military GPS receivers don't have that 'flaw'.
there are already like 6 other satellites run by europe that when used with GPS together offer accurate results, and i can do it all with my magellan on my palm, so it obviously isn't just for the military anymore
Clinton removed the "fuzz" (Score:2)
Re:Clinton removed the "fuzz" (Score:2, Informative)
Also, this is not the first time this story has been on Slashdot. However, I follow alt.geo.satellite-nav, and the general opinion there is that the EU is not actually going through with this system.
Selective Availability (Score:5, Informative)
Military GPS recievers had decoders built in, and were accurate to within a couple meters. This diffrence in accuracy was called 'selective availability.' BTW, during the gulf war, the military had a shortage of GPS recievers so they turned selecive availability off and used civilian recievers. Didnt seem to affect security all that much.
To get around the problem, ths US Coast Guard deployed a system called Differential GPS, or DGPS. Basically, they created fixed-position GPS recievers, which continuously compared the position derived from civilian-degraded GPS with a known position, and then broadcast the correction in real time. DGPS recievers applied the correction to the satellite position, and restored ccuracy to about 10-20 meters. In short, one branch of the military, (the coasties) were spending tens of millions to overcome the inaccuaracy included by another branch of the military.
During the Clinton administratioin, it bacame apparent that civilian uses of GPS were becoming signivicant to the economy, so Clinton ordered selective availability turned off (or turned down) to increase civilian accuracy. However, the military still reserves the right to degrade the civilian signal at any time without warning, if they percieve a national security risk.
So, the interest in a European GPS network is at least in part to remove the control from the US military, and remove the hreat of having the system degraded when they may want to use it.
Re:Selective Availability (Score:2)
The CG is part of the dept of transportation. They spent money to improve resolution within the range of the coastal transmitters. In other words shipping related to American trade. Also, it might have been easier than you make it seem since the infrastructure was already there from the existing loran transmitters.
Re:Selective Availability (Score:2)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess for the same reason monopolies make people antsy: the Europeans probably don't like their increasing dependence on a system administered by a single nation, especially one which, from time to time, trumpets "unilateralism".
There might be some concern, too, that the system would be suspectible to terrorist or other hostile action. Two systems might provide the redundancy to salvage a disaster.
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:5, Informative)
This is due to ionospheric interference. When a radio signal travels through the free electrosn in the ionosphere, it experiences a certain amount of delay. Signals of different frequencies are delayed differently. So in creating the GPS system the military thought of using two signals when the satellites broadcast there info. Called L1 and L2 the military use both signals mesure the amount of delay between them and make corrections for the effect of the ionosphere. The Civilian receivers cannot correct for the ionospheric interference since it only picks up the L1 frequency.
So I guess there is a good, long explanation on
why to invest the capital. Or you could buy the
military reciver.
-Scott
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1)
it is not much of a mony maker, in fact the US has to keep putting up new satellites into the system. The US uses 24 satellites in the system but there are more then 24 GPS satellites up in orbit.
-Scott
But why would Europe care? (Score:2)
I can see some country like Iraq or China having good reasons for their own independant GPS system, but not Europe, they're more likely than anyone to be sided with the US during any event that may call for decreased GPS accuracy.
Re:But why would Europe care? (Score:2)
I doubt that the US and the EU will have serious problems in the near future, but the military has a different way of looking at things. They deal with "threats" and "risks", and they generally see the glass as half-empty (especially when looking at their budget). A separate satellite navigation system could resolve a risk and a budget problem at the same time.
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:5, Insightful)
(GPS+WAAS is good enough for accuracy in inches, even if they turn SA back on. WAAS will only work in the US though.)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:1)
-Maher-
Re:Isn't using GPS free? if so why spend capital? (Score:2)
Because we can?
Great, just what we need... another standard... (Score:1)
Re:Great, just what we need... another standard... (Score:1)
Re:Great, just what we need... another standard... (Score:2)
No Matter (Score:1)
Re:No Matter (Score:1)
Re:No Matter (Score:1)
It wouldn't surprise me if the US military could turn-off the GPS over selected parts of the globe. I recall hearing rumors of the signal from the GPS satellites disappearing in some parts of the country a few years ago, perhaps they were testing their ability to selectively disable GPS satellite transmissions.
The only thing that surprises me is that it's taken the rest of the world this long to start developing a replacement system (except for the Russian GLOSAT(?) system of course). Think about it, every airline in the world (for example) is dependent on a navagation system run by the US military. Nothing against them, they seem to be running it on the up-and-up, but is it a good strategy to depend on a navagation system run by a potential enemy or even a competitor?
Re:No Matter (Score:1)
> on a navagation system run by the US military
What are you talking about???? until just a few years ago (5) no plane in the sky could "officially" use gps as a positional aid. Admittedly, gps has RECENTLY opened up many additional runways and airports to instrument approaches (when the weather's too bad to land visually) but the majority of approaches in use today still don't use GPS. And the majority of in flight navigation is also NOT based on GPS. I don't know this for fact, but I'd be suprised if even 1 commercial flight out of 10 uses GPS as a primary navigation aid. Beleive me, the FAA and other countries' equivalents has long had a system in place without the use of GPS and it's still going strong today.
Re:No Matter (Score:1)
Re:No Matter (Score:2)
You can buy a prebuilt differential broadcast correction station for not much money -- no need to homebrew. Just set it up at a known location. You likely don't even need that: USGC differential beacons cover most of the country. However you get better repeatability if you are close to your differential station, so it may be worth your while if you are doing high precision work and aren't near a USCG beacon. I've heard it also helps if you have weak GPS signals (e.g. under tree cover with limited sky view) but I haven't seen it in action.
Re:No Matter (Score:2)
I would imagine that most parts of the continental US have reception to at least two or three LORAN stations. IIRC, you need four vectors from LORAN station to get a reliable position. I'm not sure how many it would take to fix you to within 10 meters or so.
Placing the beacon at a known location would be pretty easy, I'd imagine. Let's say you wanted to target a certain government building in DC. Place the DGPS beacon at a known location (like the roof of a building down the street) and a receiver on your missle/plane/whatever, and I think you'd be able to hit your target quite accurately.
Re:No Matter (Score:2)
What would be really cool would be a machine capable of doing fully automatic celestial navigation.
Re:No Matter (Score:2)
The Magellan clip on GPS for PDAs has software which allows you to tap on a world map. This gets you an almost immediate fix. The cell network, which locates you to within 40km or less (depending on network density possibly much less) could do the same thing. Of course the magellan unit doesn't do differential.
I'm curious about the cell phones though. Are they using the USCG differential signal, or are the cell providers broadcasting their differential signal?
Re:No Matter (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:No Matter (Score:2)
Get a clue, bro. You can buy this stuff [magellangps.com] from any Magellan GPS dealer. Almost every GPS has the ability to output coordinates over a serial port. Interface this with a guidance system and you're within 3 meters of your target.
Instead of GPS why not develop... (Score:2, Funny)
Supply/Demand (Score:1)
Re:Supply/Demand (Score:1)
You can already pick up GPS receivers for under $100, so I'm not quite sure what you're waiting for. If you mean with onboard mapping, colour display, etc, well that isn't costly because of GPS.
New Ads for EU standard (Score:2, Funny)
I can see the comericals for the new system, there going to have Queen's Bohemian Rapsody playing: Galileo, Galileo, Galileo, magnifico... oh, oh, ohh, oh, oh, oh, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no mama mi-ia, mama-mi-ia, mama-mi-ia let me go...
Pay for GPS? (Score:1)
Re:Pay for GPS? (Score:1)
The Russians? (Score:1)
GLONASS, the Russian GPS (Score:5, Informative)
I believe the Soviet Union once launched a system of satellites called GLONASS that worked like GPS. Are they planning to do an upgrade or repair of this system? The GPS FAQ [vancouver-webpages.com] has more information (see section 5.2).
Heck, it's understandable why they'd want to build an alternative GPS; the US Department of Defense could suddenly decide to turn selective availability back on again if they felt like it someday...
Re:GLONASS, the Russian GPS (Score:2)
Hurry - we don't have much time to finish this task before the US government switches off the GPS system!
Re:GLONASS, the Russian GPS (Score:5, Informative)
GLONASS is a quite different system to GPS, and it's unclear whether or not buying GLONASS would be better than designing your own. The satellites only have a usable life of about 7.5 years for starters, so it would be a short-term measure at best.
GLONASS is designed for smart satellites and relatively dumb receivers, whereas GPS is designed for relatively dumb satellites and smart receivers. For example, the GLONASS satellites are in orbits with an almost zero eccentricity, so receivers don't need to correct for relativistic effects. (The Soviets were always much better than the US at getting things into very precise orbits.) The benefit of GPS here is that you can always upgrade a receiver if you want something even smarter. (The US has always been much better than the USSR at producing sophisticated consumer electronics.)
Also, GLONASS uses an older geodetic system than GPS, which makes it not as useful for advanced surveying applications.
Yet another standard (Score:3, Insightful)
And spheroids are calculable. Anyone doing surveying will be reading into a PDA or something anyway so they can transform coords into any space they want.
Xix.
Re:Yet another standard (Score:2)
I'm curious also about Pseudonym's statement about the geodetic systems, something doesn't seem right about that.
ESA has long considered a separate system that is under their control, they just don't trust us Yanks (and for good reason, if they are considering landing aircraft with the system).
But designing a system now has great advantages over a system designed in the '70s (GPS), especially if a wide range of civilian uses are taken into account. Everything from personal navigation devices, transportation uses, high reliability / availability use for aircraft and geodetic uses would be much easier with a system designed for them.
Re:Yet another standard (Score:2)
All I meant by that is that if you're using GLONASS, chances are it won't correspond precisely to your map if it was made after 1985 or so. Sure, you can transform between the two systems, but that requires more smarts on the receiver, which eliminates the one potential advantage of GLONASS (having a simple receiver).
If you're just trying to find your way back to where you were, it won't make a difference. If you're trying to locate somewhere accurately on a map, it'll be an unnecessary headache.
Re:Yet another standard (Score:2)
Re:If GLONASS is 'quite different to GPS', then .. (Score:2)
Kaplan's Understanding GPS: Principles and Applications asserts that GPS transmits Kepler elements whereas GLONASS transmits cartesian coordinates and derivatives. They also keep different time and use a different reference frame. Admittedly the book doesn't go into GLONASS in detail, however, is this information wrong?
Its about control... (Score:5, Informative)
When GPS was designed, they added a fudge factor in that would only allow civil recivers to get get a short term fix of about 100m but the military recivers should have been able to get under 10m but because of R&D money on the civil side, the non-military recivers would give much better results than the over priced military ones. With good differental systems you can now get sub meter precision and the fudge factor is pointless and has been turned off. It was the fudge factor that started the Galileo project in the first place.
I don't see Galileo going anywhere. It is a user pay system so are you going to use the euro system where you get to pay $30/yr on top of the reciver or the GPS system where its free thanks to the US tax payers? There will also be the problem that GPS recivers are commodity item and Galileo recivers won't be for at least a decade. Europe would be much better off provide a WAAS compatable sat system than doing their own GPS.
Re:Its about control... (Score:1)
however if the US shuts down the public GPS system, its also going to take out Glonass and any other location system
How exactly do they plan on doing this??
European silliness (Score:1)
But, it's a free world! If the Europeans want to waste $3.6 billion (give or take another billion or two), they should go ahead! Higher taxes in Europe, increasing the attractiveness of American goods! If they waste enough, American manufacturers can stay on top of the economic battles for another generation!
BTW, paid vs. free doesn't always matter. Look at the world's largest software monopoly, and all the PCs everybody's going to buy this Christmas loaded with what operating system? (But just in case, maybe Garmin just needs to start contributing to some political campaigns on the other side of the pond...)
Re:European silliness (Score:2)
But, it's a free world! If the Europeans want to waste $3.6 billion (give or take another billion or two), they should go ahead! Higher taxes in Europe, increasing the attractiveness of American goods! If they waste enough, American manufacturers can stay on top of the economic battles for another generation!
Well, the difference is this.
We don't spend idiotic amounts of money on the military.
So, $ 3,6 billion is nothing compared to the US military budget.
O yeah, and that is also the reason that we have (almost) free healtcare
Don't forget that the military budget of the US is higher than that of China and the whole of Europe combined.
Damn them, they'll win! (Score:1, Funny)
Yes, that's right - (Score:1)
evil American GPS signals! [google.com]
Not that I have a problem with a parallel system. More power to anyone who wants to go for it, but "U.S. dominion" seems like kind of a silly justification.
Would be cheaper to write a treaty (Score:1)
Becuase anytime real GPS gets scrambled, the US would probably also take any rival system down by force.
Would you like to be in an airliner that makes a 100m vertical postioning error in foggy weather ?
Re: (Score:2)
Easy solution: Sell GPS rights to the UN (Score:1)
Come to think of it, bundle in a satellite warning system while we're at it, and make the whole package available to all nations.
One thing I'd like to see (Score:5, Informative)
If on the other hand, they included an accelerometer in the GPS unit they could tell with great precision which changes were due to movements, and which were due to errors. Thus, with some algorithm changes, such a GPS unit could continue to refine its measurements to greater and greater precision as long as it was turned on, even if it was moving about.
Ideally, the accelerometer would be integrated on to the same chip as the GPS or Galeon reciever, along with the logic for coorelating the results as well. Accelerometers can be built entirely on-chip, so no extra parts would be needed. I believe modern accelerometers can achieve high accuracy over a very wide range of accelerations using just 2 square millimeters of chip area, so this shouldn't add much to the manufacturing cost.
This would also increase safety in a number of ways. If an airplane in flight lost GPS signal, perhaps due to flying into a low narrow valley, it could continue to navigate electronically for a while (albiert with less precision) using only the accelerometer. If for some reason the GPS or Galeon network became suddenly unavailable due to unforseen circumstances (US goverment getting pissed off, technical issues, bizarre weather, interference, terrorists, etc.), critical systems would have a little extra time to deal with the situation before global positioning equipment failed completely.
Does this make sense to people? Think it's a good idea / bad idea?
Re:One thing I'd like to see (Score:2)
Re:One thing I'd like to see (Score:2)
Get on a swing, close your eyes, and try to stay upright while moving back and forth. It's not just in your ears, it's in your eyes too.
Re:One thing I'd like to see (Score:2)
Re:One thing I'd like to see (Score:5, Informative)
One accelerometer can't. You need accelerometers on all three axes to detect which direction you're moving, and you need gyros for pitch/yaw/roll. I beleive the inexpensive solid state gyros are just two parallel accelerometers (A and B) with your point of reference (X) in the middle.
If you rotate around X, you'll measure downward acceleration on A and upward acceleration on B.
The real problem is not measuring acceleration (or rotation), the problem is converting this to speed (integral of acceleration). Accelerometers are great for measuring speed over a short period of time. For example, with just one accelerometer you can very accurately measure a car's 0-60 time and 1/4 mile speed. However, without an occasional speed or position sample, your calculated speed will always be drifting.
Re:One thing I'd like to see (Score:2)
Clearly you don't have a clue and you're just trolling, but it's worth clarifying the drift problem:
What good is "nearly" no drift? If there's any drift at all, then it means you *have* to have an occasion external reference. If you're talking about a 20 minute missile flight then you're okay, but it doesn't work if you want to track your position for the course of a longer trip.
There is always some noise in your samples, and there's always data lost between sampling intervals. You're integrating twice and then adding up a whole bunch of deltas, each with some error. Over time, your calculated position WILL ALWAYS drift further and further from your actual position. That's why inertial navigation is seldom preferred when GPS or Loran is available.
lets just say it is more accurate than military grade GPS.
Bullsh*t - under what circumstances? Where do you think you're going to get the initial position to program the inertial guidance system?
Here's a good intro to inertial navigation [pdx.edu] if you're interested.
A guess... (Score:1)
Probably something like a "GPS Tax" (think about it for a moment).
The end result will be a system that no one will use.
GLONASS (Score:2)
It might be cheaper to do navigation by sending out navigation signals on the major communications satellites. This won't provide global coverage, but it would cover all the places you can get satellite TV broadcasts. I'm surprised that INMARSAT doesn't do this as a matter of course.
Re:GLONASS (Score:2)
Iridium sats would work, though.
Europe -- Rivals? (Score:1)
Summary: Expensive, bad idea.
Who Cares? (Score:2, Insightful)
Who is going to pay that subscription fee while there is a free one in the sky? It's like web sites. Who is going to pay for content when there is more than you can read in a lifetime free?
I have a feeling that if the Europeans build a fee based GPS, nobody will come. What a waste of Euro taxpayer dollars.
Re:Who Cares? (Score:2, Insightful)
It would be a waste, except we don't pay our tax in dollars. We pay in Euros, which are worthless anyway. So, technically, it's not a waste.
Re:Who Cares? (Score:2)
Two Good Reasons (Score:5, Interesting)
Another reason is the available of ultrawideband [timedomain.com] technology (UWB). It's really interesting, relatively inexpensive, and can provide tremendously accurate (1 centimeter) positioning.
No, I don't own stock in it or anything like that (although, as a U.S. citizen, I should [discover.com]).
Mind Control Rays (Score:5, Funny)
To retaliate they are going to build their own, and make us think the European rock and roll is good, and like warm beer, too!
See http://zapatopi.net/afdb.html for the defence against this dastardly plot!
Re:Mind Control Rays (Score:2)
There is a keen difference (in my experience) between masss produced European and mass produced American beer:
1) European beer is really good warm, and tasty cold.
2) American beer is terrifyingly bad warm, and it's bad cold.
It depends on if you want consistantly bad or consistantly good beer.
Mind you, this is coming from a person who's idea of heaven is sitting on an isolated beach on a sunny day with his laptop and some nice room temperature stout...writting code and getting pleasently smashed. So you might want to take my opinions with a grain of salt.
Re:Mind Control Rays (Score:2)
Well, in my travels on both sides of the pond I've learned to stay away from mass produced beer of either sort.
And yes, I still prefer specialty beers cold.
Jamming (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Jamming (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a good point to justify an alternative EU GPS system: the US can jam or make "selectively available" their own system, but doing something like that on someone else's system would be an outright act of war.
Of course this boils down to some leverage in commercial talks, after all; and I don't see the US and the EU engaged in more than "heated talks" in the next 10-15 years.
Maybe it would fix GPS's 'Time' Problem (Score:2)
You can read a paper here [sustainableworld.com] about the date bug.
Redundacy! (Score:5, Insightful)
You can't even fathom how dependant we are on GPS already. It's amazing.
* Ships use it as a replacement for LORAN (with LORAN being the redundancy).
*The whole telco industry uses it . Rather then sending a sync signal for long-distance serial lines (aka some T-1s, etc) they use GPS (with wire-sync being the redundancy).
* A good hunk of the computer industry uses it. GPS receivers are used for many NTP servers.
* The FAA is looking into using it (as a replacement for thier ground-based radar set up to allow pilots to autonomously plot thier poin-to-point flight plans).
* The military uses it in many ways including the self-guided smart bombs, etc.
We all know that a lot of people and companies do not build in redundancy until the sh*t hits the fan andsomthing goes down. If we loose a few GPS satellites the results for those that were not careful would be catastrophic. Having a second system in place, even at a subscription cost, is VERY valuable.
BTW I highly doubt the miltary would ever shut down civilian access to GPS in anything less then a world war. The US economy is WAY too dependant on it.
Re:Redundacy! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Redundacy! (Score:2, Informative)
China is also in the game (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.spaceandtech.com/digest/flash-articl
There has also been talk of China financing the the Glonass system (Russia's GPS) for their own use.
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/gps-00h.html
Ooh (Score:2, Funny)
GPS.Eu Version 0.1
GPS# whereami
Recieving response from GPS.Eu Sat #24
Response: "We'd tell you, but you have your own version of GPS, you American bloke!"
Seriously, whats wrong with the existing GPS system?
Why the signal is no longer degraded (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with the 'just trust us' approach is that it is difficult to place great trust in a democratic country that no longer bothers to count the votes and is planing to do away with trials, replacing them by tribunals. Meanwhile the Bush admin. has declared that it will unilaterally withdraw from any agreements it finds to be inconvenient - including biggies like the ABM treaty.
The cost is not a major issue, $1Bn is not a huge amount in the EU budget, however it is not a negligible issue. The Brits would certainly not get bothered enough about the risks of a US monopoly, the French on the other hand can be relied upon to get into a galic stew over the issue.
The concern for the EU would be that a future US president might use the GPS selective availability system as a bargaining chip in future trade negotiations. The US has from time to time gone through protectionist cycles and a President Buchannan might well have tried to get his way through various types of blackmail. Or imagine Senator Jessie Helms putting a ridder on an appropriations bill ordering the Admin. to turn off GPS service to any country that does not toe the line on whatever idea the supporter of segregation happened to have that week.
Given the vagaries of the US political process it is not surprising that the dependence on the GPS system is being raised as an issue. It is very unlikely that the EU will go ahead and build a rival system, however it is very likely that the US will respond to the proposals with a set of diplomatic assurances over the use made of selective availabilty. And just as GWB has discovered that the ABM treaty matters after all a future president Buchanan would find that diplomatic assurances are kind of harder to renege on than US unilateralists tend to believe.
thanks for the asides ... (Score:3, Informative)
The problem wasn't that the votes were not counted. The problem was that they were counted over, and over, and over again. Even if the supreme court had allowed a several county recount bush still would have won. If the democrats had asked for an entire state recount and got it (which seemed like a bad idea at the time) Gore would have won. However, when it's so close, it's more important that somebody win sooner rather the right person 6 months after the election.
is planing to do away with trials, replacing them by tribunals.
Heh, but not for U.S. citizens. Only for alleged terrorists in a certain situation. Since 90% of americans probably think shooting them on sight is our the idea, a trial at all is pretty good.
Meanwhile the Bush admin. has declared that it will unilaterally withdraw from any agreements it finds to be inconvenient
First of all, the bush administration seems less likely to do this now that international support is more necessary for the war in afghanistan. Secondly, no countries ever follow treaties if it doesn't suit them. If any other country had the money lying around to develop an ABM system you bet your asteroids they would (except maybe switzerland).
I actually think that another system is a good idea, because american GPS systems are such a great military target, and redundancy is good. I just dislike half-informed country bashing.
Re:thanks for the asides ... (Score:2)
Are saying that Gore *did* win but you have no problem with GWB being president? Are you mad?
However, when it's so close, it's more important that somebody win sooner rather the right person 6 months after the election.
No, you are very very wrong. A thorough transparent COMPLETE recounting of EVERY ballot is the sole acceptable solution. To be hurried - for what reason i dont know, the president isnt inaugurated for months after the vote - makes no sense. Why not take your time and be thorough, NOT doing so could only end up casting questions onto the legitimacy of your democracy, your president, your entire system? Very big stakes, for what reason were these things chanced? (aside: Bush's brother and his cronies were in charge of the re-count, this casts EVEN MORE doubt on the legitimacy of the event... very sad day for "american democracy")
is planning to do away with trials, replacing them by tribunals.
Heh, but not for U.S. citizens.
I hereby propose Bill SN101; "Americans Shot on Sight Act" for first reading. This does not affect Canada's ideals and reputation of maintaining a peacfull and free domestic state, because, Hehehe hehe, its not for Canadian Citizens.
Is it a fact now that Americans feel they are entitled to the guarantees in there constitution, freedom, liberty and safety - but "foreigners" are NOT? I think your constitutional lawyers may have a problem with this...
Only for alleged terrorists in a certain situation. Since 90% of Americans probably think shooting them on sight is our the idea, a trial at all is pretty good.
Please repeat this, its stunning
First of all, the bush administration seems less likely to do this now that international support is more necessary for the war in Afghanistan.
Fair weather friends are we? Im amazed that you would propose this as acceptable. Together, the rest of the world has no problems doing without the USA. Never forget that. Have a look at the domestic and foreign policies of the rest of the world - you will find some significant differences in opinion... America is moving away from the rest of the world....
Secondly, no countries ever follow treaties if it doesn't suit them.
What are you talking about? You cannot simply walk away from treaties? There are SIGNIFICANT ill effects of doing so. Not least of them would be loosing-face.
If any other country had the money lying around to develop an ABM system you bet your asteroids they would....because american GPS systems are such a great military target, and redundancy is good.
Who is this great empire of war-mongering foreigners you are trying to 'defend' yourself against?
I just dislike half-informed country bashing.
Really - how do you feel about ignorant jingoism? In short, i %worship_action% to %some_diety% that your opinions are not shared by your countrymen. Was your post serious?
Re:thanks for the asides ... (Score:2)
Gore did not win. But he received the most votes (after an unofficial recount by news organizations). The recount, however, took around 8 months and had no guarantee of being unbiased or accurate.
The winner was decided by the number of votes that stood after several recounts. The democrats wanted a recount of several (heavily democrat) counties, republicans took 'em to court saying it was unconstitutional, supreme court agreed, and Gore basically ran out of time. He conceded. He realized that it would be better for the country to concede than hold the country in suspense for another four months.
At any rate, it was really a technological problem, not a fundamental problem with our democracy. We are going to great lengths to fix our technology before the next elections :)
Please repeat this, its stunning
Americans very much consider this a war. It is not unusual to consider assassination of foreign officials during times of war. Saddam tried on bush. We've had prohibitions on it that the CIA occasionally violates. There's been consideration of lifting the prohibition.
hereby propose Bill SN101; "Americans Shot on Sight Act" for first reading.
Legal precedent holds in the U.S. that the rights specified in the Constitution sometimes do not apply to non-citizens, _especially_ when they are actually in a foreign country. For example, the FBI recently hacked into a russian computer to gather evidence before they had a warrant. That would get the case thrown out in the U.S., but the judge ruled it was ok because the computer and operator had no constitutional protections in russia. When the data was brought back, a warrant was needed to look at it, because it was in the U.S.
What are you talking about? You cannot simply walk away from treaties?
Who is this great empire of war-mongering foreigners you are trying to 'defend' yourself against?
Because many countries that sponsor terrorists may have cbrn capabilities and will probably have missiles that reach the U.S. in 10 or 20 years. Normal deterrence (MAD) does not work for many of these nations, because Saddam Hussein, for example, does not seem to care if we kill all of his citizens. It would save him a lot of work. Upholding treaties kind of pales in comparison to the thought of that.
(p.s. : cbrn is chemical-biological-radiological-nuclear, MAD is mutual assured destruction)
Re:Why the signal is no longer degraded (Score:2)
To depend solely on a US owned GPS system for such a huge, and growing, list of services, often relating to national security, is shortsighted.
However. The EU should not build a competing product. The US should hand control of the GPS system over to the UN lock stock and barrel. That way the world has a reliable GPS system that cannot be switched off by a grumpy state at some point in the future.
GPS is becoming too important to leave it in the hands of someone else. Either its everyones toy, or EVERYONE needs their own. With the cost of a GPS system being prohibitive to all but the richest nations I think the UN option is best.
It'll never happen though.
Re:Why the signal is no longer degraded (Score:2)
How quickly they forget eh? The US scuttled 3 completely supported international initiatives:
Kyoto Protocol
Standing War Crimes Court. There were US Military from Korea on the docket.
Standing / Enforceable BioWeapons Inspection teams. The US refused to endorse this, they claim its to defend BigPharma, but I wonder...
Now they need the rest of the world, they want to form a broad-coalition to end terrorism... I see this "if your not with us, your against us" rhetoric as a pre-European vs USA "Superpower" duality volley, but I digress.
I wonder how the USA would react if another nationa said ' we arent going to join *your* "coalition against terrorism" because it may ill-affect our economy ', I wonder if THAT is an acceptable answer to the request from the USA.
Re:Why the signal is no longer degraded (Score:2)
Ah but if you write a good one you can still get more up mods than down mods.
The point is that the US view of itself at home is not shared abroad. The rest of the world does not consider the US to be the unique, the sole repository of freedom, liberty etc. etc. as US politicians are so fond of bleating.
Rather the rest of the world look at the dishonest liars that you elect as politicians and mae pretty much the same judgement of them as people in the US do. It is odd that the same people who demand that foreigners trust your government are the same ones who demand the right to carry guns because they can't trust the US government... The US does not have an unblemished record of keeping its word in international agreements.
The suggestion to build a duplicate GPS system is not bizare or in any way unexpected. The French have the same view of their 'culture' as the US does of theirs, only more so because they are French. Just as the US had to build a $15 billion experiment to duplicate the LHC in Geneva to have their flag on the damn thing, the French would love the rest of the EU to subsidize the launch of a rival GPS system on their Arianne rockets.
It is all tin pot nationalism which is why it looks so silly, particularly when people have to prove that they are tin pot nationalists by clucking in such excited circles. Ooohhh he said something naaaasty about our country, you must be eeeevil, quick, set up a GWB tribunal and execute him.
Jamming GPS (Score:5, Informative)
In fact, this article suggests that they're doing it now in Afghanistan:
[computerworld.com]
http://www.computerworld.com/storyba/0,4125,NAV
Improved accuracy? (Score:4, Informative)
1. The receiver clock is not exactly synchronized with the satellite clock so the time of flight will be imprecise.
2.The satellite and receiver are in different velocity reference frames and gravitational regimes so there are relativistic differences (both special and general)
3. The speed of light is 300,000 km/s in a vaccum. However, while travelling through the Earth Ionosphere and Troposphere, the radio waves travel at slightly slower speeds
4. Radio signals traveling through the atmosphere travel differents paths depending on the location of the receiver.
Although the first problem is correctable using a fourth satellite [ednet.ns.ca], the remaining three problems persist. However, if you receive signals from several satellites (not just your minimum 4), if you average your reported locations, you should be able to get a more accurate fix on your location.
Canada's Involvement (Score:3, Informative)
This is a multi-million dollar venture by the Canadian government that involves researchers in all fields, including sciences and humanities. Essentially what they are trying to achieve is a car that drives itself.
I interviewed the head of the U of C's Geomatics department, Dr. Gerard Lachapelle. He mentioned the European "rival" to GPS (he called it "Galileo"), but he did not seem to think of it as a rivalry at all. Quite on the contrary, he and his department plan on using both technologies extensively in their coming work on the project.
All the same, he seemed extremely excited about the prospect of a second system.
~windside
EU falling behind US? Too late! (Score:2)
OK class, who can tell me when GPS was first deployed? And when will Galileo be deployed at its earliest?
Our next topic of discussion is the importantce of picking proper verb tense...
Re:use both... (Score:1)
Re:don't worry... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:don't worry... (Score:1)
Re:don't worry... (Score:1)
Re:How about something sneakier? (Score:2)
Re:ha ha ha.. Quoet from the article.. (Score:2)