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| GPS |
| June 2005 |
| Tsunami shifts Bangkok
southwest... |
| Bangkok has
moved about nine centimetres (3.5 inches) horizontally
southwestwards because of the December 26 earthquake
that measured 9.0 on the Richter scale and sent devastating
tsunamis across the Indian Ocean. The tourist island
of Phuket also moved 32 centimetres (12.6 inches) southwestwards
since the quake, said the Chulalongkorn University researchers,
who used GPS satellites to measures the shifts during
a January 20-24 survey. Researcher Itthi’s survey
engineering department at Chulalongkorn is collecting
data from six other locations in Thailand to get a better
picture of how the nation’s geography has changed,
the Nation newspaper reported.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com |
 |
| ...and brings India
and Indonesia 12cm closer |
The December-26
earthquake that triggered the giant tsunami pushed India
12 cm closer to Indonesia, according to scientists of
the National Geophysical Research Institute (NGRI).
The findings are the result of analysis of data gathered
over a month from GPS receivers at different locations
by a team of NGRI scientists.These post-quake coordinates
of the two land masses indicated by the GPS receivers,
supplemented by data from permanent GPS stations in
Indonesia and India, showed that southern India had
moved 10-15 mm eastwards and Sumatra a bit less westward,
bringing them 12 cm nearer to each other. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com |
| GPS production to
skyrocket to $21.5 billion in 2008 |
The
GPS technology has contributed a great deal to the world
economy over the last decade. Presently, there are more
than hundreds of uses of GPS, starting from stand-alone
applications to more integrated, embedded applications.
In Western Europe, the vehicle navigation market is
in its initial stages, but there is already a strong
demand for traffic information and navigation solutions.
Countries like USA, Japan, and some others have gained
a cumulative shipment of 9.39 million in-vehicle navigation
and traffic information units in May 2002, and still
find a great demand.
Research and Markets has announced the addition of ‘GPS
Market Update 2004-2005’ to their offering. The
GPS production value globally is expected to grow to
$21.5 billion in 2008, up from $13 billion in 2003,
according to the Industrial Economics and Knowledge
Center (IEK) of the Industrial Technology Research Institute
(ITRI), Taiwan.
In the year 2003, GPS equipment sales was reported to
be around US $3.5 billion worldwide, and that annual
market could grow to US $10 billion after 2010, according
to a report published by a market research firm.
Based on the industry trends and technological assessment,
experts predict that the market is expected to grow
by the next 15-20 years. The market is yet to perform
as well as expected. Predictions also show strong annual
growth and an expected market size of US $757 billion
by 2017.
http://www.spacedaily.com |
| NOAA readjusts the
National Spatial Reference Syste |
Beginning
in June 2005, the US-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) will perform a general readjustment
of the horizontal position and ellipsoidal heights in
the National Spatial Reference System (NSRS) using high
accuracy GPS data. The NSRS is a consistent national
coordinate system that specifies latitude, longitude,
height, scale and gravity throughout the nation. This
data provides the foundation for transportation, communication,
mapping, charting and a multitude of scientific and
engineering applications. Using GPS data, the readjustment
will improve accuracy and consistency of the NSRS and
provide a local and network accuracy measure for each
coordinate. http://spatialnews.geocomm.com |
| UAE vehicles to install
telematics devices |
The
United Arab Emirates (UAE) has hired computer giant
IBM to develop a special traffic tracking system to
help curb road accidents that have reached deadly proportions,
a statement said. Under the four-year contract, worth
up to $125m, the “telematics” devices will
be installed in tens of thousands of vehicles, whose
drivers are deemed among the world’s worst, in
pilot projects over the next four years to allow police
to better manage chaotic traffic in the state.
Similar in concept to the black boxes found in aircraft,
the new telematics device combines microprocessors with
advanced GPS tracking and other wireless communications
to capture, analyse and deliver data via a wireless
network to the UAE’s Ministry of Higher Education
and Scientific Research.
The device is so advanced that it can monitor the speed
of the moving vehicle and compare it to the defined
speed limit on each street. If the car exceeds the limit,
the device sends out a warning message to the driver.
Trials of GPS-monitored speed sensing systems have already
begun in the Netherlands.
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com |
| Germany’s
SC rules GPS police searches constitutional |
Germany’s
Supreme Court has ruled that police surveillance via
the satellite- based GPS and the use of data gained
from such observations is not unconstitutional. The
Court thus overruled the charge that a member of the
“Anti-Imperialist Cell” had been unconstitutionally
sentenced to thirteen years in prison on four counts
of murder and four bombings.
In their investigations, criminal prosecutors had installed
a transmitter in the suspect’s vehicle, which
they are allowed to do according to the Act for the
Prevention of Illegal Narcotics Trading and Other Types
of Organized Crime (OrgKG). After it had been detected
and rendered useless, the police installed a GPS receiver
in the car. By analyzing the positioning data for roughly
two and a half months, the police were able to track
the vehicle’s trips and stops almost completely.
The technology is said to have considerably helped investigators
prove that the suspect committed the four bombings.
However, the suspect filed suit at the Supreme Court
to have such tracking via GPS ruled an unconstitutional
violation of his basic rights. He argued that GPS surveillance
represents an especially severe breach of his privacy
and thus requires special legal authority. Therefore,
he claimed that the simultaneous surveillance of him
and the others facing similar charges is unconstitutional.
The data and knowledge gained in the process thus should
not have been allowed in court.
However, the judges in the Second Chamber of the Supreme
Court ruled that the technical surveillance of suspects
does not generally constitute a breach of privacy. The
court found that scope and intensity of the intervention
in privacy that takes place when technical instruments
are used for surveillance generally do not reach the
inviolable core area of the right to lead the kind of
life one wants. In addition, the legal regulations fulfill
the legal requirements. However, the court called on
legislators to keep a close eye on technical developments
in light of the rapid changes in information technology
and the risks they pose for the protection of basic
rights. |
| India plans for regional
satellite navigation system |
India
is planning a regional satellite navigation system,
similar to the GPS of the United States. India wants
to set up the “Indian Regional Navigation Satellite
System” (IRNSS), that would be totally under its
control.
When implemented, the IRNSS would provide positional
accuracy similar to the GPS system for 1,500 km around
the country, according to the Notes on Demands for Grants
from the Department of Space. A configuration with eight
satellites was being studied, say officials of the Indian
Space Research Organisation (ISRO). In addition, ISRO
and the Airports Authority of India are jointly establishing
a GPS augmentation system for navigation and precision
landing of aircraft over India. http://www.hindu.com |
| GAGAN to have SBAS
equipment |
NovAtel
Inc., a precise positioning technology company, has
announced
that an order for additional Space Based Augmentation
System (SBAS) equipment was received from Raytheon Company
in support of the Indian GAGAN program.
This latest contract with Raytheon follows on from an
award to Raytheon by the Indian Space Research Organization
(ISRO) of a contract for the ground-based elements of
the GPS and GEO (Geostationary Earth Orbit) Augmented
Navigation (GAGAN) Technology Demonstration System (TDS),
in November 2004. NovAtel will supply receiver elements
of these ground-based elements, which will be included
in eight Indian reference stations, an Indian master
control center, and an Indian land uplink station.
The GAGAN project is part of a worldwide movement toward
space-based navigation, which has been endorsed by the
International Civil Aviation Organization.
www.novatel.ca |
| Offtrack |
| Elephants go hitech:
send GPS data via SMS |
As
part of a campaign by NGO, Save the Elephants, pachyderms
in Kenya are getting in on the action, as well. They’re
being fitted with specially designed GSM/GPS collars
that hold what are essentially mini cellphones, which
are programmed to send SMS messages to farmers’
mobiles with the latest GPS positions of the animals.
The elephants can also be tracked on the web in (near)
real time via Animal Tracking System software, which
gathers data from the GSM/GPS tags and makes it available
via standard web browsers.
http://www.engadget.com |
| And the blind will
see: pocketPC and GPS tools |
HumanWare
of New Zealand is showing the first integration of Trekker,
a standalone GPS orientation solution for the blind,
and Maestro during the CSUN Conference on Technology
and Persons with Disabilities. HumanWare is a new company
created through the recent merger of VisuAide and Pulse
Data, both active in the development of products for
persons with disabilities.
http://www.geekzone.co.nz |
| Old trees get new
lease of life in China |
After
losing 86 old trees over a period
of six years, Shenzhen has turned to the GPS to preserve
the remaining
old trees. From last September, Shenzhen forestry authorities
began defining positions of old trees using the system
and, so far, the positions of more than 400 old trees
had been determined by means of the positioning system,
said Chen Lizhong, an official of the municipal forestry
office.
The special economic zone excluded the districts of
Bao’an and Longgang and a tree older than 100
years was regarded as an old tree, he said. Chen said
they would soon start recording old trees in Bao’an
and Longgang.
http://english.people.com.cn |
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| June
2005 |
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