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| GPS |
| October 2005 |
Misdirecting
GPS maps appear in Chinese markets |
| A number of
people in China are having trouble with GPS navigation
systems in their cars, because they are installed with
counterfeit electronic maps, but authorities are doing
nothing about the problem as there are no laws regulating
the industry. Over the past six months, the Chinese
Academy of Surveying and Mapping has granted eight companies
across the country a certificate allowing them to produce
electronic navigation maps.
Industry sources, however, say the number of fake maps
on the market far exceed the number of genuine ones..
The electronic maps allow the system to tell drivers
the best route to take to any destination. Legal maps
cost more than 1,000 yuan (US$123) a piece, while counterfeits
can sell for as little as 15 yuan.
www.shanghaidaily.com |
| UAE invests to check
vehicle speed |
The
UAE is investing $125m in a system that will make it
possible to determine the speed of any of the Gulf state’s
2m vehicles, no matter where they are. New devices,
now being developed by the UAE’s Centre of Excellence
for Applied Research and Training (CERT) in conjunction
with IBM, should be ready for installation in cars within
four years. Once fi tted, these devices will use GPS
satellites to determine the car’s location to
within a few metres. By combining several position and
time measurements, it is a simple matter to determine
the car’s speed. epaperdaily.
timesofi ndia.com |
| GPS to track delivery
of readymix to construction site |
Delivering readymix
concrete at this time of year is a battle against the
clock as well as the thermometer. As the temperature
starts to rise, any delay in the delivery of readymix
to site can result in the cement solidifying and spoiling
before the contractor gets to start the pour. And with
traffi c congestion becoming an increasing problem in
many construction industry hot spots throughout the
Gulf, delivery delays are becoming more common. But
one Bahrain-based concrete supplier hopes that receiving
angry calls from contractors demanding to know what
has happened to their delivery will be a thing of the
past, thanks to a new tracking system, which allows
them to keep tabs on their trucks. The Eastern Asphalt
& Mixed Concrete Company (Eamco) is set to fi nish
installing MobiApps, a fl eet management system, on
its 45 cement mixers and 15 pump trucks by the end of
the month. The system will allow Eamco to monitor its
drivers’ activities in near real time, which will
then enable management to keep a better watch on staff
and also to inform customers about delays as they happen.
www.itp.net |
| Earth`s crust pulsates
in the Amazon basin |
Earth`s crust
pulsates up and down in the center of the Amazon basin,
new research suggests, according to researchers in Brazil
and United States. A GPS located next to the Amazon
and Rio Negro rivers in Brazil, recorded the station`s
altitude from 1995 to 2002. During that period the station
oscillated up and down within a range of about 75 millimeters,
or 3 inches, which was 3 to 9 times larger than observed
at GPS stations around the world. Michael Bevis of Ohio
State University in Columbus, working with a team of
colleagues, compared vertical crustal displacement with
the fl uctuation of the water level in the river and
found an almost perfect anti-correlation. As the river
rises, the ground sinks. Conversely, as the river level
falls in the dry season, the solid earth rebounds.
http://science.monstersandcritics.com |
| Truck fi rms in Philippines
urged to use GPS |
The Calabarzon
police offi ce in
Philippines has asked the association
of trucking companies in the region
to immediately install GPS gadgets in their trucks to
thwart hijacking and highway robberies. Although the
number of reported hijackings had declined in the past
months, the threat was still high. Once installed the
GPS could show the exact location of the trucks at any
given time. In case a truck is taken by criminal elements
or during an emergency, the police and its owner can
easily detect where the truck is headed. Then police
units can be dispatched to go after the truck at once.
He said despite the availability of such technology
in the country, the number of trucking companies using
GPS in their units is still negligible. The most common
reason cited by companies, he said, was that GPS units
are expensive. http://news.inq7.net |
| Massive sunspot causing
problem to GPS equipments |
A sunspot fi
ve times the size of Earth could wreak havoc with satellites
and radio communication systems, scientists warn, as
it moves across the face of the sun and Earth and moves
directly into its fi ring line. Seven huge X-class fl
ares have already erupted from the spot, including one
of magnitude X17 that made it into the record books
as the fourth largest ever seen. The US National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said that the
fl ares have already caused problems with some electric
power systems, radio communications and global positioning
equipment. www.theregister.co.uk |
| GPS modernization
begins with Delta rocket launch |
A Boeing Delta
2 booster launched the fi rst modernized Global Positioning
System satellite to build a bridge from the navigation
network of today to the advancements of tomorrow.
The two-ton GPS 2R-M1 spacecraft rode its three-stage
launcher into a temporary, looping orbit stretching
from 150 to nearly 11,000 miles where the Delta successfully
released its payload nearly 25 minutes after liftoff.
Ground controllers will spend the next several days
guiding the $75 million satellite to its final destination
by fi ring an onboard kick motor to raise the orbit’s
low point. The power-generating solar panels will be
deployed and antennas unfurled during the critical early
days, too.
justin@spaceflightnow.com |
| GPS device to track
down racehorses |
Racing has got
a new piece of hitech kit, which monitors racehorse
performance and simultaneously relays the information
anywhere in the world. The new system has been developed
by Cambridge Design Partnership together with British
Endurance Riding Association Team member Dominique Freeman
in U.K. It combines a GPS receiver with biological and
environmental sensors in a single lightweight package
carried by the horse. The device can simultaneously
monitor the horse’s performance, physiology and
environmental conditions. This can be displayed in real-time
to the rider and transmitted live around the world.
www.cambridge-news.co.uk |
| GPS to monitor sex
behavior of giant pandas |
Chinese and American
scientists are using the GPS to monitor the sex behavior
of giant pandas in deep mountains. The Chinese Academy
of Sciences (CAS) Institute of Zoology and the US Zoological
Society of San Diego are joining hands in a three-year
giant panda observation program in the Foping Natural
Reserve of northwest China’s Shaanxi Province,
which costs 660,000US dollars. Hypogenesis and incretionary
disorder make female giant pandas hard to get pregnant.
Scientifi c statistics indicate that 78 percent of female
giant pandas are unable to get pregnant while 90percent
of males are sterile. Tracking them with advanced technologies
and observing their sex activities might help us find
ways to avoid their extinction. GPS and other computerized
geographical systems could help scientists track movement
of the surveyed in different seasons and the animals’
behavioral change in different environments.
http://news.xinhuanet.com |
| History lessons now
equipped with GPS |
A new project
is linking history with new technology. Sixth formers
are to use GPS to show tourists historic sites in a
Denbighsire town in U.K. The history students at Ysgol
Brynhyfryd will be equipped with palm-held computers
showing Ruthin’s historic buildings via GPS. Data
will be accessible via the computers close to sites
when students act as tour guides later this month. The
Alevel pupils have already digitised documents found
among the archives in the town.
http://news.bbc.co.uk |
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