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| GPS |
| September
2005 |
| Bangkok to introduce
GPS to its fleet of taxis |
| Bangkok has
opened the first of 150 new electronic taxi stands that
will allow pedestrians to summon a taxi by pressing
a green button, signaling a dispatcher to send a taxi.
The devices will display the estimated arrival time
and license plate number of the approaching taxi. Taxis
will be equipped with GPS as part of the service. The
first arch-roofed electronic taxi stand was unveiled
last week outside a superstore on the city’s Phahonyotin
Road, while the remaining stands are expected to be
installed across the city by November. Besides helping
Bangkok pedestrians easily hail taxis, the stands are
meant to keep cab drivers from wasting fuel by driving
around the city in search of fares. www.chinapost.com.tw |
| New GPS unit helps
dodge traffic jams |
Chicago-based
Cobra Electronics in U.S. recently unveiled its new
GPS navigation system, the first portable with real-time
traffic information. The Nav One 4500 offers rerouting
options based on the location of traffic congestion.
Portable units appeal to people who want to be able
to use a device in different cars, including in rental
cars while on business trips or vacations. The data,
refreshed every two minutes, is available for 48 major
cities, including Chicago, New York, Los Angeles on
down to smaller cities, including West Palm Beach, Fla.,
and Austin, Texas. Marsh said these cities include more
than 70 percent of the U.S. population.
www.suntimes.com |
| GPS-Guided 155mm Artillery
Projectile |
One
of the most frustrating things about any mountain biker
is getting lost, confused or turned around. Outdated
maps or guidebooks, poorly marked trails or junctions
not marked at all can put the damper on just about any
recreational ride. It’s something that Mike Sladdin,
an avid mountain biker, noticed about three years ago
when he decided he wanted to start mapping the trails
around his hometown of Aspen in U.S. Pursuing what he
thought would be a useful tool for the mountain-bike
community and a good business idea, Sladdin recently
launched MountainTownTrails.com, a web site of downloadable
GPS tracks and GPS-based maps concentrating on Colorado,
Utah and the Rocky Mountains. Though the technology
is not yet widespread, many say GPS
mapping and tracking is the future for serious recreationists
who don’t want to worry about getting lost or
taking a wrong turn. The main advantage of GPS biking
is safety.
www.rockymountainnews.com |
| Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
moving northeast |
The
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, dubbed “the roof of the
world”, is moving northward and eastward at seven
to 30 millimeters a year, according to a Chinese researcher.”The
plateau is moving because it’s being pushed by
the Indian plate,” said Dr. Tan Kai, a researcher
with China Seismological Bureau who is collecting data
for a GPS survey in the towering Kunlun Mountains in
Golmud city of northwest China’s Qinghai Province.
Dr. Tan and his colleagues have found through the survey
that Lhasa, on the southern end of the plateau, is moving
30 millimeters a year northeast at an angle of 38 degrees
The seismological bureau has conducted more than 50
GPS surveys on the roof of the world since 1991. Of
the country’s 1,056 survey stations, 340 are in
the plateau region, which is known as the “third
polar of the earth”. Dr. Tan said the GSP surveys
can capture real-time, highly precise data to calculate
velocity of the crustal movement. Results of the surveys
will help scientists study the formation and evolution
of the plateau and evaluate the region’s risk
of earthquake and other geological disasters.
http://news.xinhuanet.com |
| GPS to study changes
in hurricane intensity |
Researchers
are using a $3 million National Science Foundation grant
in an effort to learn why sudden, dramatic changes occur
in the intensity of hurricanes. The study will focus
on how the interaction between a storm’s outer
rain bands and its inner eye can influence abrupt fl
uctuations in its strength.
Beginning on Aug. 15 through the rest of this year’s
Atlantic hurricane season, P-3 Orion aircraft from the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and
the U.S. Navy fly into hurricanes at sea armed with
sophisticated Doppler radar and GPS technology.
The planes will record wind speed and direction, temperature,
humidity, atmospheric pressure and other data to help
scientists build a new computer model on hurricane intensity.
The research team for the Hurricane Rainband and Intensity
Change Experiment, or RAINEX, includes the University
of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric
Science; the University of Washington; the National
Center for Atmospheric Research; NOAA; and the U.S.
Navy.
www.wftv.com |
| Tracking fast-moving
glaciers in Greenland |
Two
University of Maine scientists studying the effects
of climate change in the Arctic have discovered that
two glaciers in Greenland are moving at a not-so-glacial
pace.
The scientists returned from a fi veweek expedition
to the east coast of Greenland, where they studied the
movement of fi ve glaciers. They found that two of the
glaciers are moving at a far faster rate than just a
few years ago, raising questions about the effects of
regional warming. To take measurements, the scientists
drilled holes in the ice and placed GPS devices in them
to precisely measure the forward motion of the glaciers
by satellite.
One of the glaciers, called Kangerdlugssuaq, was moving
at the rate of nearly nine miles a year, making it one
of the world’s fastestmoving glaciers, the researchers
said. In the late 1990s, it was moving at about 3.5
miles a year. The glaciers’ accelerated speeds
in Greenland suggest that the climate is warming up,
at least in that region reported the scientists.
www.seacoastonline.com |
| GPS
Industries at golf course in South Africa |
GPS
Industries, Inc. (GPSI) an innovator of Wi-Fi wireless
and GPSenabled multimedia communications and management
solutions for golf facilities and residential communities,
announces that two courses, one in South Africa, Pezula
Championship Golf Course and White Hawk Country Club
in Crown Point, In. have been installed with the Inforemer
(TM) Wi- Fi GPS Golf Business Solution. Pezula Championship
Golf Course has been selected as the first course in
Africa to implement this GPS-based golf course management
system. Both courses have installed the full Inforemer)
management system, Wi-Fi network and equip their golf
cart fl eets with 10.4” color GPS units. www.primezone.com |
| Indian military equipped
with Sarantel GPS antenna |
Encore
Software of Bangalore in India is incorporating U.K.
based company Sarantel’s GeoHelix GPS antenna
in its new Saathi PDA for the Indian Army. The Sarantel
GPS antenna ensures that every Indian soldier with a
Saathi has optimum GPS reception across all environments
and locations. The Saathi is a robust tactical GPS enabled
PDA with integrated radio and a customised GIS application
for displaying military maps and location of other devices.
Weighing 875 grams, the Saathi can easily fi t into
a soldier’s palm and also has a remotely operated
self-destruction and activation feature for preventing
misuse by unauthorised people. Encore Software integrated
Sarantel’s high performance miniature GPS antenna
in the Saathi to ensure soldiers have stable GPS reception
in unstable conditions i.e near people or other electronics
in the radio.
www.businessweekly.co.uk |
| GPS tracking data
broadcast at German Grand Prix |
A
new TV feature for MotoGP broadcasts was introduced
at the German Grand Prix, showing the location of a
rider on the track - in real time. The system is based
on GPS has been jointly developed by the teams, motorcycle
manufacturers, leather suit manufacturers and Dorna
Sports engineers. A transmitter-receiver, mounted either
on the bike (GPS Data Bike) or inside the back protector
of the rider’s leather (GPS Data Rider), sends
real time information to the TV International Program
Feed unit, where it is converted into graphics and is
inserted in the fi nal television signal. This data
is transmitted thanks to the On Board system
installed on the bike.
www.crash.net |
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| September
2005 |
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