Letters to the Editor
January 1, 2010 By: Frank van Diggelen GPS WorldThe Smartphone Revolution
Nice article on “The Smartphone Revolution” in the December issue. I am not so tech-y about the working of GPS/indoor GPS, but I am interested more in this technology specific to indoor GPS (repeaters).
Can the smartphones get indoor GPS signals correctly and quickly? If the smart phones are really smart that they can connect to GPS satellite from indoor locations, then do the GPS repeater products become obsolete?
— Saad B.
Author Frank van Diggelen replies:
The simple answer to your first question is yes, many of these smartphones can get GPS signals indoors. But indoors is a big and varied place, and the more complete answer is that the term “indoor GPS,” like “offroad vehicle,” describes the presence of a capability, not the absence of all limitations. So even if your GPS receiver works indoors in some locations, there will always be other places it doesn’t. And it will generally work better where there are stronger signals, like outdoors.
Similarly, for your second question, high-sensitivity GPS will work some places indoors, but not everywhere, so there is a role for repeaters. However, GPS repeaters are like a long cable from the repeater’s receiving GPS antenna; so any GPS receiver that gets signals from a repeater will compute the position of the repeater’s receiving GPS antenna.
Nice article. One comment and one question.
Comment: The IGS ultra-rapids that started in 1999–2000 were from the beginning available for the future. They always contained 24 hours of estimated orbits and 24 hours of predicted orbits usable in real time. As I was responsible for generating these products within the IGS at that time, I am pretty sure that was the case.
Question: I do not understand why you write that turning off SA (Seletive Availability) was an enabler for A-GPS!? I know that one possible feature of SA was an artificial degradation of the satellite ephemerides but this option was never exercised to my knowledge. So using a global network to obtain broadcast ephemerides and predict them into the future was always possible. Nothing fundamentally changed when SA was turned off!?
— Tim Springer






