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by _flux
584 days ago
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I don't understand this. As far as I know, the satellite basically sends its identifier and precise time, and from this information (combined with the information in GPS calendar that tells the locations of the satellites) the recipient can determines its own location. How could it be possible to determine the location from a single timestamp and information about which satellite it belongs to? I suppose if the recipient already has a fix, then it could perhaps survive with less than 3 satellites by making some assumptions, but I imagine this will result in lower quality location information. Were you proposing to assume the location of a 5m sphere the recipient is in? |
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I'd assumed the GPS calendar was somehow broadcasted by the GPS network too, which kind of means that they also share their location.
> Were you proposing to assume the location of a 5m sphere the recipient is in?
I guess the proposal was to change the problem from pinpoint a single point in space, to figure out roughly where I am, in which case being anywhere in a tiny sphere is pretty much the same as being in a point after you account for errors.