Posts Tagged ‘Global Position Satellite’

How To Use a GPS Receiver

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

According to the standard definition, a GPS receiver is a device that enables navigation through the satellite system, by determining the exact geographical location. The GPS receiver is in fact one of the three elements required by the Global Positioning System, and from the certain point of view, the least significant. The other two vital elements are the satellites and the control and monitoring stations. When the signal is caught by the GPS receiver it is decoded according to three-dimensional factors, altitude, latitude and longitude, also providing information on the time. Anyone can purchase a GPS receiver with the accessories necessary from commercial retailers.

Air navigation, military and maritime operations, disaster relief interventions and emergency services would be paralyzed without the Global Positioning System. Moreover, the GPS device allows for accurate timing for mobile phone operations, power grids control as well as banking operations. The GPS receiver represents the modern way to be accurate, safe and in control of an unlimited number of activities no matter where you are on the globe. If we only consider the efficiency of streets, highways and mass transit when coordinated through GPS receiver systems, the preponderance of this technology worldwide is more than obvious.

With a GPS receiver you can identify the vehicle location, as well as get information for the best way to reach destination. From the receiver, the information is processed through a special software that enables the transmission of the information both graphically, on a monitor and vocally, by voice announcements. Most drivers find it very easy and efficient to just periodically check the monitor, and follow the vocal instructions most of the time. Furthermore, the possibility to track urban traffic though a GPS device increases the time efficiency of a travel.

The GPS receiver technology also finds application in the constant monitoring of roads and highways by the authorities. Information on road damage, service stations, supplies, maintenance and entry or exit ramps is thus both accurate and in real time, allowing for rapid interventions if necessary. The data gathering process adjacent to the Geographic Information System (GIS) allows the formation of large databases of knowledge that is afterwards processed by lots of drivers and transportation companies that have to maximize the efficiency of the rides. There is in fact active support between the GPS and the GIS systems, and their applications are often shared.

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When the author isn’t using his GPS unit, he’s also a fan of best psychics,Seattle HCG Diet, and uses a Saab windscreen windblocker wind deflector.