Click here to Skip to main content
15,887,214 members

Welcome to the Lounge

   

For discussing anything related to a software developer's life but is not for programming questions. Got a programming question?

The Lounge is rated Safe For Work. If you're about to post something inappropriate for a shared office environment, then don't post it. No ads, no abuse, and no programming questions. Trolling, (political, climate, religious or whatever) will result in your account being removed.

 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
OriginalGriff23-Jun-23 21:30
mveOriginalGriff23-Jun-23 21:30 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen24-Jun-23 6:09
trønderen24-Jun-23 6:09 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
OriginalGriff24-Jun-23 6:26
mveOriginalGriff24-Jun-23 6:26 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen27-Jun-23 1:12
trønderen27-Jun-23 1:12 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
OriginalGriff27-Jun-23 1:46
mveOriginalGriff27-Jun-23 1:46 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen24-Jun-23 6:25
trønderen24-Jun-23 6:25 
AnswerRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Mircea Neacsu24-Jun-23 0:00
Mircea Neacsu24-Jun-23 0:00 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen24-Jun-23 7:37
trønderen24-Jun-23 7:37 
My quote was from TechCrunch[^], reference [187] in English Wikipedia: Galileo (satellite navigation)[^]. The Wikipedia article discusses the issue to some extent.

Apparently, there was such a regulation until November 2018. As the TechCrunch article discusses, enforcement was almost impossible. E.g. although most smartphone manufacturers for the US of A market disabled software support in phones that had hardware support, an app might unlock it. I have seen no indication of any such regulation being in effect as of today.

There are numerous examples of hardware support for some technology, not made available to the user. This may be due to national regulations (such as for Galileo pre 2018), or pure marketing: The manufacturer wants to reserve some functions for premium products, or to force the customer to buy a new product at a later time.

One example: When DAB digital radio was introduced in Europe, there were only a small handful of DAB chip makers. All of them made chips supporting DRM, the digital radio standard for "the AM bands", now a major broadcasting technology in India. Lots of DAB radios used those DRM capable chips - but provided no button or menu option to select this band! If all (/most) DAB receivers had given access to DRM, DRM might have been a reality in Europe as well, after a series of successful trial transmissions. Radio manufacturers hoped for a DRM success, so that they a few years later could sell new receivers to the the market (maybe they would use the same chips, but omit a selector for DAB!). With no consumer receivers on the market, no broadcaster went for DRM.

I wouldn't at all be surprised if Galileo was used for market manipulation in a similar way, in principle being available, but only to a selected group willing to pay a premium price for it.

What I really is concerned about is not smartphones in particular, but how vulnerable the US society is to a hypothetical complete GPS failure, e.g. as a result of a sabotage/terror action. One part is the civil society. Another question: Has USAF fallen down to the level of including a foreign GNSS system as a backup, in case their own GPS becomes unusable? This is all speculation, so to try to find some more tangible information, I asked about smartphones.

Here Norway/Europe, we are close to a state where we would hardly notice if every single GPS satellite was shot down tonight. (My late winter/spring 2016 smartphone is like a museum artifact that doesn't count for this purpose.) I sort of suspect that the US of A society might be harder hit. I ask because I am not sure about that.
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Mircea Neacsu24-Jun-23 8:45
Mircea Neacsu24-Jun-23 8:45 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Richard Andrew x6425-Jun-23 11:29
professionalRichard Andrew x6425-Jun-23 11:29 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Mircea Neacsu25-Jun-23 11:37
Mircea Neacsu25-Jun-23 11:37 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Jörgen Andersson25-Jun-23 22:10
professionalJörgen Andersson25-Jun-23 22:10 
AnswerRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
PIEBALDconsult24-Jun-23 8:29
mvePIEBALDconsult24-Jun-23 8:29 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
theoldfool24-Jun-23 15:47
professionaltheoldfool24-Jun-23 15:47 
AnswerRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Single Step Debugger26-Jun-23 2:46
Single Step Debugger26-Jun-23 2:46 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen27-Jun-23 0:43
trønderen27-Jun-23 0:43 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Single Step Debugger27-Jun-23 2:42
Single Step Debugger27-Jun-23 2:42 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen27-Jun-23 4:23
trønderen27-Jun-23 4:23 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Single Step Debugger27-Jun-23 6:36
Single Step Debugger27-Jun-23 6:36 
AnswerRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
Ralf Quint26-Jun-23 7:56
Ralf Quint26-Jun-23 7:56 
AnswerRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
maze326-Jun-23 23:43
professionalmaze326-Jun-23 23:43 
GeneralRe: Galileo satellite positioning in the US? Pin
trønderen27-Jun-23 0:30
trønderen27-Jun-23 0:30 
GeneralA Walk Through Hades Pin
Roger Wright23-Jun-23 18:39
professionalRoger Wright23-Jun-23 18:39 
GeneralRe: A Walk Through Hades Pin
OriginalGriff23-Jun-23 19:07
mveOriginalGriff23-Jun-23 19:07 
GeneralRe: A Walk Through Hades Pin
Roger Wright24-Jun-23 3:37
professionalRoger Wright24-Jun-23 3:37 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.