Russia's GPS going global in 2009 |
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| Trendwatch | ||||
| By Rick C. Hodgin | ||||
| Wednesday, December 26, 2007 16:15 | ||||
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Moscow (Russia) - The last three satellites for a soviet GPS network named GLONASS (Global Navigation Satellite System) were launched without incident yesterday in an improved Proton-M carrier rocket from the Baikonur space center in Kazakhstan. The three satellites complete the system which will be fully operational in 2009, providing world-wide GPS access to GLONASS devices. ![]() 29 relative-position satellites comprise the full global spectrum of GLONASS, a web of global positioning satellites for Russia and GLONASS devices. The program will be fully operational in 2009 and will offer an alternative to GPS users who don't want to rely on American technology, or trickery. The early American GPS system was programmed to generate false data by the receiver. This error was called "Selective Availability" and would result in GPS coordinates that were a few hundred meters off of true coordinates. This slight error was programmed into the satellites so that, without a compensating device capable of correcting for the error (typically a military device), the GPS would produce false data that was not accurate or reliable for a given spot. Selective availability was turned off in 2000, following a 1996 executive order mandating that users receive a non-degraded signal globally. The feature still exists and/ can be re-enabled at any time. Read more ... Russian News & Information Agency.
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Shop Keywords: Russia Soviet space satellite GPS GLONASS global navigation satellite system