Perry E. Metzger wrote:
Ian Stirling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Based on ballpark estimates from other similar devices, it's probably
around 70mW.

This will really hurt if you keep it on all the time, fortunately, for
most applications, you probably don't need to.
If it works at 2s on, 30s off, as seems likely, this alone drains
1/30th of the battery per day, which isn't bad. Especially as you can
probably back off a little if the phone has been stationary for
several minutes.

Does GPS work well in such a mode? I seem to remember from various
handheld units that it can take quite a while (minutes) to sync up to
a given satellite. (For all I know, you *can* operate this way, I'm
completely clueless on the subject.)

Several cases.
'cold start' - this can take up to around several minutes to get an accurate position. The only time this happens is when the GPS has not downloaded an almanac in 6 weeks (either directly from the satellites (requiring being on for 13 minutes) or from the internet. Or hasn't been on for 30s every 3 or 4 hours since it last did get an almanac.

If the neo has a GPS signal when it's charging, this (several minute locks) will never happen.

To get lock in a couple of seconds requires a pretty good idea of your position, the time, and maybe even being able to tell the hardware chip the estimated relative speeds of the satellites.

Again, if you're turning on and off the GPS every minute or so, and you're not expecting it to cope with continent sized jumps, it's not a big deal - especially if the hardware can be fed estimates, rather than trying to figure it out on its own, which it can, but it may be slower.

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