2008/7/14 thomasg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > This all are no arguments. > With my TomTom device I can do a full reset so that no GPS data is available > at all (also no time and so on) and still get a fix in < 3 minutes at 100 > km/h.
Ok, I don't claim my guess would be truth, I'm just guessing. Is it so that when the fix has been gotten, it stays and works properly even with (supposedly) very poor antenna like Neo's, even in places where zero signal was seemingly being got before the fix was had (elsewhere)? The main interesting thing for me was that the map updated completely fine inside a car and between tall buildings, after the fix was finally gotten. Is this really possible if the problem is broken / very poor antenna that cannot receive almost any signals? If such finely working GPS function is not possible in the case antenna is so poor that these fixes are so hard to get as it seems most of the time, then it would more likely be this is the case of this (random) internal/external switch problem instead of broken antenna otherwise. Or if not that, then some other possibly software based problem related to getting the fixes - again something in which I don't know enough about GPS since I don't know if the software is supposed to do something else besides telling the GPS chip to "get the fix, please". -Timo _______________________________________________ Openmoko community mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community

