In case you haven't heard...

President Turns Off GPS Selective Availability
Dateline: 05/02/00

  In plain English, we are unscrambling the GPS signal. It's rare that
someone can press a button and make something you own instantly more
valuable, but that's exactly what's going to happen today. All the people
who bought a GPS receiver for a boat or a car, or their riding lawn mower
or
whatever, to use in business and in recreation, are going to find that
they're suddenly 10 times more accurate as of midnight tonight. - Dr. Neal
Lane, Director of the Office of Science and Technology.
  With SA activated, you really only know if you are on the field or in
the
stands at that football stadium; with SA switched off, you know which yard
marker you are standing on. - Comparison of Positions With and Without
Selective Availability.


If you take a look at your handheld or automobile Global Positioning
System
(GPS) unit today, you'll notice that it's much, much more accurate now
than
it was on May 1. The reason? U.S. President Bill Clinton ordered Selective
Availability (SA) turned off at midnight May 1 (Coordinated Universal
Time).
Now, civilian GPS users around the world will no longer experience the up
to
100 meter (approximate 300 feet) random errors that SA added to keep GPS a
more powerful tool for the military. Today, GPS units are accurate to
within
20 meters (approximately 60 feet); although in good conditions, units
should
display an error of less than 10 meters.
In 1998, President Clinton directed that SA should be turned off between
2000 and 2006. Fortunately, it happened early in that range of years. The
U.S. military was able to quickly develop and test their ability to
selectively block accurate GPS transmissions in areas of conflict or where
U.S. security was at risk. When the U.S. Air Force Space Command turned
off
SA last night, GPS became incredibly accurate for the entire planet.

GPS operates through the use of 24 satellites, paid for by the U.S.
government but free for the world to use, that are orbiting the earth. The
satellites broadcast extremely accurate time signals (accurate to within
40
billionths of a second) using their onboard atomic clocks. GPS units on
the
earth triangulate the time signals from the satellites to provide
location,
velocity, and elevation of the units themselves. When Selective
Availability
was on, GPS units received a scrambled signal from the satellites, which
hindered private and commercial use of GPS.

The current worldwide GPS industry is estimated to be approximately U.S.
$8
billion and there are about four million GPS users worldwide. Now, experts
expect that the demand and use of GPS will skyrocket, leading to $16
billion
industry within three years. Use of GPS in a variety of areas has
automatically been vastly improved. For example, automobile GPS units and
mapping software under SA would often place the car one to two blocks from
its actual location; today, GPS can tell which side of the freeway a car
is
on.

GPS is actually now more accurate than the accuracy standard for United
States Geological Survey topographic maps so outdoor enthusiasts should
truly appreciate the new accuracy of their GPS units. Soon, the U.S.
Federal
Communications Commission will require location determination technology
in
cellular phones for use in emergencies as part of their enhanced 911
service. With a much more accurate GPS system, GPS might be the technology
of choice and emergency responders will be able to respond more quickly
and
accurately to these signals from cellular phones.

Future plans for improving the accuracy of GPS include the launching of
eighteen additional satellites that are awaiting launch or are currently
in
production. Additionally, two new signals will be broadcast from the
satellites by 2005 to help bypass any distortion from the ionosphere.

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