Quoting Rob Seaman <[email protected]>:

> > There will likely be a report on anything significant at the CGSIC  
> > meeting in Savannah the week after next
> >
> <http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/cgsic/meetings/49thmeeting/49th_CGSIC_Meeting_Agenda.htm
> 
> > >.
> > -- Richard Langley
> 
> 
> It's impressive that civil GPS discussions reach back through so many  
> meetings.  Any idea when the 1st CGSIC meeting was held?

Probably 1986:

Title:  Civil GPS Service Interface Committee (CGSIC)
Author: Heywood O. Shirer
Meeting:        Proceedings of the 1991 National Technical Meeting of the 
Institute of
Navigation
January 22 - 24, 1991 Sheraton San Marcos Hotel Phoenix, AZ
Page(s):        183 - 185
Abstract:       The Civil GPS Service Interface Committee (CGSIC) was 
established to identify
civil GPS user technical information needs in support of the Civil GPS (CGS) 
program.
To effectively identify information needs that relate to the civil use of GPS, 
the
CGSIC interfaces between civil GPS users, the Civil GPS Program Office, and the 
GPS
operators (Department of Defense). The current CGSIC evolved from DOD 
preliminary
planning for a GPS civil user interface function in 1986. As part of the 
effort, an
oversight committee led by the USAF Joint Program Office, with representatives 
from
government, industry and the user community, was established to provide a GPS
Information and Data System for the civil community. This committee became 
known as the
Civil GPS Service Steering Committee and became jointly chaired by DOD and DOT 
after DOT
accepted responsibility for the civil interface in 1987. In 1988 DOT assumed 
the sole
Chairmanship of the CGSSC, but with continued DOD representation on the 
committee. In
early 1991 the Committee's named was changed to the Civil GPS Service Interface
Committee (CGSIC) and its charter revised to more accurately reflect its 
mission of
establishing a forum for technical information exchange. The current CGSIC is 
jointly
chaired by the U.S. Coast Guard and the Research and Special Programs 
Administration
and consists of a general committee and five subcommittees that meet about 
every four
months. Until recently the CGSIC consisted of a general committee open to all 
and an
executive committee restricted to government representatives. The executive 
committee
was dropped in an interest to open up the meetings to all interested groups. 
Membership
in the Committee is intended to represent the widest possible coverage of the 
civil
community. About 100 participants from relevant private, government, and 
industry user
groups, both U.S. and international, attend each meeting.

> The last  
> five such meetings have been annual, but I'm not having much luck  
> clicking through the site for earlier info.  GPS as a project dates  
> back to the mid-70's, right?

Started in 1973.

> With completion in the early 90's?

How do you define "completion"? Reaching FOC (full operational capability)? 
Then, July
17, 1995.
   
> Presumably they met more frequently early on, but that still seems  
> like a lot of meetings (for just the civil sub-community) to squeeze in.

Go to the "Wayback Machine" aka Internet Archives to find more. Use 
www.navcen.uscg.gov
as well as www.navcen.uscg.mil (previous URL). You should be able to get back 
to at
least the 22nd meeting (1993).

-- Richard

> I'm sensitive (really) to the concerns expressed in the title of this  
> talk:
> 
>       Why leap seconds are difficult to get right for an equipment vendor –  
> Sam Stein, Symmetricom, Inc.
> 
> but the system engineering question here is backwards.  First,  
> discover the requirements.  Second, figure out how to meet them.  That  
> said, I hope the presentations will be posted online.
> 
> Rob
> 
> 


===============================================================================
 Richard B. Langley                            E-mail: [email protected]
 Geodetic Research Laboratory                  Web: http://www.unb.ca/GGE/
 Dept. of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering    Phone:    +1 506 453-5142
 University of New Brunswick                   Fax:      +1 506 453-4943
 Fredericton, N.B., Canada  E3B 5A3
     Fredericton?  Where's that?  See: http://www.city.fredericton.nb.ca/
===============================================================================


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