The Mobile Computing Geekosphere

Friday, October 27, 2006

New CORS Stations in OH, TN

SIXTEEN NEW STATIONS HAVE BEEN ADDED TO THE NATIONAL CORS NETWORK


Coordinate information, logfiles, and RINEX2 data is now available for the
following National CORS sites.


MIBX (Baraga, MI)
MICV (Centerville, MI)
MISI (St. Ignace, MI)
MISJ (Saint Johns, MI)
MIWC (White Cloud, MI)
OHAL (Lima, OH)
OHAS (Ashtabula, OH)
OHCO (Coshocton, OH)
OHDR (Greenville, OH)
OHHI (Hillsboro, OH)
OHLI (Jacksontown, OH)
OHMN (Canfield, OH)
OHPO (Rootstown, OH)
OHRO (Chillicothe, OH)
OHUN (Marysville, OH)
TND1 (Dandridge, TN)

New GPS Generation Coming On-line

SECOND MODERNIZED GPS SATELLITE BUILT BY LOCKHEED MARTIN BEGINS SERVICE FOR USERS WORLDWIDE
Team Poised for Next Launch Scheduled for Mid-November
DENVER, Colo., October 25, 2006 -- The second modernized Global Positioning System Block IIR (GPS IIR-M) satellite, designed and built by Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] has been declared fully operational for military and civilian navigation users around the globe. This milestone is the culmination of a successful on-orbit deployment and check- out phase that allowed the spacecraft to begin service ahead of the planned schedule.


Launched last month from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. the GPS Block IIR-15(M) is the second in a series of eight Block IIR-M spacecraft that Lockheed Martin Navigation Systems is developing for its customer, the Global Positioning Systems Wing, Space and Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles Air Force Base, Calif. The third GPS Block IIR-M satellite is scheduled for liftoff on Nov. 14 from Cape Canaveral.

Each IIR-M spacecraft includes a modernized antenna panel that provides increased signal power to receivers on the ground, two new military signals for improved accuracy, enhanced encryption and anti-jamming capabilities for the military, and a second civil signal that will provide users with an open access signal on a different frequency.

"This milestone is the result of our team's focus on achieving mission success for our customer," said Don DeGryse, Lockheed Martin's vice president of Navigation Systems.
"We understand how vitally important GPS is to both military and civilian users around the world and we look forward to providing significantly improved navigation capabilities with the modernized IIR-M program."

The Global Positioning System enables properly equipped users to determine precise time and velocity and worldwide latitude, longitude and altitude to within a few meters. The satellite was declared operational on Oct. 12 by Air Force Space Command's 2nd Space Operations Squadron (2 SOPS) at Schriever Air Force Base, Colo., which manages and operates the GPS constellation for both civil and military users.

The spacecraft are the most technologically advanced GPS satellites ever developed and are designed to provide significantly improved navigation performance for U.S. military and civilian users worldwide. The satellite joins the first modernized IIR satellite, GPS IIR-14(M), successfully launched and declared operational last year and 12 other operational Block IIR satellites currently on-orbit within the overall 29-spacecraft constellation.

The modernized navigation payloads are being built by ITT in Clifton, N.J. The satellite upgrades along with final assembly, integration and test is being performed at Lockheed Martin facilities in Valley Forge, Pa.


Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin employs about 140,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. The corporation reported 2005 sales of $37.2 billion.

Contact:


NOTE TO EDITORS: Low- and high-resolution JPEG image files of a GPS IIR-M satellite are available at:
http://www.lockheedmartin.com/GPS

Media Contact: Steve Tatum, 408-742-7531; e-mail, Stephen.o.tatum@lmco.com

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

ESRI Conference Abstract Deadline Now 11/7/2006

The deadline to submit an abstract for the ESRI International User Conference (UC), the Education User Conference (EdUC), and the Survey & Engineering GIS Summit has been extended to November 7, 2006.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

RTK Base Station "Decommissioned"

Copyright Deseret News Salt Lake City, Utah Oct. 5, 2006

Detonated package ID'd as GPS survey machine

The bomb squad from the Salt Lake City Police Department detonated a suspicious package Monday night found in the parking lot of the ARUP building at the University of Utah's Research Park.
Tuesday, a man stepped forward to say the device that was blown up was actually a GPS survey machine that had been set up to collect data.
The black box with an antennae sticking out of it was reported to police as a "suspicious package" about 6 p.m. Monday.
Because they were unable to determine exactly what was in the box, a robot blew it up twice to render it useless.
As it turns out, the man who left the box there works for a local engineering firm, said Salt Lake City Police Detective Joe Cyr.
There was no information Tuesday on what kind of data the machine was collecting or how much the device was worth.

Monday, October 16, 2006

ArcPAD BT problem resolution form Rick Koehler

We have a HP iPaq Navigation
Bluetooth GPS receiver that we wanted to use. Although
it would connect to the Tablet, ArcPad couldn't see it,
even with "FindGPS" installed.

The problem was that ArcPad only allows setting the COM
port to 1 - 32, and the auto-assign port function of the
Tablet's Bluetooth set the GPS receiver port to COM 40,
which could not be changed.

I discarded that connection setup, and created a new one,
not selecting auto-assign, but instead manually selecting
a COM of my choice (COM6 since I knew it would be exceptable
to ArcPad, and it was unused).

Worked fine. The rest of the settings:
COM = 6
Baud = 4800
Parity = Odd
Data Bits = 8
Stop Bits = 1

New CORS Stations in OH, AR

THIRTEEN NEW STATIONS HAVE BEEN ADDED TO THE NATIONAL CORS NETWORK


Coordinate information, logfiles, and RINEX2 data is now available for the
following National CORS sites.


ARMH (Mountain Home, AR)
IDBY (Rexburg, ID)
IDIF (Idaho Falls, ID)
MIAL (Alpena, MI)
MSCL (Cleveland, MS)
NDMB (Minot, ND)
NVLM (Las Vegas, NV)
NYDV (Dansville, NY)
NYFD (Dansville, NY)
NYRH (Riverhead, NY)
OHAD (West Union, OH)
OHTU (New Philadelphia, OH)
OHWA (Marietta, OH)

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

New Trimble "XC" Complements XB as Correctable, Inexpensive GPS engines

http://www.trimble.com/pathfinderxc.shtml

http://www.trimble.com/pathfinderxb.shtml

New Trimble "XC" Complements XB as Post-process ready GPS engines

http://www.trimble.com/pathfinderxc.shtml

http://www.trimble.com/pathfinderxb.shtml

Monday, October 02, 2006

New GPS CORS stations in OH, MS

ELEVEN NEW STATIONS HAVE BEEN ADDED TO THE NATIONAL CORS NETWORK


MSCD (Clarksdale, MS)
MSHT (Harriesburg, MS)
MSMR (Meridian, MS)
NCET (Elizabethtown, NC)
NCKN (Kenansville, NC)
NCLU (Lumberton, NC)
NHUN (Durham, NH)
NJOC (Toms River, NJ)
OHAT (Athens, OH)
OHFA (Washington Court House, OH)
OHHA (Findlay, OH)