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What is GPS? Global
Positioning System (GPS) devices can be found everywhere - they're used in cars,
boats, airplanes, and even in cellular phones. Handheld GPS receivers are
carried by hikers, surveyors, map makers, and others who need to know where they
are.
• The Global Positioning System is composed of twenty-four
satellites 20,200 km (12,500 miles or 10,900 nautical miles) above the earth.
The satellites are spaced in orbit so that at any time a minimum of six
satellites will be in view to users anywhere in the world. The satellites
continuously broadcast position and time data to users throughout the world.
• Using a portable or handheld receiver unit that receives
data from the closest satellites, the GPS unit triangulates the data to
determine the unit's exact location (typically in latitude and longitude),
elevation, speed, and time. This information is available around-the-clock
anywhere in the world and is not dependent on weather.
• Selective Availability, which made the public GPS less
accurate than the military GPS, was turned off on May 1, 2000. Thus, the GPS
unit you can buy over the counter at many retailers is as accurate as those used
by the military today.
• Many over-the-counter handheld GPS units contain base maps
of a region of the earth but most can be hooked up to a computer to download
additional data for specific locales.
• GPS was developed in the 1970s by the U.S. Department of
Defense so that military units can always know their exact location and the
location of other units. The Global Positioning System (GPS) helped the United
States win the war in the Persian Gulf in 1991. During Operation Desert Storm,
military vehicles relied on the system to navigate across the barren desert at
night.
• GPS is free to the world, developed and paid for by the
United State Department of Defense. Nonetheless, the U.S. military maintains the
capability to prevent enemy use of GPS.
• In 1997, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Federico Peña
stated, "Most people don't know what GPS is. Five years from now, Americans
won't know how we lived without it." Today, GPS in included as part of
in-vehicle navigation systems and cellular phones. It's taken a few more than
five years but I know the rate of GPS use will continue to explode.
Facts sited from About.com - Matt Rosenberg, Guide to
Geography since 1997
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