Galileo: Europe's Version of GPS Reaches Key Phase
another random user sends this quote from the BBC:
"The third and fourth spacecraft in Europe's satellite navigation system have gone into orbit. The pair were launched on a Russian Soyuz rocket from French Guiana. It is an important milestone for the multi-billion-euro project to create a European version of the U.S. Global Positioning System. With four satellites now in orbit — the first and second spacecraft were launched in 2011 — it becomes possible to test Galileo end-to-end. That is because a minimum of four satellites are required in the sky for a smartphone or vehicle to use their signals to calculate a positional fix."
Are there any consumer gear that can receive Galileo?
There has been far, far too many delays and political fuckery with this. I'm glad to hear it is finally going online.
Satellite navigation is just very important to everything these days (it is the primary nav method for all planes, ships, etc). Having everything rely on GPS, and thus on the budget the US chooses to spend keeping it working, is not a good idea.
This will make things much more reliable since, after an initial hissing match, the US and EU settled down and the systems play nice together and you'll be able to get devices that use both for better accuracy and reliability.
So now there's GPS, GLONASS, and Galileo. Is there going to be cooperation between the different sets of satellites, or will a given device only talk to its own set of satellites? It sucks, for example, when I'm hiking and can't get a GPS fix because I'm in a canyon with a view of only part of the sky. Ditto when all the visible satellites are near the horizon, so the vertical position's accuracy goes to hell, like a couple of weeks ago when I was at 7000' and it told me I was at 14000'. If we had a large number of satellites all in the sky at once, and could use them in any combination, it would be really cool.
Find free books.
Why is Europe spending billions to create their own GPS constellation when the US government already went through the hassle and expense? The GPS system is free and open to use by anyone with a GPS receiver. This strikes me as nothing but a political move, as if to say "We're independent and don't need America to provide anything for us". This is a completely redundant and pointless project by the EU.
Article did not answer: If Europeans don't have GPS yet, how do their existing sat-navs work? And why is this new system only for Europe?
You can use data from 3 satellites to get a fix.
You need a fourth one for an getting altitude.
because a minimum of four satellites are required in the sky for a smartphone or vehicle to use their signals to calculate a positional fix.
Lets be more accurate here. A minimum of 4 satellites are required to be in the sky that can be observed at the same time from the same point on earth. Hopefully these satellites are relatively close together, because otherwise they might never all be visible at the same time. And if they are, since they are in low earth orbit they will pass by relatively quickly and only be briefly useable during each orbit. So, if the orbits are close this may allow a little bit of testing, but the "system" is still too satellite poor to be of any real use for navigation (at least unless you combine the signals with info from other U.S. or Russian satellites).
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
That must be exactly what Russians think about us not wanting to use their fine space launch services indefinitely.
I love how position is often triangulated by connecting points to form something other than a triangle.
You're spot-on.
This is nothing but a propaganda project for Europeans to escape reality. The idea that, after decades of parasitism, EU would become militarily independent from the USA is ridiculous! They can hardly afford this >5-gigaEuro toy, which they're building at a time of a debt crisis, and they'd need 100s of times more to be independent!
So they're getting no benefits, just costs (with debt interest), and this also goes a long way squash the potential of private satellite navigation networks from taking off...
--libman
I wonder, since you can pretty much figure out what city you are in through ordinary radio and wifi beacons, not to mention the help you could get from having a clock and a sun locator, couldn't you really use GPS on the road with just two or three satellites?
When your international reputation is at an all-time low you should expect things like this... Galileo was started way before the US popularity took a nose dive, but the last decade or so are only going to make projects like this *more* likely. To the civilised world, the US is not one of the good guys any more, they're not in "bad guy" territory yet, but they're sure headed there fast.
Basically the world no longer trusts the USA. Simple as that.
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
RU is a very different civilization, with very different geopolitical interests.
No countries in the top quarter of the Economic Freedom Index will ever have a serious conflict amongst themselves, ever.
EU (especially its best countries, like UK, NL, DE, etc) and US are largely on the same page when it comes to economic freedom and free trade, while RU remains an unstable wildcard (even more-so than CN). Some EU countries (FR, IT, etc) are major disappointments, but they're too weak to do anything by themselves. US'ians may justifiably call FR'ies "socialists", but it is a relative judgement - there's still a vast difference between them and RU.
So EU depending on US is a smart choice, but US (or anyone) depending on RU isn't.
--libman
Once Galileo and Beidou are... what happens?
Europe has been without GPS this whole time?! Or am I reading this wrong?
Competition is never redundant, and EU is trying new things with their GPS systems.
The GPS system the US built hasn't been improved for a decade, they haven't blocked spoofing of civilian signals, yet they did for military ones. EU wants to have its own system and they'll expand the features list independently of the USA. This in turn will causes the USA to improve its system. So we'll all get more accurate GPS and less prone to spoofing and interference.
Besides, the USA is run by nutcases, what if one of those nutters decides to defund GPS because God told him to??
http://bostonherald.com/news/us_politics/view/20121006congressman_calls_evolution_lie_from__pit_of_hell
Republican Paul Broun is on the Congressional science committee BTW.
Your comment is short-sighted.
GPS, whether American, Russian, or EU, is first and foremost, a military asset for their respective owners.
The US military can elect to disable or cripple civilian GPS service to all devices other than their own when they deem it necessary to prevent its use by hostile forces. Presumably, GLONASS and the EU systems have the same capability.
History repeatedly shows that international political alliances vary over time. Just because we currently are at relative peace with the EU and Russia, that does not mean it will always be so in the decades to come. I'm not saying we will be in a hostile situation with either in the future, but it's not out of the realm of possibility, either.
The EU is building their own system not because they want to win a "pissing match" with the US or Russia. It would be foolish of them strategically to depend on a GPS that is under someone else's control.
Let's play Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. I'll be Pestilence.
"Nose dive"? That is bullshit from the socialist fantasy bubble! Now here's a summary of objective benchmarks by which a country's reputation can be judged...
USA is #1 in overall National Brand ranking, and #1 in international tourism receipts (in spite of really shooting itself in the foot with all the post-9/11 security theater). USA gets more foreign investment than any other country - more than twice as much as the runnerup. It has the world's most respected universities, and some of the most admired and best managed companies. USA's credit rating went down a bit under Obama, but only a handful of countries rank higher. It ranks higher among preferred immigration destinations than most of Europe (sadly too many survey respondents thought France was a romantic destination, even though most people who visit it are disappointed) (and justly behind small Economic Freedom champs like SG and NZ).
USA's reputation was at an "all-time low" shortly after the Revolution, when it was seen as a pirate nation of rootless migrants and uncivilized wilderness. USA's reputation gradually went up and up during the 19th century, leapt upward as it became a superpower and a powerful anti-colonial influence after WW1, and went further up in the civilized world after WW2 and during the Cold War.
--libman
Jesus, tunnel vision much ?
Look it's nothing to do with GPS vs Galileo. It's to do with the USA, a nuclear power, declaring war left, right and center, & invading other countries basically because it can. No-one likes that; international reputation suffers, trust is lost, and consequences ensue. There's no point in getting pissy about it, you brought it on yourselves.
I don't think Europeans are innately superior. I think people are just people, wherever you are. I'm married to an American woman, whom I love dearly. I do think the USA is fucked though, the society is (IMHO) past the tipping point and heading down, and I can't see myself staying around much longer, as I've said before on this site. At some point, the money just ain't worth it.
Simon
Physicists get Hadrons!
Right, I'm talking about a cop executing a handcuffed helpless suspect [warning. Graphic.] and the lack of respect for the law that "peace officers" show; about the TSA, just the very fact of its existence; about the demagoguery that passes for news and its knock-on effects on society; about the constant military action taken to divert attention from problems; about the massive debt and crippled economy; about the shameful lack of a decent for-all healthcare system; about the proliferation of lethal weapons that for some reason is enshrined in the country's constitution!, and the horrendous murder statistics that it produces; about the general sense inherent in US society that "everything's ok as long as *I'm* ok, screw you guys" ... I could go on... and on.... and on...
And your point is that the "national brand" is good. Well whoopy-do. That's all right then. Phew! Glad *that*'s sorted out! .... Fuck me, it's worse than I thought :(
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
Apparently, there are units available that will track 120 simultaneous channels across all the available systems (this comes from Dave Wells). Not having a unit in my possession (and never having messed with Rinex before), I'll have to take his word for it.
Nobody is stopping you. Please leave. Seriously.
USA has no interest in hurting the global economy - it spends hundreds of billions a year to protect it! It won't turn off GPS just to fuck with its allies in Europe - that is insane! (Inside joke: Uncle Sam is no Ian Fraudman...)
The odds of USA ever turning off GPS due to a military threat are theoretical, and nearly non-existent in practice. I guess that scenario imagines a missile fired by al Qaeda / Iran / North Korea / etc trying to use USA's own satellites to guide it... But, why?! There are lots and lots of options for building a device to detect position - other countries' or private satellites, phase difference from terrestrial cell towers, Earth magnetic field, on-board optical recognition of the terrain, simple internal inertial sensing, target beacons, etc, etc, etc.
Cut-off switches are pointless. We need to transition to a private satellite infrastructure, and both USA and EU need to stop buying so many toys on credit and get their respective fiscal houses in order!
--libman
I would have originally insisted that the GP was correct, because I believed that GPS uses triangulation to determine location. Two intersecting lines would give a 2D position, three intersecting lines would yeild a 3D position, etc.
I clicked through your links and was confused because they have two different reasons for having 4 satellites. The first describes the geometry of four intersecting spheres, the second explains that a fourth satellite is required in order to synchronize timing for accurate distance measuring.
It appears that my assumption that GPS uses triangulation is wrong. It uses trilateration. In triangulation, you use the angle of the lines to determine where they intersect. With trilateration, it is the length of the radius (the distance to the satellite) that is used to calculate position, but the Wikipedia example diagram only requires three spheres.
So I'm still left confused and too tired to sort it all out. Is the fourth satellite a solution to a geometric problem, or a timing/measurement/accuracy problem? If it's a timing problem, why does the fourth satellite need to be the timekeeper?
The EU sees the US as far less trustworthy than you do, and expects to come into conflict with it again - war is unlikely but economic and policitical spats are quite common between the two. In addition to that galilleo lets them have greater accuracy than the US will allow with GPS, and ensures that they don't have a strategic dependency on the US in space.
Strange how myopic and solipsistic the view from the US is sometimes.
Seeing how the USA are the biggest bully on the planet, it is a smart choice for no country to depend on them, even for the EU, itself made of big bullies.
The USA have already misbehaved with their "friends" and there is no reason to believe that they will not do it again. Therefore seeking independence from them is the sane thing to do.
they're not in "bad guy" territory yet
Just speaking for myself here: they most certainly are, although discussing the reasons is out of scope and would take ages.
I get the impression that many people see the USA as a necessary evil. Apparently everybody thinks that there has to be domination by one nation over the others; in this perspective, the USA are the least bad option (alternatives such as China or Russia aren't that exciting).
Hm, what was the last time Congress declared war? Or are we just making shit up now?
I don't think Europeans are innately superior.
Well, a lot of your countrymen do, and they aren't shy about saying it. Try these keywords: "fat, hamburgers, Wal-Mart, fascist". That should help you become familiar with these repugnant attitudes after a bit of searching.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
Yes it is a nose dive. Years back there were rumours about rogue CIA idiots torturing people in Central America - some believed it, but most didn't, and those that did believe mostly didn't think it was standard operating proceedure. Then Baby Bush made it very clear that torture was now fully accepted as a tool and not an atrocity for the first confirmed time in the USA since the American Revolution. That's just one thing, abducting other countries citizens for torture (extreme rendition) is another, so that's a reputation loss that far exceeds Reagan's "bombing starts in 15 minutes" moment or anything Nixon ever did.
It sent a message that the US government could not be trusted to stick to the values it had for the last two centuries, so people wondered if it was going to be as untrustworthy as a place built on "might makes right" such as China or Putin's Russia. Hillary didn't help recently by demanding that agents find out the credit card details of all foreign diplomats in the USA so that they can be easily framed and pressured when needed or whatever she wanted it for.
GPS satellites are already being replaced. So far, three IIF sats have made it into orbit. As usual with US military operations, things happened late and extremely over budget, but things are happening and the chance that the system fails due to not enough operational sats is rather small.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
No. Im a EU citizen and if someone screws me over, it better be someone from the EU.
Not needing the US for that - US can screw their own citizens, thank you very much.
So, while I am not happy with the state of democracy in Brussels, I am all for independence of the US.
Including projects like Galileo. After all the (old) US administration has clearly stated to not care about the "old EU"
any more.
Youre right on: congress did not declare war for a long time, and us has not made any prisoners of war and neither did they torture anybody.
Instead what they did is redefine a lot of words. Legal bull...
"Hm, what was the last time Congress declared war? Or are we just making shit up now?"
Note the "invading countries left, right, and centre" part of his argument too, the US has been doing this basically without a single break since World War II in one way or another, whether it's drone strikes in Pakistan, or the CIA pulling off defacto coups across the world. His point is that America spends far too much time and far too much money meddling with other nations, rather than keeping to itself, and that often leads to greater instability. Case in point, by ousting Saddam, the US removed the only credible counterbalance in the middle east to Iran, and since then Iran has been able to carry out proxy attacks everywhere from Iraq, to Lebanon, from Afghanistan, to the Philippines. They couldn't do this shit when Saddam was around, because Saddam would then be given the international blessing he needed to do the exact same thing in Iran proper. By trying to make things better for the oppressed minorities in Iraq, the US ended up making things worse for everyone in Iraq, and people in many other countris too. So when you stop avoiding the point he was making by focussing on a specific intentionally mis-used part of that, tell me, are you disagreeing that America consistently meddles in the dealings of other nations?
"Well, a lot of your countrymen do"
Well, ignoring the fact Europe is a country, what Europeans thinks is not that they have any kind of innate superiority - that's simply not in the European mindset- Europeans are simply much more rational than that, they recognise their fallibility in part because they have thousands of years of history of it to learn from. Some European nations did have this mindset- the French and British at the height of their empires for example, but as their empires fell they realise it was simply a load of bullshit. Ironically, the reason you most likely claim it is because it IS something that's in the US mindset, there's even a term for it - "American exceptionalism", it's something America hasn't, like Europe, grown out of yet.
What many Europeans do believe however, that you're getting confused with, is the fact that currently, Europe is at least governing itself just a little bit more sanely than the US, and that is what Europeans are happy to point out to you. The terms you mention are nothing more than banter, and if you believe any use of them implies some perceived superiority then it simply demonstrates that you, as an American, haven't got out of this absurd mindset that some nations and their people are simply inherently superior to others. Europeans know full well they have their problems, and this is ironically why the current global economic instabilities focus on the Eurozone's issues - because Europe is the only one really openly admitting they have a big problem and trying to deal with it, in contrast to for example America's insanely massive deficit, see here for example, and sort by worst to best, note how insanely large the US figure is in the negative compared to even the closest member on the list?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_by_current_account_balance
The only reason you believe there's some kind of belief about inherent superiority is because you have that mindset yourself, until you lose that you wont be able to get over this stupid idea that Europeans think they are innately superior. Believing they are doing some things better that lead to for example, lower infant mortality, longer life expectancy, higher levels of personal happiness, etc. does not in any way imply this is because of some innate superiority or belief in such.
Hm, what was the last time Congress declared war? Or are we just making shit up now?
Whether some old men call it war or not is irrelevant. If it involves armor and troops fighting the military of a different country it's a war, and nobody sane thinks otherwise. The first definition given by Wiktionary says:
"War: Organized, large-scale, armed conflict between countries or between national, ethnic, or other sizeable groups, usually involving the engagement of military forces."
If you still don't get it: calling war something else doesn't change reality. If I called my gun a camera, it still wouldn't shoot pictures.
Just quoting someone else without knowing what you are talking about doesn't make you right. Come up with scientific reasoning using trigonometry and publicly available specs for GPS to prove your point, or keep your mouth shut, please.
Triangulation (without altitude) works with three points if you have one unknown transmitter and three known receivers. This is the other way around. Using just two receivers would give you two possible locations, without altitude. The other way around, in a real life situation with moving sats and a round planet, you need more data sources to get anything near to accurate results. It may very well be that given enough time, you can get somewhat accurate lat/long information from just 3 transmitters, but you'll be suffering to get altitude positioning correct if they are all in more or less the same horizontal plane. The trajectories of GPS sats are such, that you will in practice need more than three sats to accurately determine your position and still have global coverage with less than 30 sats orbiting the planet.
So in theory, using one location and stationary sats, aided with other navigational means, you may be able to get lat/long with just 2 sats and alt with 3, but in practice, you need 4.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
With 3 satellites there are 2 possible solutions to the equations. Since we know we are on earth and not in space one solution can be discarded. So in theory 4 satellites are required in practice not.
GPS has a civilian and military accuracy. In order to get the military accuracy (and bomb the correct buiilding) you have to have the greenlight from US command. Ths US also has a limited ability to reduce the accuracy dramatically in selected zones. Europeans do not want to rely on a system that can be turned off whenever it fits US agenda.
This is not about a EU-US war, this is about the ability to have an independent diplomatic and military stance. I do believe that this is in America's best interest : it allows a diplomatic roleplaying game of good cop/bad cop.
Hm, what was the last time Congress declared war? Or are we just making shit up now?
I don't think Europeans are innately superior.
Well, a lot of your countrymen do, and they aren't shy about saying it. Try these keywords: "fat, hamburgers, Wal-Mart, fascist". That should help you become familiar with these repugnant attitudes after a bit of searching.
I wish the US would have the decency to actually declare war and be honest about their agendas and motives. Right now it seems that you can't be bothered to declare war because war has rules that you have to abide by. Just Doing It instead of playing by the rules is more expedient and currently the US can get away with it. But don't think it won't have consequences.
Talking about repugnant attitudes, I think "might makes right" should have no place in modern civilization, but the vibe from the US is that both the government and a non-trivial proportion of the people (government and people are different entities, just ask anyone from Iran) share this attitude. Who gives a fuck about cheeseburgers, obesity and Wal-Mart when faced with something like this?
Speak for yourself. I don't trust either.
Dilbert RSS feed
what Europeans thinks is not that they have any kind of innate superiority - that's simply not in the European mindset- Europeans are simply much more rational than that
LOL! Read through that and see if you can spot the contradiction.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
they're not in "bad guy" territory yet
They are in "bad guy" territory at the latest with Guantanamo. This incarceration and torture of people without enough evidence to start a trial is way past the limits of civilisation. If they are shocked about it like about Abu Greibh and abolish it immediately but no they continue it shameless for years after years.
Guantanamo is only the most visible tip of the iceberg. The whole war in Iraq was against international law and without any evidence of this "weapons of mass destruction" (the whole non-US world was laughing about the presentation of the pretended "facts"). Abduction and torture of foreign citizens also is not a attribute of "good guy".
I could ramble about so many "bad guy" things the USA have done lately, my keyboard would drown in the froth forming at my mouth. I'm not sure the EU would be acting better in the same position, but the USA are doing it right now in reality before our eyes.
The US is a very young child. American state of the art scientific experiments keep affirming the thesis of continental philosophy that spans 2000+ years. (Which arguably travelled from the East.)
To be fair, we should wait at least a millennium before passing judgment on the American outlook.
(I do think, though, we will see USA become SA within 150 years.)
Defining Statistics and Social Research
Let's go one satellite at a time...
First satellite: You know approximately what time it is because the satellite tells you. You know the position of the satellite, and all of the other satellites, because it tells you in its signal. However, you don't know how far away the satellite is because you don't know the difference in time between when it sent its signal and when you received it. Thus, while one satellite tells you a lot, it does nothing at all to narrow down your position.
Second satellite: Now you know the difference in time between when you heard the two satellites, and thus, you know how much further you are from one of them than you are from the other. So in 3D space, you can use this information to narrow down your position to a point that lies on a sphere. This sphere intersects the earth, forming a circle. Thus, you know a lot of place where you might be, but you still really don't know much.
Third satellite: Now you're able to cut that huge sphere down to a circle. Where this circle intersects the earth, are two points. One point is flying around at high speed, the other relatively stationary. Thus, you kind of know where you are now. ...but only kind of. While the earth is a sphere and we intersected that with a circle to get two points, the places on the earth you might be aren't an infinitely thin mathematical sphere. There's thousands of feet of elevation in which you might exist. ...and worse than that, even if you don't care to know your elevation, the intersection of that circle with the atmosphere isn't straight up and down -- it's at some bizarre and slowly changing angle -- thus you can't ignore it because it isn't just your elevation you don't know, but rather, you're equally uncertain about your latitude and longitude. You know your position to within a mile or so, but if you want to be more accurate than that, you need to either know your elevation or find another satellite.
Fourth satellite: That circle of possible locations is now narrowed down to two points. One is flying randomly through space, the other is near earth. You don't even need to find an intersection with the surface of the earth, unless by some odd chance you're having difficulty figuring out which of those two points is you.
Fifth satellite: No longer any questions, you know exactly which point is you. ...but still, the math is only narrowing you down to about a 10 ft. radius...
Sixth satellite: ...and so it's nice to have some additional data to average together for a slightly more accurate result.
Seventh satellite: ...and it's nice to have some spares for when some become obstructed by trees or tall buildings.
Technically it's not - being better in one thing does not imply inherent superiority. Otherwise, I'd be inherently superior to most Americans in that I'm better at German than they are while they are inherently superior to me in that their American English is better.
For the record, I don't really suvbscribe tothat rationality argument, eithar. At the very least I don't think we are inherently more rational, although we might be effectively more rational. Our advantage is that we're not a superpower. Given that people will usually do things they can get away with (depending on one's moral framework), that top politicians tend to have few scruples and that people like to believe that they aren't doing evil I think it's a reasonably safe assumption that more powerful countries will tend to be more delusional about their status in the world and the possible consequeces of their actions.
If Europe should make it to superpower status (which seems iffy given that we'll have to compete with China, India and possibly the US and Russia) we'll become just as much of an overbearing sociopath as all superpowers in recorded history have been. And boy, will we feel good about ourselves.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Well, ignoring the fact Europe is a country
Europe is a country? As somebody who lives in a European country, I'm quite interested to know when this happened.
GPS is not the primary means of navigation for airlines. It sees a lot of us in General Aviation, but not for scheduled airline service.
But it will be, "soon".
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/ato/service_units/techops/navservices/gnss/
The FAA Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Program Office provides satellite (GPS) based positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) services in the United States to enable performance-based (RNP/RNAV) operations for all phases of flight from en route, terminal, approach, and surface navigation. PNT services are an essential enabler required to overcome the deficiencies in today's air traffic infrastructure and support implementation of the Next Generation Air Transportation (NEXTGEN) system for the United States' National Airspace System (NAS). The FAA's plan to provide PNT services requires implementation of two GPS augmentation systems, the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) and the Ground Based Augmentation System (GBAS). Both systems improve the accuracy, availability, and integrity needed to support continuous all-weather use of GPS as a primary means of navigation and automated dependent surveillance (ADS-B) within the NAS.
"GPS as a primary means of navigation ... Within the NAS".
Oh dear, I think you're having real difficult with the rather simple word "innate".
In this context the word innate would mean that there was a belief that Europeans are born with some kind of natural superiority, the fact that I stated that Europeans tend to be much more rational and not believe in such hogwash doesn't conflict with this, because the rationality spoken about in case is a learnt trait taught into European culture through are many lessons from history we can draw on to understand why that belief is stupid. As I say, some Europeans used to have this exact belief - the British, the French, the Germans, but we also eventually learnt that wasn't true.
In contrast, many Americans do actually believe that being American gives you some kind of natural superiority, which simply isn't true. Americans have yet to learn the same lesson that Europeans have learnt in regards to this mindset, because, like the afformentioned European countries at the height of their power, they were blinkered by that power and that resulted in their eventual downfall.
So now that you understand the word 'innate' in this context, perhaps you can go back and re-read the posts in this thread and begin to understand why people are in disagreement with you and why there is no contradiction in what I said, merely a lack of understanding of a rather simple term on your part.
Quick, notify JFK, Romney, Limbaugh, and whoever's hosting "Coast to Coast" these days.
This calls for derp-rage.
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
*facepalm*
I'm sure you knew what I meant. That'll teach me for being pedantic about the GP's post!
We did bring it on ourselves. (Ignoring Hiroshima) We've done everything we could since the Wall went down to prove to the world that we're backsliding. As an American I fully agree with such European sentiments and so do millions of other US citizens. We have been miserably led since 1980. The Bush years were not only hell for all but our most ignorant, they were also well-disguised attacks on our basic civil liberties and economic foundations.We've also managed to ignore climate change, demonize our educators, journalists and teachers. We're heading for hell in a handbasket and most of us act as if everything is going quite well ... fully cooperating in our own decline and whistling in the dark each day.
You're just making stuff up. Everybody knows the rest of the world hates us because of our freedom!
You just have no idea how many idiots I encounter who actually believe that the US never does anything wrong....and $diety forbid that we actually admit it when we do, because then some idiot (Romney, for instance) will run around saying he won't ever "apologize for America".
You perfectly made my point with your reply, and I don't think you were even trying. Without attacking a single merit of what I said, all you did was reflect 'anti-US sentiment' and failed to site a single economic reason to spend the billions of dollars Galileo will cost.
My point stands, this is nothing more than a redundant multi-billion dollar pissing contest with no real economic benefit.
I wish Europe would rather develop its owns operating system (Linux, hint hint). than its own GPS. Simply because GPS seems fine to me.
As opposed to its US counterpart, the Galileo network is slated to only work when it feels like it, so generally not in the summer months. Additionally, some of the other satellites are going to have to constantly bail the others out or risk them taking out the whole network.
Ask yourself: Why do European countries give in to US military requests so much, despite citizen disapproval? Quid pro quo. Military technology, bases, the big missile defense shield program flow to Europe. It pays for those things with military support for arbitrary wars that keep the money flowing into the military and defense industry on both sides of the pond.
Don't think for one second that there is a good guy to be found on either side.
Problem is...the US hasn't learned it isn't in their best interests to push their agenda or go to war all the time. Given what is more likely, the US would definitely attack Europe if it had an economic incentive to do so. Russia would do the same for pride despite itself.
What could the EU do? Just sit in committees for the over site of the Lunch scheduling office and declare it's ideas unhealthy while Rome burns around them.
Yet the US is the only superpower. I think that says more about human nature than it does international politics.
Can anyone help me? I can't figure out how to write a post without repeating "Simon." at the bottom of every single one, like some kind of narcissist. Yeah so I'm stupid, just help me out, would ya?
Simon.
In agriculture GPS guidance systems already have the capability of talking to Galileo when it is finished, and Glonass right now.
No. Wrong. Please never say that again.
These satnav devices are receivers. Only. No data is ever sent from them to the satellites. Instead, the chips triangulate position based on clock data received through transmissions from these satellites in known orbits.
I have interacted with more than one person who required over 10 minutes to be convinced that these systems could work without the device "talking to" the satellites. I just would like to do whatever I can to avoid the spread of this misinformation, if only to avoid having more of these wearying discussions with ignorant people.
If we're talking about US vs europeans, pls explain to me why someone should trust those that in the last century had still colonies all over the world and started two global wars, the last one with a genocide. Sigh, I'm from Europe, but it makes me sick when someone suggests that Europe might have a moral superiority over the US.
I really suspected it wasn't a sphere, but my brain power wasn't able to imagine what the correct shape would be, so I'm happy to finally know.
Still, absent that mistake, the explanation is essentially correct. Second satellite makes the set of possible locations a 2D surface, third satellite reduces it to a line of some sort, fourth cuts that down to two possible points, etc. So three satellites still isn't sufficient for a 3D fix.
I give you relevant facts, and you reply with an incoherent emotional rant...
That YouTube video, though anecdotal in the grand scheme of things, only confirms my broader philosophy - governments suck. In a more capitalist society there could be no "victimless crime" nonsense like the "war on drugs", and Private Defense Agencies would actually be accountable for their mistakes. You, on the other hand, want to give the government unlimited power, including total control over your health care and a total monopoly on weapons of every kind! Read Solzhenitsyn, if not USA's gun rights advocates - an armed populace raises the cost of tyranny. The most peaceful country in Europe, Switzerland, understands this too.
As for USA's high murder statistics (which, BTW, are lower than much of Eastern Europe) - you need to adjust them by a number of factors, most importantly fertility rates. Most murders are committed by young people, of which USA has more than Europe or East Asia. USA also has a greater percentage of immigrants than almost any country Europe, particularly those that come from more violent countries. Most of the crime is caused by government prohibitionism, as well as the ineffectiveness of the law enforcement monopoly. Comparing applies to applies, US states that have similar demographics as Europe (ex. New Hampshire) are actually safer than Europe! You should also look at other crime statistics, like robberies. And, from a broad historical perspective, USA has seen far less large-scale violence than European countries did - USA's most costly wars have been to save Europe from itself!
Regarding USA's "shameful lack of a decent for-all healthcare system"... I remember the "for-all systems" back in the Soviet Union - they weren't pretty. What is most shameful is that USA's health system (pre-ObamaCare) is half-socialist, which manifests bad attributes of both worlds - the government pays for the majority of it, innovation is stifled, price competition is stifled, and costs are way too high. There's no reason why health care should be so expensive, with hospitals and doctors charging stratospheric prices that the customer never sees and health insurance companies are mandated to pay. What USA needs is free market competition in health products and services, which would immediately result in a technological revolution similar to the computer revolution of the 1990s, with prices falling far lower and benefits growing far higher than most people can currently imagine! About 90% of health care is information, and most medical tests can be done at home or in cheap competing clinics. The poor should ideally settle for private charity, but a voucher system would be a reasonable temporary political compromise.
--libman
Sure. Reboot your computer, take a .50-caliber pistol, relaunch the Web browser, load the pistol, click the URL bar, put pistol in mouth, type in "now-thats-how-you-feed-a-troll.edu" (no quotes), press ENTER, pull trigger.
--libman
The concept of a "superpower" is largely meaningless in a globalized inter-dependent world, because Uncle Sam (and all other mostly-capitalist countries) are very limited in what they can do militarily. (An interesting analogy is the idea of using Doom or Quake weapons IRL - pressing the trigger on the BFG would send you flying back a hundred feet while plasma ricochet and falling debris turn your body into watery hamburger.) All the major economies are so entangled that they would do almost as much damage firing at themselves as at each-other!
There are only about a dozen countries that USA could possibly go to war against, all of which are at the bottom of the Economic Freedom Index. Those countries are already at war, with their governments brutalizing their "citizens" - a military intervention by the USA would only help put an end to the violence. You can look at South Korea as an example of what happens when USA goes to war and wins, and you can look at North Korea as an example of what happens when it doesn't. Since wars cost money and are unpopular, only the countries with tangible short-term economic potential (ex. oil) or an eminent danger of aggression (ex. potential of giving WMD's to terrorists) are candidates for regime change.
There are no benefits to being a "superpower", only responsibilities and costs - USA spends 4.7% of its GDP on the military, while the world combined averages 2.2%. This means Europeans can mooch off USA's spending, enjoy the benefits of global trade (not to mention R&D, etc), stay safe, afford more welfare statism for themselves, and then have the gall to insult and bite the hand that feeds them...
--libman
Europe's biggest claim to Linux is Linus Torvalds being a Finn, but he has moved to California in ~1996, and is now a US citizen. (I too am a naturalized US citizen, having been born in the USSR.)
The history of UNIX is rooted in AT&T research, and later corporate America, and simultaneously Berkeley, MIT (and I don't just mean that silly GNU hippie), and many other US universities. Top contributors to Linux are American corps! Many contributions also came from English-speaking countries that are culturally closer to US than the US-bashing continental Europeans. Open source projects get contributions from all over the world, but you'll find very few important FLOSS projects where European contributors dominate over North American ones.
So, if you want to make it a contest...
North America has Microsoft (still 83% of Web clients), oldest and most popular UNIXen (BSD's, MacOS X, Oracle's sunset, RedHat, etc), Commodore / AmigaOS, EMC / VMware, BeOS / Haiku, Plan9 from New Jersey, old IBM / HP / DR / Honeywell / Apple / Novell OS'es, etc, etc, etc.
Europe has Nokia, Amoeba, a few obscure UNIX-like systems (MINIX, my dear native U-NAS (Soviet BSD fork), etc), and of course Atari. (Did SAP or Ericsson ever make any noteworthy OS'es? Did I miss anything?)
The contrast is obvious.
The point is that USA (and other national champions of Economic Freedom, most of which speak English and are merely small satellites [topic.ref.pun] orbiting around USA) presently constitute the world's leading civilization, and the bulk of Europe is secondary in its aggregate merit, benefiting from diffusional ("trickle down") benefits of USA's achievements. There's nothing wrong with that, and USA has always acted benevolently toward the Europeans, but when you engage in America-bashing you are in contradiction of solid inescapable facts.
--libman
For smaller countries, not feeling dominated is not an option. Being pushed around by a hegemonic power far away may be preferable to being pushed around by bigger neighbours. This is apparent in the incoherence of EU "foreign policy" towards the US: whenever Germany and France move too fast for the others, others break ranks to have separate negotiations with the US. The dynamic is not fundamentally different from playing your big neighbours against each other, or forming coalitions, to maintain the local balance of power.
esa have no real failproof record. i'm paranoid again i know but if they can't deliver a payload into orbit without external help where did the tek for a global tracking system come from ????
Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
As opposed to those that committed genocide within their own country and instituted slavery for another ethnic population, you mean ?
I'm not one to visit the sins of the father unto the Nth generation, I think actions are the responsibility of the individual/entity that does them. I don't think any other approach makes sense, so I don't blame the current US citizens for what happened in historical times. I also don't blame current Europeans for actions that happened donkey's years ago...
IMHO, if you do, you either have a chip on your shoulder, or you're nuts.
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
Unfortunately the US chose to have no ground based back up to GPS and I assume the EU will go the same way. One major Coronal Mass Ejection (CME), severe meteor storm, or even EMP and we'll all be without navigation signals. We (in the US) had an ideal back up in the new Enhanced, or E-Loran, but that was scrapped and the equipment (including antennas) immediately destroyed. Non Directional Beacons (NDBs) which are very simple, but require a little skill and practice to use are already being phased out and the VORs are also scheduled to be decomissioned. Many airports, at least through class C require GPS for instrument approaches. If we are going to get hit by a major CME I hope it's before they get all the ground based backups decommissioned. One other point: Beyond a certain point additional satellites gain you little in accuracy. My question is why do people with consumer devices want more accuracy? With the current number of US satellites it can tell you where you are on a taxiway within 15 to 20 feet and that is without the additional, high accuracy ground based augmentation transmitters. GPS is not infallible. It has failed for a few hours a couple of times. It is also not immune to interference, or even strong signals a few channels off to the side, or even farther. Fly or drive in the SW US and you'll see what I mean. It is not a good system for putting all your eggs in one basket.
I posted this yesterday, but somehow posted it in reply to my own message by mistake.
Yes it is a nose dive.
You are parroting communist "ripe for a revolution" propaganda without the slightest comprehension of what you're saying. Here's the objective reality: all governments always use violence to gain and retain power, it's just a matter of degree. If you were to look at the big picture and graph the amount of violence, you'd see that it has been on a gradual decline.
USA has committed much violence in conquering land from the Natives (who were even more violent amongst themselves - violence in pre-capitalist cultures is unavoidable), crushing dozens of rebellions and secessionist movements you've probably never heard of (especially if you went to "public school"), and of course slavery and the Civil War (fought primarily not to end slavery but to resubjugate the South). The bloodiness of European history (including their other colonies) is orders of magnitude greater. But, as governments stabilize, their motivation for overt violence decreases, as does their ability to do things covertly - why kill when you can tax?
Years back there were rumours about rogue CIA idiots torturing people in Central America - some believed it, but most didn't, and those that did believe mostly didn't think it was standard operating proceedure.
Communists took over much of Eurasia and killed tens of millions of people through direct action, while billions of people's lives were diminished indirectly, resulting in less freedom, lower quality of life, lower life expectancy, and lower attainment. (My (grand)parents were among their victims, both directly and indirectly.) The commies want a World Revolution, and have done much to sponsor violent Communist uprisings in every part of the world, including Latin America.
USA was the only significant power that could stand in their way, propping up less tyrannical governments that offer much more respect for individual Rights. Just compare a country where anti-Communist interventionism was a success (ex. Chile - soon to be one of the world's wealthiest nations) to one where it was a total failure (ex. Cuba)... Yes, some Communists were killed in the process - revolutions aren't fought with water-guns you know. Killing an active Communist is a legitimate act of self-defense!
And, yes, there were a few innocent victims as well (perhaps 1/10,000th the number of innocent victims created by communists). If you don't want to become an "innocent victim" for either side, don't stand within a smartbomb blast radius of a commie!
Then Baby Bush made it very clear that torture was now fully accepted as a tool and not an atrocity for the first confirmed time in the USA since the American Revolution.
All governments torture when they have something to gain from it. Not all governments do it as infrequently and as by-the-book as USA does. Of course sometimes it doesn't go by the book, but still - you have to look at degrees. Base your arguments on numbers and logic, not feelings and polemic slogans. Iraq after Saddam's fall is a less torture-prone place than it was before, and in another decade the improvement will be even more significant.
That's just one thing, abducting other countries citizens for torture (extreme rendition) is another, so that's a reputation loss that far exceeds Reagan's "bombing starts in 15 minutes" moment or anything Nixon ever did.
It seems that in your version of history only recent Republican presidents engage in violence, the more recent the more evil. Many US presidents are responsible for violence on a massive scale, from Washington to Bloody Abe to Wilson to FDR and
As opposed to those that committed genocide within their own country
The word "genocide" means the desire to kill all people based on an ethnic criteria. Actual genocides are very rare in history (there's more profit in slavery, taxation, or ransomed expulsion), and USA has never committed "genocide" of any sort!
There have been wars with some Native tribes, but there have always been tribes that weren't at war, and Native individuals who have assimilated and lived among the general USA'ian population. (If only my Jewish ancestors had historically been treated as well in Europe as the Natives had been under Uncle Sam...)
Don't get your history from monochrome Hollywood, or from left-wing race-baiting propaganda - read credible sources! You'll find many examples of European settlers and the natives getting along just fine, trading for mutual benefit, or the settlers making alliances in wars where Native tribes were fighting among themselves, etc.
Some tribes had no concept of Property Rights, and they at times broke agreements and/or raided peaceful settlers. Some settlers took revenge without distinguishing one tribe from another... Peace is a very precious thing between cultures that are so different... Cultural integration has always been difficult, in every part of the world...
and instituted slavery for another ethnic population, you mean ?
USA didn't "institute" slavery - slavery has existed in every part of the world prior to the Industrial Revolution. Europeans enslaved Europeans for thousands of years, with Feudalistic institutions lasting well into the 19th century. Read up on the Arab slave trade -- which once also enslaved Europeans, and lasted from antiquity and well into the 20th century -- and compare their accumulated enslavement count to the post-revolution United States. There has been massive amounts of slavery internally in Africa, South Asia, East Asia, and elsewhere since the dawn of time!
You mean to say that USA has perpetuated slavery, in some states, from its inception in 1776 to 1865. (With slavery being just a small fraction of the economy of those states that allowed it, and those Slave States in total only representing about a fifth of USA's GDP by 1860.) This isn't much different from the time when slavery was phased out in other Western nations, and slaves further south of the United States (Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil, etc) had to wait decades longer to be freed...
I also don't blame current Europeans for actions that happened donkey's years ago... [...]
The difference is that the overwhelming majority of Americans have learned from their biggest historical mistakes, while, as the recent election in France demonstrates, many Europeans have not. Germany violates Speech Rights pertaining to discussion of National-Socialism, and, equally as sadly, many today if they could would defend it...
--libman
Top comments on this one are by a bunch of naive tossers who failed to comment on the sole reason this system is going up in the air: Control of the system in case of war.