[gps-talkusers] Re: Excited about my GPS Weekend

  • From: Alex Parks <mehgcap@xxxxxxx>
  • To: gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 18 Jun 2007 21:35:40 -0400

Great to hear that all went so well!
WAAS is a military precision service and, I am pretty sure, seems to be random depending on where you are in relation to military or other authorized equipment that are using it. That is what I have learned from past posts, so if anyone wants to add or to tell me that I could not be more wrong, please do so.

Have a great day,
Alex

----- Original Message -----
From: Joleen <cjferg@xxxxxxxxxxx
To: gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date sent: Mon, 18 Jun 2007 17:35:59 -0700
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Excited about my GPS Weekend

Hi All,

I wanted to share my GPS weekend with all of you.  As a new user,
just about a week's experience, I set off on a train trip with a
friend, also blind.  We listened to my Sendero as it kept us
updated on the train speed, the points of interest, the towns we
passed and on and on.  How fun it was to know where we were along
our trip.

When we reached the end of the run, we took a taxi to our
destination and I used the GPS with a route open between the
train station and the destination.  I told the driver that I was
practicing and he was impressed that I was able to tell him where
I thought we should turn.  I told him that I knew he knew his
way, but I was learning the new system.

I was able to record some user POI's for the college campus where
I spent the weekend.  When it was time to go, one participant
wanted directions to the bus stop.  Knowing that I had lots of
bus information available, I found stops and she confirmed the
one she needed.  I also learned that the numbers that had seemed
irrevelent before turned out to be the bus numbers.  Never mind
that my search from our known location was only 313 feet, I found
what I thought should be the bus stop and, low and behold, there
sat the bus.  She would have missed it if she had waited where
others told her it should be.  It was already parked and the
driver soon came out from the building and boarded the bus.  He
would not have seen her waiting about 300 feet behind him.  I was
thrilled with my GPS.

Later, after the return train trip, when my husband met and drove
us home, I set a route to my friend's house.  The Sendero told us
where to turn.  This was not news for my husband, but it was
certainly fun for me.

I noticed that the WAAS satellite was intermittently available.
I wonder if it is turned on for brief periods or if it is
intermittent because of my GPS changing view of the sky.

This coming weekend, my husband and I will be traveling to new
territory and I am hopeful that I will have enough experience to
help him with directions as we go.  Very excited,

Joleen




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