[aprssig] APRS vs. SPOT
Earl Needham earl.kd5xb at gmail.comThu Sep 8 13:41:31 UTC 2011
- Previous message: [aprssig] APRS vs. SPOT
- Next message: [aprssig] APRS vs. SPOT
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
It isn't really Wifi, it's using a sat phone as a data connection -- I'd guess it's more in line with dial-up service. Pretty slow, too. Vy 7 3 Earl On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 7:18 AM, Jim Alles <kb3tbx at gmail.com> wrote: > Iridium just announced Wifi from their satellites, good for an Igate app, > maybe ($$$). > > Axcess Point<http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20102904-266/iridium-brings-wi-fi-to-remote-corners-of-the-world/> > > Jim A. KB3TBX > > On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 5:35 PM, <jjesson at voyager.net> wrote: > >> >> From my ~10 years of designing-in commercial satellite/cellular tracking >> and telematics systems: >> >> SPOT technology originally was designed by Axonn's then CTO and this >> technology is based on simplex protocol talking to Globalstar.... protocol >> is interesting as it chips between Globalstar's native CDMA duplex protocol >> (native to Globalstar). Their form of simplex is also known as send-and-pray >> as not an ARQ protocol with Simplex... but a form of repeat packet >> transmissions improve the odds of correctly receiving packets and this is a >> setting in their engineering configuration tool. >> >> Unfortunately, the fade margin (C/N) is marginal so trees or roof >> structure attenuate the signal to the point of not working and the lack of >> confirmation was a major issue. Not exactly the product or wireless >> satellite protocol I would use if my life was riding on packet reception but >> ok for a lightweight tracking unit. I used these for a quick light fleet >> tracking system. >> >> The new Iridium ASIC provides a true duplex portable unit and offers a >> solid ARQ protocol. I have evaluated their ASIC and it works great and would >> be my life-saving product of choice. Hey, all the ice road truckers use >> Iridium tracking devices and they do bet their life on this satellite >> network! One word of caution - Iridium data costs are not for the typical >> experimenter but if needed commercially a good deal if you need very >> low-latency duplex data transmission. >> >> Incidentally, for the best cost/packet and if you can live with a longer >> latency and larger antennas - such as for heavy equipment and 53' trailer >> fleets - you cannot beat Orbcomm. While both Globalstar and Iridium use >> L-band, Orbcomm uses 136-150 MHz for its operation. Now you understand the >> antenna size issue :-) Orbcomm is getting ready to relaunch this year and >> they will, IMHO, become the leader for global large asset tracking. >> >> 73, Joe Jesson, KC2VGL >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> aprssig mailing list >> aprssig at tapr.org >> https://www.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > aprssig mailing list > aprssig at tapr.org > https://www.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://www.tapr.org/pipermail/aprssig/attachments/20110908/ef5837ea/attachment.htm>
- Previous message: [aprssig] APRS vs. SPOT
- Next message: [aprssig] APRS vs. SPOT
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the aprssig mailing list
