[aprssig] The best resolution of position from APRS
J. Lance Cotton
joe at lightningflash.net
Wed Jan 4 12:07:52 EST 2006
Robert Bruninga wrote:
> 1) XASTIR insists on sending the depricated obsolete
> compressed object /item format that has been known
> to not work on the thousands of Kenwoods for many
> years which reprsents 85% of our mobile APRS community
> that sees objects in their mobiles. This undermines the
> communications on-air integrity of APRS when mobiles
> cannot see these objects.
No, Xastir insists on letting the users decide whether to do this or not. It
is a user preference to send object/items in compressed format, and I
believe the default is to avoid it. So a user has to explicitly turn this on.
> 2) Yet there are 3 ways XASTIR could UPGRADE and
> transmit objects to 1 foot resolution if they wanted
> to instead of just bashing kenwoods.
>
> a) use KISS mode and send the object as a $GPGGA packet
What does KISS mode have to do with raw NMEA? You can change the MYCALL,
send a raw packet, and change MYCALL back without any need for KISS mode.
Speaking of KISS mode, is the gold standard client aprsDOS going to start
speaking it any time soon?
> c) IMplement the new APRS 1.1 !DAO! format.
I thought !DAO! was APRS 1.2 spec?
> To me, This insistnce on using the obsolete/depricated
> compressed object/item format is what is holding back
> progress, missleading the community, and bashing a
> very useful product that almost half of us depend on for
> our APRS picture.
Sure is funny that declaring that something that was in the APRS spec for a
very long time, but was recently taken out is "holding back progress". I
guess when we look to APRS in the future, we should expect dumps of NMEA
sentences on the air.
Ham radio is about experimentation and advancement of the art of radio
communication. It's also about cooperation between all Hams in the ways they
use the radio frequencies.
If someone is going to use some aspect of APRS that is not supported by some
users' equipment, then that someone should know and understand the
ramifications of use of that feature. But to say that there is no room for
advancement of the principle of radio communication in APRS is kind of silly.
The key is education. Be aware of what you do. If you need to reach the
widest audience possible, which includes Kenwood D700 and D7 users, then you
should know what to avoid. If you are trying to communicate with a group
that you know does not include such limited users, then there is no good
reason to prohibit efficient, accurate communication among those users who
are trying to communicate efficiently and accurately.
To assume that all APRS users are children who know nothing about anything
and will "click every button" just for the sake of it is kind of insulting.
Yes, there are users who choose not to educate themselves in the minutiae of
APRS, but do not make us all cater only to that kind of user!
--
J. Lance Cotton, KJ5O
joe at lightningflash.net
http://kj5o.lightningflash.net
Three Step Plan: 1. Take over the world. 2. Get a lot of cookies. 3. Eat the
cookies.
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