If I choose to drive on anything except the freeway, I get told the road is closed, drive it anyway (the road is, after all, not closed) and spend the entire journey with a mapless screen. Great 4G+ reception the whole way. Happens all over NSW. Weird.

  • railsdev@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I know you stated you have a great connection, but signal strength isn’t necessarily the best measure of bandwidth/latency on the network.

    What I’d do to rule out connectivity is download offline maps; it’s a feature now built in to Apple Maps.

    • Thisfox@sopuli.xyzOP
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      1 year ago

      The maps were downloaded, I could read them and did, but moving or parked, the gps insisted I was at best “on a road that is closed”, and at worst tried to find me in the world. Not shown: Same problem with google maps, which also insisted that we weren’t on any road.

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        1 year ago

        That’s really strange. It’s hard to pinpoint the behavior. I almost wonder if it’s the triangulation of cell towers (assisted GPS) at this point. I wonder what would happen if you shut off cellular entirely and just went full GPS (though it takes something like seven minutes to acquire coordinates that way).

        Too many variables to tell.

        • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          I almost wonder if it’s the triangulation of cell towers (assisted GPS) at this point

          No that wouldn’t be it.

          The way GPS works, it takes a 12 minutes for the satellites to send enough data to calculate your approximate location. And note I said “send” enough data. Your device might not receive the data, especially since GPS is designed for very large (basketball sized) antennas mounted up high on top of a military ship surrounded by open seawater with no buildings, trees, car roof, etc for the radio signal to bounce off.

          If your device already knows it’s approximate location, then the satellites are continuously sending data to calculate your precise location. So… with cell tower triangulation (or even better, wifi triangulation) to calculate an approximate location then Assisted GPS can get a lock on your exact location in a few seconds as long as you’re not surrounded by sky scrapers or in a tunnel.

          Even if A-GPS isn’t available, your phone will just assume you are near the location you were last time it calculated your location. As long as you haven’t just hopped off an interstate flight that should work fine too.

        • Thisfox@sopuli.xyzOP
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          1 year ago

          For over 100 km? probably not. This wasn’t a moment in time, it was the entire length, until we got on a more well known highway. At which point we “teleported” there I guess. It was all very weird.