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2008-04-21
, 19:02
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Posts: 868 |
Thanked: 474 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Capital District, NY, USA
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to brontide For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-04-21
, 20:27
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Posts: 309 |
Thanked: 51 times |
Joined on Apr 2007
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#3
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2008-04-21
, 20:34
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Posts: 123 |
Thanked: 35 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ South Bend, Indiana
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#4
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The Following User Says Thank You to spartanNTX For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-04-22
, 04:37
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Posts: 69 |
Thanked: 10 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#5
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The Following User Says Thank You to oldmancoyote1 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-04-22
, 06:03
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Posts: 149 |
Thanked: 21 times |
Joined on Jun 2007
@ Germany
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#6
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that Nokia is taking this problem
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2008-04-22
, 18:30
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Posts: 716 |
Thanked: 236 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#7
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2008-04-22
, 18:48
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Posts: 868 |
Thanked: 474 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Capital District, NY, USA
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#8
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I really hope that Nokia is taking this problem seriously though. The n810 is an expensive device with GPS as one of its main selling points.
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2008-04-22
, 20:58
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Posts: 123 |
Thanked: 35 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ South Bend, Indiana
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#9
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https://bugs.maemo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2878
Here is the bug... vote for it. It's the already the most voted bug in their database.
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2008-04-22
, 22:57
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Posts: 868 |
Thanked: 474 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Capital District, NY, USA
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#10
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N810 GPS. Typically around 3 minutes compared to 45 seconds on my 5 year old Garmin (also internal antenna, pocket sized device). I have heard of one user totally unable to get a fix in 25 minutes after flying in to Europe.
I complained to Nokia and they suggest buying one of their Bluetooth GPS sets. Not very satisfactory - why should they get better performance without an external antenna ?
Design compromise in the N810 ? Screwup ? The N810 I believe uses the TI GPS5300 chip, marketed to OEMS as having a rapid TTFF and suitable for cellphones with Assisted GPS - AFAIK a rough location from celltowers that enables a faster fix for 911 calls. So I'd think it ought to be possible to
give the chip a previous fix or guessed location over the I2C or serial interface and get a fix in a few seconds. Unless the thing has been wired up unidirectional.
What kind of fix times have other users been getting ?