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KJ4VOV wrote:Okay, so how are they doing this with just an app?? An app cannot change the hardware, and without changing the hardware an iPhone or Android is not going to reach a satellite. Physically impossible. It's like trying to signal the ISS with a candle from Times Square on New Years Eve. So how are they actually making this work?

skelco wrote:KJ4VOV wrote:Okay, so how are they doing this with just an app?? An app cannot change the hardware, and without changing the hardware an iPhone or Android is not going to reach a satellite. Physically impossible. It's like trying to signal the ISS with a candle from Times Square on New Years Eve. So how are they actually making this work?
the device does the communicating with the satellite, the phone provides the interface

KJ4VOV wrote:Okay, so how are they doing this with just an app?? An app cannot change the hardware,

doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.

KJ4VOV wrote:doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
(We really need a "bang head on brick wall" smiley)
A receiver does not a transmitter make, no matter how you play with the software. And, even if it did, how were you planning to transmit back to the satellite? Using what power and what antenna? A 3/4 watt signal from a unity gain omni stands as much chance of being picked up by that satellite as that candle I mentioned earlier has of signaling the space station.
Think about it.
AUA wrote:KJ4VOV wrote:doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
(We really need a "bang head on brick wall" smiley)
A receiver does not a transmitter make, no matter how you play with the software. And, even if it did, how were you planning to transmit back to the satellite? Using what power and what antenna? A 3/4 watt signal from a unity gain omni stands as much chance of being picked up by that satellite as that candle I mentioned earlier has of signaling the space station.
Think about it.
Cell phone = phone that communicates via radio waves to tower units ('cells') to send/receive calls and etc
Thus, cell phone = high-tech walkie-talkie type thing
that has secondary functions like GPS tracking through aforementioned cell network (tower pings phone through network and cross-references the ping time with GPS coordinates based on the known location of the tower, which are then plotted on a map and refreshed often enough to be considered in 'real-time').
This 'device' is separate from the phone and acts as the cell tower, letting the phone communicate with the satellite and vice versa in absence of an actual cell tower.
Just to get things straight here. Right?

KJ4VOV wrote:AUA wrote:KJ4VOV wrote:doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
(We really need a "bang head on brick wall" smiley)
A receiver does not a transmitter make, no matter how you play with the software. And, even if it did, how were you planning to transmit back to the satellite? Using what power and what antenna? A 3/4 watt signal from a unity gain omni stands as much chance of being picked up by that satellite as that candle I mentioned earlier has of signaling the space station.
Think about it.
Cell phone = phone that communicates via radio waves to tower units ('cells') to send/receive calls and etc
Thus, cell phone = high-tech walkie-talkie type thing
that has secondary functions like GPS tracking through aforementioned cell network (tower pings phone through network and cross-references the ping time with GPS coordinates based on the known location of the tower, which are then plotted on a map and refreshed often enough to be considered in 'real-time').
This 'device' is separate from the phone and acts as the cell tower, letting the phone communicate with the satellite and vice versa in absence of an actual cell tower.
Just to get things straight here. Right?
Except it's specifically stated that this works in places where you are outside cell phone range. So the question, at least for me, is still, "How?"

ImfromtheGovt wrote:I was able to find this:
http://files.delorme.com/manuals/InReac ... Manual.pdf
Iridium Communication
Using the DeLorme inReach’s Iridium® communication services requires a clear view of the sky. A subscription is
required to operate this device. For more information, go to explore.delorme.com.
••Frequency Spectrum: 1.61GHz–1.63GHz
••Transmission Power (peak): 1.6W
Because it only sends a short-burst data transmission, the bandwidth it needs to use should be a whole lot smaller than the phones that send a voice transmission. Could this be the biggest reason that it only needs to transmit at 1.6(peak) watts and still get a good hit on the satellites?

Burncycle wrote:Aren't PLB's about that same size?

Blacksmith wrote:Burncycle wrote:Aren't PLB's about that same size?
Some are. I'd rather be able to send messages though.
doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
JFlagg wrote:doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
It's been said twice already, but I'm simpler English, cell phones don't use satellites for its gPS tracking features. They use the cell signal to triangulate their position via cell towers. So no cell signal=no GPS
Smokecheck45 wrote:JFlagg wrote:doitnstyle1 wrote:most of the phones will receive satellite information especially for GPS. It is only a matter of programming to change that into a communication device.
It's been said twice already, but I'm simpler English, cell phones don't use satellites for its gPS tracking features. They use the cell signal to triangulate their position via cell towers. So no cell signal=no GPS
That's only partially true. Most phones have a GPS receiver built in them now days. They will use this GPS reciever to relay your position back to the network. It is more accurate and cost effective for the cell company. While some models will still use the traditional timing advance value used to get an aprox distance from the servicing tower, your gps enabled phone will only do it if you are in a gps denied spot, IE inside building or underground.
Your phone will also still receive the gps signal if it is outside a cell coverage area and provide that to you to use with map programs that allow you cashe maps.
These new generations of sat comm devices are getting pretty small and awesome for the commercial market. Now if they could just teem up and get the cell phone makers to install a UHF transmit antenna you could have it all in one device. Hmmm I wonder if there is a external antenna I could get for an iPhone.
Just food for thought.
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