if its agps aka assisted gps. else you should be fine. gps can at times go foobar. if its unable to send sync packets. ermmmmmm trouble :-DBobbyguitarist said:Well GPS is rather dependent on your mobile net connection (3G/wifi). If they suck, your GPS will also suck.
agps derives its concept from gps, but it uses the MBTS (mobile base tower stations) to triangulate position. thereby saving power of directly hooking up with the sattelite, and then it syncs with the gps sattelite.aviral sangal said:gps is no where related to mobile network. GPS provides latlog which can be plotted on world map. So it depends if you have maps offline then no data is needed if you dont then only data is needed to view map. Still GPS will do its job.
In assisted GPS it is. If there is signal fragmentation etc. then locking a signal purely on GPS can take a long time, stretching in minutes. But if its assisted by the network (either MSB or MSA), the lock will almost always be much quicker. Depends on the GPS hardware, some phones have pretty crappy antennas.aviral sangal said:gps is no where related to mobile network. GPS provides latlog which can be plotted on world map. So it depends if you have maps offline then no data is needed if you dont then only data is needed to view map. Still GPS will do its job.
which phone ?mreccentric said:I just drove for 10km and half of my phone battery is drained. Isn't it Awkward. How can anyone use it for long drives?
But can i know how much does using GPS drain battery? Tell me in terms of time or km and also the type of system you use(smartphone/gps system).