TidBITS#388/14-Jul-97
=====================

  Feeling lost? Wondering about your position in life? This week we
  explore the technology of the Global Positioning System (GPS),
  used by the military, surveyors, and now consumers. We also
  comment on Gil Amelio's and Ellen Hancock's resignations from
  Apple, report on a new version of HTML, and note the newly
  released Disinfectant 3.7.1. Also, Tonya takes a break from her
  series about Web publishing software, but plans to continue next
  week.

Topics:
    MailBITS/14-Jul-97
    Amelio & Hancock Resign from Apple
    Cougar Slinks into View
    Feeling Lost? An Overview of Global Positioning Systems
    Driving Through Trees: Using GPSy

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-388.html>
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MailBITS/14-Jul-97
------------------

**Disinfectant 3.7.1** -- On the heels of last week's Disinfectant
  3.7, John Norstad has released Disinfectant 3.7.1, which corrects
  an error that could cause a crash while scanning some rare types
  of large resource files. This release does _not_ respond to the
  discovery of a new virus. If you aren't having problems scanning
  files using version 3.7, you probably don't need version 3.7.1.

<ftp://ftp.acns.nwu.edu/pub/disinfectant/disinfectant371.sea.hqx>

  We also heard from a few readers last week who were confused by
  the overloaded FTP server at Northwestern University. The server
  allows twenty simultaneous FTP users, but a new release of
  Disinfectant generates a lot of traffic. If you get an error,
  check your FTP transcript for a message, and try again in a few
  minutes. You can also get Disinfectant from mirror sites like the
  Info-Mac network. [GD]

<ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/vir/disinfectant-371.hqx>


Amelio & Hancock Resign from Apple
----------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  On 09-Jul-97, Apple Computer announced Gilbert Amelio had resigned
  as CEO and chairman of Apple Computer. Amelio replaced Michael
  Spindler as Apple CEO in February of 1996, making his tenure at
  Apple slightly more than 17 months. Executive Vice President of
  Technology Ellen Hancock also announced her resignation, after
  following Amelio to Apple from National Semiconductor about a year
  ago.

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1997/q4/
970709.pr.rel.amelio.html>

  Unlike previous leadership transitions, Apple has not announced a
  new CEO; instead, a search committee has been formed to look for
  candidates from outside Apple. In the meantime, Apple Chief
  Financial Officer Fred Anderson will take on additional
  responsibilities for the Apple's daily operations, and - in a move
  that's generated spirited debate in the Macintosh community -
  Apple co-founder and former NeXT CEO Steve Jobs will take on a
  wider role as a key advisor, including serving on the CEO search
  committee.

  Analysis and speculation regarding Amelio's resignation has been
  rampant in both Macintosh and mainstream media - a good deal of
  which has been inaccurate and even surreal. Amelio is generally
  credited with revising Apple's byzantine organization and
  practices, streamlining operations, improving product quality, and
  clarifying Apple's product line. However, Amelio's strengths are
  as a technologist and manager rather than as a salesperson: his
  resignation was not entirely unanticipated given that Apple is
  attempting to become a more market-focused organization. To that
  end, it seems that Apple requires an articulate market- and
  consumer-focused CEO who can improve Apple's sales and (perhaps
  more importantly) its public perception. Rather than rehash
  examinations and analyses of Amelio's departure, it seems more
  appropriate to let Amelio speak for himself, via a surprisingly
  good interview in the San Jose Mercury News.

<http://www.sjmercury.com/business/apple/giltalkstranscript071097.htm>

  Ellen Hancock's departure follows her central role as Chief
  Technology Officer in Apple's decisions to mothball the Copland
  operating system effort and acquire NeXT. Following the purchase
  of NeXT, however, many of Hancock's responsibilities were
  transferred to NeXT executives. Hancock has stated repeatedly that
  Apple must focus on its own market and customers rather than try
  to convert to a NeXT-like enterprise focus; in a MacWEEK
  interview, Hancock said that she's open to the possibility of
  serving as Apple CEO.

<http://www.zdnet.com/macweek/mw_1127/nw_hancock.html>

  Apple faces many challenges in its core business and in a
  seemingly constant public relations battle; switching CEOs will
  undoubtedly throw more fuel on the fire of Apple criticism in many
  circles. However, Apple clearly must begin to communicate its
  advantages and distinctiveness better, and that will require
  strong, decisive, and public leadership from the top of the
  company.


Cougar Slinks Into View
-----------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Those who regularly visit the Web site of the W3C (World Wide Web
  Consortium) have seen hints about the next version of HTML,
  codenamed Cougar. Last week, the W3C updated and consolidated
  those scattered hints by releasing them in a public draft of HTML
  4.0. This release is important because it codifies a wide array of
  tempting new features. Many of these features will work only in
  new browsers, and Microsoft has already announced plans to support
  them in Internet Explorer 4.0.

<http://www.w3.org/Press/HTML4>

  Forms gain many improvements in HTML 4.0. Publishers can assign
  keyboard shortcuts to form elements and set a tab-order for form
  elements such that users can press Tab to move among them. Forms
  can have generic buttons that publishers program with scripts, and
  forms can utilize a new item that prompts for a file name to be
  uploaded. Publishers can also set elements to be disabled until
  they are appropriate (for example, a Submit button might be
  disabled until a form's mandatory elements were completely filled
  out, a feature that will likely be welcomed by every Web user on
  the planet).

  Other highlights of the draft include a new script element for
  adding client-side scripts; grouped columns and rows in tables
  which make for faster perceived presentation of a table, plus
  sections of a table that can scroll within a fixed header and
  footer; and a new character set, ISO-10646, which is a character-
  by-character equivalent to Unicode 2.0. (Unicode contains 38,885
  characters which come from 25 different scripts, including Arabic,
  Cyrillic, Hebrew, Katakana, Thai, and Tibetan.)

<http://www.unicode.org/>

  I recommend that Web publishers take time to read the actual
  draft, which strikes me as more reader-friendly than much of the
  W3C's previous Web publications.

<http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-html40-970708/contents.html>


Feeling Lost? An Overview of Global Positioning Systems
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Karen Nakamura <karen@gpsy.com>

  Until about five years ago, the Global Positioning System (GPS)
  existed in the realm of high-tech military thrillers. Fictional
  spies would tote hand-held units that precisely displayed their
  locations (or that of their objectives) anywhere on earth - with
  street maps and 3D topographic representations to boot!

  Reality imitates art. In the past ten years, three amazing things
  have happened. First, the U.S. military opened up the Global
  Positioning System for civilian use. Then, the price of receivers
  plummeted from the $1,000-$10,000 range to $100-$200, making them
  widely affordable. And last, advanced computer-controllable units
  have appeared, making integration with personal computers a
  reality. With your Macintosh and about $300 in additional hardware
  and software, you can do things that were science fiction just a
  little while ago.

  In this article, I explain the technology behind the Global
  Positioning System and discuss some receiver units currently
  available. Later in this issue, TidBITS Managing Editor Jeff
  Carlson talks about GPS technology from a user's perspective, and
  reviews GPSy, a GPS communications software package I developed
  for the Macintosh.


**Your Tax Dollars at Work** -- The Global Positioning System is
  truly amazing. Developed by the U.S. military at a cost of several
  billion dollars, GPS is based on 24 orbiting satellites (space-
  heads call them SVs, which is short for "Space Vehicles"). These
  satellites broadcast a precise data signal that allow GPS
  receivers to locate themselves anywhere on the planet. A receiver
  can calculate its position (latitude and longitude), altitude,
  velocity, heading, and precise time of day. Most units also have a
  built-in mapping feature that displays their positions relative to
  waypoints you've pre-programmed into them and a plot trail that
  shows where you've travelled. Advanced models have built-in street
  or waterway maps, plus serial ports for computer connections.

  Military and high-end survey-grade models are accurate to the
  millimeter level (less than one-sixteenth of an inch). However,
  standard over-the-counter civilian models are nominally accurate
  to "only" about 100 meters (roughly a city block). This is due to
  military-induced Selective Availability - a euphemism for
  scrambling the GPS signal just enough to reduce the accuracy to
  sub-military levels. Such scrambling leaves the signal accurate
  enough to find your favorite fishing hole, but prevents you from
  accurately dropping a cruise missile into the government's
  classified Area 51 base in Nevada. One amusing consequence is that
  many car navigation systems that use GPS will put you slightly off
  the road - making it seem as though you're driving into a river or
  building!

  If you need better accuracy than 100 meters, an FM radio receiver
  called a Differential GPS unit (DGPS) used in conjunction with
  your GPS receiver can provide three to ten meter accuracy. The
  U.S. Coast Guard broadcasts DGPS signals for free along the entire
  coastline of the United States, and inland for a small
  subscription cost from various DGPS broadcast companies. The
  inland cost should go away soon because the Federal Aviation
  Administration (FAA) wants to use GPS for all aircraft and plans
  to begin wide-scale broadcasting of free DGPS signals around the
  year 2000. DGPS receivers currently go for about $500, but once
  the FAA plan goes into action GPS units should start to have
  built-in DGPS receivers.


**Behind the Scenes** -- The 24 satellites have a staggered orbit
  designed so four satellites will be visible from any location on
  earth 95 percent of the time. This number four is important, as we
  will see.

  Each satellite broadcasts a repeating message, indicating the
  position and orbital parameters of itself and the other satellites
  (almanac), a bill of health for the satellites (health bit), and
  the precise atomic time. The information is encrypted into a
  signal with strict timing characteristics.

  In order to understand how the GPS system works, we're going to
  jump into a bit of simple algebra. Remember echolocation from high
  school physics? If we send out a pulse of sound or radio waves and
  wait for them to bounce off something and come back, we can
  determine the distance to the object by dividing the time it took
  for the reply by the speed of sound (or light).

    Distance = Speed * Time
    Time = Distance / Speed

  GPS works on much the same principle, except that unlike
  RADAR/SONAR, where the transmitter is also the receiver of the
  signal, GPS satellites only transmit the timing data pulses; GPS
  receiver units only receive.

  So how does the system work? Imagine you and a friend had
  precision-synchronized watches and were standing in a football
  field. If she shouted, "I'm at the far right cornerpost and it's
  now 5:00 and 0.0000 seconds!" and you heard this message at 5:00
  and 0.333 seconds, you could determine how far away she was by the
  timing delay of 0.333 seconds. Estimating the speed of sound at
  around 300 meters per second, you can guess she's about 100 meters
  away from you (or that you're 100 meters away from the far right
  cornerpost).

  Suppose you had another friend at the far left cornerpost and he
  shouted the same message at the same time and you calculated him
  to be 150 meters away. Could you tell where you were? Pretty much.
  You know that you're 100 meters away from your first friend, so
  you could take a diagram of the field and draw a circle with a 100
  meter radius around her known position. Then you could draw a
  circle with a 150 meter radius around your second friend's known
  position. The two circles should intersect at two points - one of
  which should be your real position. With three friends, you'd have
  no ambiguity.

  Draw this on a piece of paper if it doesn't make sense as a
  written example.


**Shouting from the Stars** -- The Global Positioning System works
  on this principle, although it uses much more precise clocks and
  the speed of light. There's a hitch, though. The above example
  required that each person had precision-synchronized clocks. If
  each GPS unit had to have an atomic clock, it would be
  outrageously expensive. With three friends (or three satellites)
  we can solve three of these four variables:

    X, Y = horizontal position
    Z = altitude
    t = time

  With only three satellites and an imprecise clock, we have to
  assume altitude to be a known constant (e.g., sea level), since we
  can only solve for three variables using three satellites: X, Y,
  and time. But if we have four visible satellites, we can solve for
  all four variables: X (longitude), Y (latitude), Z (altitude), and
  t (precision time). The pleasant side effect is that not only do
  we have our precision location, but we also have precision time -
  which makes GPS valuable technology not only for geophiles, but
  chronophiles as well. Many people are now synchronizing their
  systems or network clocks to GPS signals, since it's a cheap and
  highly accurate source.

  However, thinking back to our example, there are some important
  caveats. Our friends, or the satellites, must be spaced well
  apart. If they're too close together, the timing difference
  between their signals isn't enough to calculate our location
  precisely. In GPS parlance, this is your "dilution of precision,"
  and it greatly affects your accuracy. Also, there must be a clear
  path between us and them - we can't have anything blocking our
  signals, or a large reflective object causing unwanted echoes
  ("multipath" signals). These errors can further degrade the
  accuracy of our location.

  GPS signals work in the microwave band. They can pass through
  glass, but are absorbed by water molecules (wood, heavy foliage)
  and reflect off concrete, steel, and rock. This means that GPS
  units have trouble operating in rain forests, urban jungles, deep
  canyons, inside automobiles and boats, and in heavy snowfall -
  among other things. These environmental obstacles degrade
  positional accuracy or make it impossible to get a fix on your
  location.


**GPS Receiver Technology** -- The core of GPS receivers come in
  two major variations: sequential single-channel and parallel
  multi-channel. Single-channel GPS units have only one radio
  receiver unit, and they must step sequentially through all
  possible satellites. This takes time and degrades their accuracy,
  since they may lose a "lock" each time they switch channels.
  Parallel units have from between four and twelve receivers, each
  dedicated to one particular satellite signal, so strong locks can
  be maintained on all the satellites.

  There are some two-channel units out there, but in practice these
  are only slightly better than single-channel units. Parallel-
  channel units are up to 15 times faster in satellite acquisition
  times and they are unparalleled (sorry for the pun) in their
  ability to lock onto the satellite signals even in difficult
  situations like heavy foliage or urban skyscraper canyons.

  Boaters, however, may be content with single or dual channel
  sequential units, since there are few environmental obstacles on
  the open ocean. These models are now considered outmoded
  technology, so you may be able to pick one up cheaply. But for
  others, don't settle for anything less than a full 12-channel
  parallel system, especially since the price differential has
  closed greatly in the past six months.


**Reviewing Some Receivers** -- Let's take a quick peek at a few
  low-end consumer GPS units in the $150 to $300 range. All these
  units have parallel 12-channel receivers. They also all have the
  same 100 meter accuracy, because the U.S. government reduces all
  civilian GPS units in a similar fashion. If the government were to
  remove the SA interference, the units would be accurate to about
  15 meters.

  If you're shopping for a unit, pay attention to features like form
  factor (handheld versus mounted); external antennas; mapping, and
  computer-controllability.

  I've included on my Web site a list of resellers where you can buy
  these GPS units. For local shopping, try your neighborhood boating
  stores or outdoor sports stores, they often carry the lower-end
  units.

<http://www.gpsy.com/gpsinfo/index.html#resellers>


**Garmin** -- My favorite GPS receivers are from Garmin, Inc.
  Their main handheld unit, the Garmin GPS 12XL, is about $250. The
  12XL is designed for handheld use and fits in your palm. It runs
  on 4 AA batteries for about 12 hours and has a backlight for night
  use. Garmin also sells the lower-end GPS 12, a 12XL without an
  external antenna connection or audible beeper for less than $200,
  but otherwise sporting the same handheld form factor.

  The GPS II+, on the other hand, is designed for vehicular use and
  sits on a dashboard or console. It has dedicated zoom buttons
  which make it easier for one-handed use while piloting (though not
  recommended while driving). Garmin also sells a nifty handlebar
  mount. I have an older GPS II mounted on my Honda CX500 Custom
  motorcycle and it's my constant companion when I tour New England.
  The II+ has a battery life of around twenty hours on four AAs.

  The greatest thing about Garmin units is that they have a
  bidirectional serial port that allows them to hook up to your
  computer. Though many GPS units can only transmit their current
  positional information, the Garmin units also allow you to
  transfer their waypoint databases, route tables, and other useful
  information. The wide availability of programs supporting the
  Garmin transfer protocol makes the Garmin units good choices for
  computer-based use.

<http://www.garmin.com/>


**Eagle** -- Eagle/Lowrance sells an inexpensive twelve-channel
  unit called the Eagle Explorer (approximately $200). The Explorer
  has a strong 12-channel GPS receiver, but unfortunately the user
  interface is harder to use than the Garmins. The unit also lacks
  an external antenna connection, which makes it more difficult to
  use inside vehicles. Eagle/Lowrance units have a proprietary data
  transfer protocol that's not currently supported in any Macintosh
  products. I personally wouldn't recommend that you buy a Eagle
  Explorer. It's too difficult to use either by itself or with a
  computer.

  If you're into boating, Eagle also has a four-channel unit called
  the Accunav Sport, which has the ability to support plug-in map
  modules for coastal waterways. It's a nice unit, but the receiver
  technology is two years old and a bit dated. Shop around for
  better deals.

<http://www.eaglegps.com/>


**DeLorme** -- DeLorme Mapping publishes CD-ROM and paper maps of
  the United States. Their most famous product is Street Atlas, a
  street level map of the entire U.S. on CD-ROM. But they also
  manufacture a neat little 12-channel unit called the DeLorme
  Tripmate. The Tripmate has no display or controls of its own and
  is designed strictly to be used with a computer. That said, it's a
  remarkable unit with good performance - and a reasonable $150
  price tag.

<http://www.delorme.com/>


**Data Cables** -- The biggest problem facing Macintosh GPS users
  is the unavailability of data cables. Most data cables come in
  PC-style DB-9 connectors, not the Macintosh-style DIN-8.
  Currently, the only commercial source for GPS cables for the
  Macintosh appears to be my company. However, you can make your own
  cables if you're handy with a soldering iron or wire-crimps. My
  GPS Cable Page provides details.

<http://www.gpsy.com/cables.html>


**Finding Your Way** -- GPS receivers aren't yet standard
  equipment in cars, but with price drops and improvements, it's
  only a matter of time. Ubiquitous availability of GPS devices will
  help eliminate the angst of finding yourself, in at least one
  sense.

  For more information about GPS, check out resources from the U.S.
  Coast Guard, NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric
  Administration), Iowa State University, and my own Web site.

<http://www.navcen.uscg.mil/>
<http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/GPS/GPS.html>
<http://www.cnde.iastate.edu/gps.html>
<http://www.gpsy.com/gpsinfo/>

  [Karen Nakamura founded Global Mapping Systems, a Mac-centric
  mapping and GPS/GIS software development company. Her "other" day
  job is as a sociocultural anthropologist studying deaf social
  movements in Japan and United States.]


Driving Through Trees: Using GPSy
---------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Karen Nakamura, who wrote the GPS overview article in this issue,
  contacted TidBITS with an interesting proposition: Would we be
  interested in testing some GPS units in tandem with her software,
  GPSy?

<http://www.gpsy.com/>

  Although none of us on staff have a good reason to use a GPS unit
  in the near future, we were tantalized by three factors: the
  futuristic ability to pinpoint one's position on Earth using
  orbiting satellites, the fact that Karen offered to write an
  article about a subject that interested us, and the chance to play
  with cool toys.


**Preparing to Race Satellites** -- Karen shipped us a copy of
  GPSy and DeLorme's Street Atlas 3.0, along with two GPS units, a
  Garmin GPS 12XL and a DeLorme TripMate. I can picture taking the
  Garmin on a mountain expedition, with its small backlit LCD
  display and lots of control buttons. The TripMate, on the other
  hand, was just a waterproof yellow pod - no controls, no screen,
  just a black cable snaking out of one end.

<http://www.delorme.com/StreetAtlasUSA/>

  In order to use GPSy in conjunction with Street Atlas, I needed a
  CD-ROM drive, so I borrowed a friend's PowerBook 3400c (which has
  an internal CD-ROM drive). Because I only had the GPS units for a
  couple of days, I drove to Adam and Tonya's house to try
  everything out.

  Setting up the software was simple. The fat binary version of GPSy
  2.1 is only about 850K, and installation was a matter of dragging
  the software from a floppy disk to the PowerBook's hard disk. (The
  current version, GPSy 2.5.3, was in beta when we tested the
  product.) Installing Street Atlas was also easy.

  Our first troubles involved the hardware. Believing that any
  consumer device should be operated without reading the full
  documentation, we attempted to configure the Garmin unit. After a
  period of fiddling and pushing buttons, however, we resorted to
  the manual. The fact that it was cloudy and rainy outside also
  made it difficult to lock on to more than two or three satellites
  at a time.

  Eventually we scrapped the Garmin in favor of the TripMate, which
  hadn't been misconfigured by human hands, and which, in this case,
  was easier to hook up and send data to the PowerBook.


**A World of Data** -- The information that the GPS units receive
  can seem like a fire hose of bits and bytes, and GPSy offers
  plenty of variations for displaying it. Clearly, GPSy is geared
  for the gear-head - or at least someone familiar with the many
  acronyms and terms associated with the field of global
  positioning. Here's an example of the raw information we received
  from the satellites (the NMEA Data field scrolls constantly):

> NMEA Device: GP - Global Positioning System (GPS)
> NMEA Sentences: [ APB BWC DBT GGA GLL GSA GSV MTW VTG ]
> NMEA Data:
>  $GPAPB,A,A,0.0,R,N,V,V,13.6,M,001,14.0,M,16.8,M
>  $GPGGA,215043.54,4123.46,N,07254.86,W,1,04,2.0,00086,M,,,,
>  $GPVTG,357.2,T,10.9,M,21.7,N,40.2,K

  Even with this barrage of data, we had no difficulty figuring out
  how to use GPSy's main features, even if the terminology swept
  past us. Multiple windows for translating data can be accessed
  both via the Displays menu and numbered keyboard shortcuts.
  Command-1, for example, brings up a small window with the unit's
  precise location (taking into consideration the government-
  mandated "selective availability").

  We found windows for heading, navigation (bearing), maritime and
  aviation data, and (my favorite) a visual representation of the
  satellites currently being tracked above, color-coded according to
  the strength of the signal. You can also bring up a world map with
  your location, although a pixel on that scale could represent
  several towns or counties.

  In addition to displaying the data, we played with options for
  transferring commands and data to and from the GPS unit, such as
  routes and waypoints. GPSy also has the capability to speak the
  location and other information, using Apple's PlainTalk
  technology.

<http://speech.apple.com/>


**On the (Sometimes Nonexistent) Road Again** -- After playing
  with GPSy, it was time to throw a real-world test at it (and time
  for me to drive home). We launched Street Atlas and easily
  determined our position by choosing Locate Once from the GPSyLink
  menu.

  Although Karen suggested that the TripMate unit would work best if
  duct-taped to the top of my car, I opted to preserve the paint and
  set the unit on my dashboard. Making sure that everything was
  running smoothly, I started GPSy's logging feature, and set off
  for home.

  I was surprised to discover that the software kept up with me,
  with a lag of only a second or two, even though the night was
  rainy. GPSy displayed my heading and location, and registered how
  many miles per hour I was driving (a possibly useful feature if
  you're ever pulled over for speeding and want to prove your
  innocence, although the officer might be dubious about how well
  you're paying attention to the road with such a neat gizmo next to
  you).

  In the Street Atlas window, a tiny blue car followed roughly the
  same path that I drove. Again, due to the "selective availability"
  limitation of consumer GPS devices, the little icon wasn't always
  right; I would occasionally see the car burrowing through a thatch
  of trees or skimming over a nearby lake. Still, it was refreshing
  to see such a quick response to data beamed in from above.


**Lost Highways** -- Using GPSy and the GPS units convinced me
  that the idea of embedding GPS receivers into cars and other
  vehicles isn't so much a pie in the sky idea as I had assumed.
  That's good news for me, because despite the help of satellites
  and a constantly updating map, I still took a wrong turn trying to
  get home.

  GPSy costs $30 shareware and requires at least a 68020-based Mac
  running System 7.0 or later. A demo version, which is limited to
  15 minutes of use per launch, is available as a 750K download.

<http://www.gpsy.com/download.html>


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