The Global Positioning System faces the possibility of failures and blackouts, a federal watchdog agency has warned the U.S. Congress. Mismanagement by and underinvestment by the U.S. Air Force places the GPS at risk of failure in 2010 and beyond. The problem: Delays in launching replacement satellites, among other things. According to the Government Accountability Office report, ‘In recent years, the Air Force has struggled to successfully build GPS satellites within cost and schedule goals’ as part of a $2 billion modernization program. ‘If the Air Force does not meet its schedule goals for development of GPS IIIA satellites, there will be an increased likelihood that in 2010, as old satellites begin to fail, the overall GPS constellation will fall below the number of satellites required to provide the level of GPS service that the U.S. government commits to.’ Considered by the GAO to be ‘essential to national security’ the GPS is also widely used by business and consumers and is a driver for next-generation location-based mobile applications used with smartphones and other devices. ‘Such a gap in capability could have wide-ranging impacts on all GPS users,’ the GAO report states, ‘though there are measures the […]
Wednesday, May 20th, 2009
GPS System Could Begin To Fail Within a Year
Author: DAVID COURSEY
Source: PC World
Publication Date: Tuesday, May 19, 2009 7:11 AM PDT
Link: GPS System Could Begin To Fail Within a Year
Source: PC World
Publication Date: Tuesday, May 19, 2009 7:11 AM PDT
Link: GPS System Could Begin To Fail Within a Year
Stephan: This wants watching. The report may overstate the problem, but I got an email from an SR reader who works on these satellites telling me to read this, not only because the US system may fail but, also, because the EU Galileo system, or something else entirely, may shift control of GPS to non-US interests.