Nycturne
Member
I think the rollout timeline for GPS constellations has been GPS (US), GLONASS (Russia), BeiDou (China) & then Galileo (EU).
You're probably right about the blurry imagery, if the thing was that slow then moving maps would be clunky too which i'm sure it's not.
Yeah, I’m just wondering if the 2021 Nyon might be at a disadvantage using an older receiver chip. The manual says nothing about what constellations it supports, nor does it seem to let you configure it. But it does say it can potentially take a while:
Whenever you switch on Nyon, it will begin with a satellite search to enable it to receive GPS signals. Once enough satellites have been found, the location point will change color from gray to blue. In unfavorable weather conditions or locations, the search for satellites may take a little longer. If no satellites have been found after an extended period of time, Nyon will restart.
When searching for satellites for the first time, the process can take several minutes.
In order to achieve the best possible positional accuracy, the first satellite search should be carried out outdoors. Ideally, you should remain stationary for a few minutes while this takes place, even if your position has already been found.
Yeah, even the first car units from the likes of TomTom/Garmin used vector map data. The flash storage was too slow and too small for anything else, and they definitely “clunked” when redrawing the screen. The time I spent mucking about with their file formats years ago was interesting though. Some good engineering to make those files efficient, despite the performance limitations.