jimbo said:Maybe this link
That is even scarier, thankfully just like Mongo I am but a small pawn in the game of life, so hopefully noone considers me to be a threat to world peace etc etc
jimbo said:Maybe this link
Macfie said:The max speed is also prone to giving the odd 'spike' in my experience. On a run last weekend when I was never above 70, the max speed showed 128 mph. I noticed the speed figures jump momentarily when I was actualy doing about 30.![]()
M
Dickieboy said:
Have a look at this when you've got 5,
http://www.thebunker.net/security/bluetooth.htm
nav18tor said:I know where the confusion may be comming from, I am involved with vehicle tracking, and most use GPS for the positional information.
Unless manufacturers fitted GPRS modems to our navigation devices, there is no way of communicating the time/distance/speed/location, and even if you could get that detail, it would have to be imported into software that could do something with the information
The company I work for do have a system that incorporates navigation and messaging through a Navman iCN650 - M-Nav 650, but this does not work as a stand alone satnav (as the theives who keep nicking them from our customers will find out) the GPS is drawn from the tracking unit which tracks regardless of weather or not the navigation is plugged in.
Dickieboy said:Blackspot makers of the Road Angel Navigator say somewhere in their blurb that if you ever report your navigator stolen they will render it useless to the person who stole it via the satellite link, and come to think of it if you don't keep up your subscription they'll do the same to you, so they must be able to individually target the device.
Exactly. Uses the same functionality as Sky when enabling / disabling Sky viewing cards and authorising viewing packages. They broadcast from the Satellite, with a specific target ID which is ignored by all unmatched hardware.xpi0t0s said:Doesn't necessarily mean they transmit a signal directly to the device; they might just broadcast a general "Unit XXXXXXXX to shut itself down" which all units would pick up and ignore if they're not that specific unit.
DodgyGeeSer said:Exactly. Uses the same functionality as Sky when enabling / disabling Sky viewing cards and authorising viewing packages. They broadcast from the Satellite, with a specific target ID which is ignored by all unmatched hardware.
DodgyGeeSer said:Exactly. Uses the same functionality as Sky when enabling / disabling Sky viewing cards and authorising viewing packages. They broadcast from the Satellite, with a specific target ID which is ignored by all unmatched hardware.
It's actually done all of the time, and is not terribly expensive.Kritou said:I can understand a targeted broadcast from a SKY or similar satellite - but a commercial organisation being able to transmit from one of the USAF GPS constellation?
Whatton said:But a Garmin/Tom Tom GPS can't transmit anything, all it's doing is looking for satalites in the sky and when it see's three or more it triangulates a position and relates that to the maps you've installed on it.
Or have I missed somthing here![]()
charlie b said:............ when you have/use a GPS you can be monitored by 'the authorities' who can follow/track you wherever you go.................So is this just more paranoid bollox or am I missing something obvious?
Charlie

I line the inside of my helmet with fresh tinfoil just before I take the bike out for a spin.. Just to be sure.Blue Sweeper said:If you've got nothing to hide, why should you be remotely interested and more to the point, why should they be interested in tracking you?![]()

Blue Sweeper said:why should you be remotely interested...
Macfie said:The max speed is also prone to giving the odd 'spike' in my experience. On a run last weekend when I was never above 70, the max speed showed 128 mph. I noticed the speed figures jump momentarily when I was actualy doing about 30.![]()
M
