cellio: (avatar)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2014-08-14 08:54 pm
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two dimensions out of three

It's funny to see (well, hear) my phone's navigator app react to parking garages. "Do X... oh ok you're going north so do Y... oh you're going west so do Z... oh you're going south do A... oh you're going east do X which I'll pretend I haven't said before..." -- iterate until you reach the exit. It doesn't respond to elevation, only latitude/longitude.

I can think of three possible reasons for this, and I wonder which it is (or if it's something else I haven't thought of):

1. The GPS in the phone doesn't detect altitude.

2. The map data (Google's, in this case) doesn't record elevation. It does you no good to know that the GPS is at a certain elevation if the app can't tell that that's 200 feet above the road, after all.

3. The GPS and map data are available, but the app isn't programmed to take it into account. How often does this really come up, after all?

[identity profile] eub.livejournal.com 2014-08-15 07:15 am (UTC)(link)
I suspect it's mostly (3) in play here. As a bug it's probably more silly than it is harmful or annoying?

GPS does inherently pick up altitude, but it's less accurate than location horizontally, i.e. the error ellipsoid is tall. Basically because you do not generally have satellites available near directly overhead and rarely straight downwards -- the constellation you see is pretty 'flat'. So when you triangulate position based on your approximate distance to the satellites, the vertical error is rather high, because of the geometry of the solution.

On top of that, seeing satellites from inside a parking structure is hard, so who knows if your GPS has any idea of your elevation when you're in there.

Originally map data didn't come with much elevation data at all, even relative. (You may recall the days of "turn left from Forbes Ave onto S Neville Way" directions from map sites.) It's fairly easy to paint your road lat/long data with elevation datasets derived from orbital radar ranging, but what that gets you is the *top* of your parking garage, or the trees covering the road, etc. Actual elevation of the roadbed has been a longer time coming. You can speculate that crowdsourced GPS data might be useful here.

[identity profile] eub.livejournal.com 2014-08-19 07:46 am (UTC)(link)
By the way, to give credit where it goes, fixes to data like the Forbes/Neville grade separation were probably made by the map data vendors (Navteq, TeleAtlas, et al.) through old-school "vans on the ground", driving around and taking notes on the roads. Just by the timing, before any of the fancy stuff was around much.