by Perry » Mon Nov 03, 2008 7:12 pm
AlanK wrote:Of course, having to go slowly is one reason why people don't hike with wheels. The other big reason is that they are cumbersome and take all the fun out of hiking.
The experience of the outdoors is really the most important thing for most of us on this message board.
For a semi-tangent topic like this, that a few of us care about, it helps to have an understanding of vector calculus, statistics, and writing computer code such as MatLab. These things can become very complicated:
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=YBYlCpBNo_cC
A simple way of understanding how a GPS device can be accurate is if you stay in one spot for an hour to eat lunch, and the GPS records data every 6 seconds. Then you have 600 data points, each with let's say 99% being within 18 feet of your location where you ate sandwiches (error has to be expressed with a corresponding probability). With Guassian distribution, many of those points would be closer (They are not evenly spread throughout a 36-foot diameter circle). With that much information, you have a very high probability of determining your exact location within a few inches or less. While hiking, the pace and sampling rate will influence such accuracy.
"And he knows those computers better than anybody, all those computers, those vote-counting computers. And we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide, so, it was pretty good, it was pretty good, so thank you to Elon!"
-Donald Trump