Glossary, 6 glossary – Navigon MN4 User Manual

Page 73

Advertising
background image

User's manual BLUE Edition

Glossary

- 71 -

6 Glossary

COM-port

A COM port is a connector to a communications interface, usually
the serial port. The ports are numbered by a number behind

“COM”. A communications interface is designed to connect
hardware like a mouse or a GPS receiver.

GMT

GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) is the mean solar time at the Royal

Greenwich Observatory in Greenwich near London, England,
which by convention is at 0 degrees geographic longitude.
Theoretically, noon Greenwich Mean Time is the moment when

the Sun crosses the Greenwich meridian (and reaches its highest
point in the sky in Greenwich). Up to 1972, GMT was the global

time standard. Because of the Earth's uneven speed in its elliptic
orbit, GMT has been replaced by UTC (Universal Time

Coordinated) which is an ultra stable time standard based on
atomic clocks.

GPS

The GPS (Global Positioning System) is based on 24 satellites,
which are in orbit round the earth. They are permanently

emitting the time and their current position. The GPS receiver
receives this information and calculates the longitude and the

latitude of its own current position.
The signals of at least three satellites are needed to determine

the longitude and the latitude. With the signals of at least four
satellites the elevation may be calculated, too. The determination

has an accuracy of about 3 yards.

HDOP

The Horizontal Dilution of Precision (HDOP) indicates the quality

of position determination. Theoretically any value from 0 to 50 is
possible. The smaller the value is, the more accurate is the

position determination (value 0 = no deviation from the actual
position). Values up to 8 are convenient for street navigation.

POI

Point of Interest (POI). See Special destination.

Special destination

Special destinations, also called POI (Points of Interest), are
covered by the map and may be displayed on it. Harbours,
airports, restaurants, hotels, petrol stations, public buildings, and

others belong to the special destinations. You may determine
special destinations as itinerary points for navigation purposes.

Advertising