Advertisement
Promo

Mobile working Toolkit in association with http://marketing.ianywhere.com/forms/EMEA09SUPSybaseMobilityLeadership-IDC

New GPS platform aims to save batteries

David Meyer ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 28 Jul 2009 17:20 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Cambridge Silicon Radio has unveiled a new GPS architecture that it says will let portable devices be constantly location-aware without draining their batteries.

The architecture, SiRFstarIV, was announced on Tuesday along with the first product to use it, CSR's GSD4t receiver for mobile phones and other portable devices.

Mobile phones increasingly have GPS as a feature, for navigation and other location-based services. However, current GPS architecture is a major contributor to battery drain — a situation CSR is hoping to fix.

The UK-based company, which has generally concentrated more on Bluetooth chip design, bought GPS architecture firm SiRF in February. As part of the deal, SiRF's founder, Kanwar Chadha, joined CSR as chief marketing officer.

Chadha told ZDNet UK on Tuesday that smartphones using current GPS platforms deliver a worse experience than dedicated personal navigation devices with the same technology. He attributed this lag in smartphones to three factors: battery consumption, the time it takes to get a fix on GPS satellites (as the GPS has to turn on and off to save power), and interference from other electronics inside the devices.

"GPS was not designed to be navigation-centric," Chadha said. "If you try to make location available all the time, you drain the battery very quickly. Other radios, the LCD display and the processor also interfere with the GPS signal."

This situation was a driver for the creation of SiRFstarIV, which is "not on all the time, and not off all the time", Chadha said.

The platform instead uses an 'aware' state, which "keeps the necessary information to do a very fast calculation from the satellite [and is] alive all the time but in a very low micropower mode", he explained. This approach means the device's GPS does not need to be continually turned on and off to conserve power — hence the speed with which it can get a satellite fix.

Chadha said the SiRFstarIV platform uses between 50-500 microamps. That power consumption level is substantially lower than that found in existing GPS platforms, which burn up power in the milliamps.

The company also looked at the other drags on GPS performance in smartphones for the new architecture.

"The second thing we did is [to] put in a new technology which scans for all the noisy signals that interfere with GPS, and eliminates interferers before they can hit the GPS signal," Chadha said.

The GSD4t receiver is now available in sample quantities to manufacturers of mobile phones and other portable devices, with full-scale production scheduled for October. According to Chadha, the first handsets using SiRFstarIV should become available to end-users in early 2010.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
18 out of 18 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:







Enterprise Smartphones Special Report Special Report

Nokia E63

Nokia E63

Review Although it's missing some features (chiefly HSDPA and GPS), Nokia's E63 is a well-thought-out, ergonomic and affordable smartphone.

More Special Reports

Video icon

Video

On The Road Blog

On the Saving Edge: New Tech in Disast...

By Matthew Cordell A new report commissioned by the UN Foundation and Vodafone Foundation has found the intersection between two incredible trends -- the significant uptick in disasters... More

Post a comment

Tinsel on the TARDIS

There were shepherds on the hill, and the Doctor popped his head out of the TARDIS and said "you might want to see this" and they were astounded. WHY do we pay for a TV licence?... More

Post a comment

Linux is shipped on a third of all net...

A third of netbooks shipped in 2009 came with GNU/Linux rather than Windows preinstalled, according to analysis from ABI Research. The firm's figures strongly contradict Microsoft's... More

Post a comment


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters