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Electro Gyro-Cator (wikipedia.org)
9 points by martinml on Nov 24, 2015 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


That's pretty neat. Any idea on how accurate it was? The real breakthrough in navigation imo is not so much the display of a map but rather the lack of display of more data than you actually need at the moment. Turn-by-turn navigation is what then really drove adoption. GPS may not have been necessary to achieve this and this article is a nice reminder that there are more ways than one to skin a cat.

Do any present day navigators use inertial guidance when they are out of reach of satellites? (I know mine doesn't when I enter a tunnel it seems to continue to coast based on the last known info when the signal was lost, after more than a few minutes, for instance a traffic jam it gets wildly erratic.)


Never mind inertial guidance; just distance traveled from the odometer would help, based on the commonly true assumption that the tunnel is straight.


Someone in the military did a technical evaluation of the Electro Gyro-Cator. http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a138283.pdf

Pretty interesting.


"A marking pen was also included to help make personal indicators on the map if needed."

It's disappointing that modern technology no longer supports being annotated with a marker pen.


Can't tell ... if trolling ... or serious.

Even Apple has gotten around to selling a stylu^H^H^H^H^H Pencil for your tablet; Microsoft has been _pushing_ theirs for years, and Samsung uses it as a differentiating factor on their smartphones.


The steampunk alternative to GPS




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