Are you waiting for the Galaxy Player 5.8? - Samsung Galaxy Player 4.0, 5.0

If you chose other reason, please let us know why
Product page: http://www.samsung.com/sec/consumer/it-mobile/mp3-player/smartplayer/YP-GP1EW

Guys, let me tell you this: Samsung announced the devices that are gonna be on JB and they dont gonna update this neither. They did this with our players and they are gonna do it again with this. Buy something else. A galaxy nexus Or a nexus 7 are betters options
If you dont believe me read this: http://www.androidpolice.com/2012/0...more-devices-soon-including-the-galaxy-music/
The galaxy music is a cellphone not this device

If the price is right, i will get it, but i doubt Samsung will release it for International market.

I'm waiting to see what they finally release. I've been thinking about getting a Galaxy Nexus and just using that.

tbh, I was gonna wait to purchase it instead of my 4.0, but I thought about the price + the chance it probably wouldn't fit in my pocket.
It's probably gonna be around $300 on launch (although I'm not sure) and I only had $200 at the time of purchasing my 4.0.

There was a company called Yepp in Korea and it's Samsung's.
It's a MP3P company and that's why our devices are like "YP"-G70 or else.
And Yepp company takes care of our device and firmware kind of stuff.
This means that Samsung is not really fond of MP3P as they are toward its phone, Galaxy S series.
I wouldn't recommend people to buy MP3P from Samsung. Cellphones I will recommend, but...... MP3P?
I'll have to ponder about it.

stylemate said:
There was a company called Yepp in Korea and it's Samsung's.
It's a MP3P company and that's why our devices are like "YP"-G70 or else.
And Yepp company takes care of our device and firmware kind of stuff.
This means that Samsung is not really fond of MP3P as they are toward its phone, Galaxy S series.
I wouldn't recommend people to buy MP3P from Samsung. Cellphones I will recommend, but...... MP3P?
I'll have to ponder about it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually, YEPP is not a separate company. That's the name they've given to their PMP (Portable Media Player) line. YEPP is an acronym for something, but I forget what it means.
As for the Player 5.8, I speculate that it will be at least six months for it to release in international markets, because that's how long it took between the release of the original Galaxy Player in Korea and the West.
I am definitely going for the Galaxy Note 2. I am very reluctant to buy another Galaxy Player from Samsung again, as they charge full price for obsolete hardware and leave their customers in the dark with upgrades

I'm probably getting an ipod touch then, even though I don't really like is and the small screen.
The thing is it's too expensive, I would've bought the $200 16 gb if Apple released it.
Still waiting to see how are they gonna price the ipad mini lol
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T

I would have gotten an ipod touch this go around but they keep on neglecting GPS. Which is the one thing that would make me switch. Maybe next time apple.

mxjcmxjc said:
I would have gotten an ipod touch this go around but they keep on neglecting GPS. Which is the one thing that would make me switch. Maybe next time apple.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol I don't even know what gps is.
What is it? How is it different from location service? How is it useful?
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T

nooktablet said:
Lol I don't even know what gps is.
What is it? How is it different from location service? How is it useful?
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GPS stands for "Global Positioning Satellites" and these satellites are the key to identifying your location on the earth. Devices with GPS have an additional part within them that allows your device to communicate with the satellites, and as a result the GPS satellites are able to pinpoint your coordinates on earth. Without a GPS receiver your device cannot communicate with said satellites, so no GPS positioning is possible outside any facilities. And, I say that because without a GPS receiver, the only other way to track your location is via your Wi-Fi connection. So, the location services you mentioned…I just explained them for you.
P.S. - Most technologies that exist as commodities now were first invented by the U.S. military. GPS is one of those technologies, as well as the Internet.

Higgs_Boson said:
GPS stands for "Global Positioning Satellites" and these satellites are the key to identifying your location on the earth. Devices with GPS have an additional part within them that allows your device to communicate with the satellites, and as a result the GPS satellites are able to pinpoint your coordinates on earth. Without a GPS receiver your device cannot communicate with said satellites, so no GPS positioning is possible outside any facilities. And, I say that because without a GPS receiver, the only other way to track your location is via your Wi-Fi connection. So, the location services you mentioned…I just explained them for you.
P.S. - Most technologies that exist as commodities now were first invented by the U.S. military. GPS is one of those technologies, as well as the Internet.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So with gps you can use mapping/location app offline (no Internet access needed)? That would be great for turn by turn direction
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T

nooktablet said:
So with gps you can use mapping/location app offline (no Internet access needed)? That would be great for turn by turn direction
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes. I remember back in the day, when I still had my HP iPAQ, I was using TOMTOM maps for navigation. At that time, no handheld devices came equipped with internal GPS receivers, so I had to buy a Bluetooth GPS receiver to use with TOMTOM.
Nowadays, most devices (but, I guess not iPod Touches) come with internal GPS receivers, allowing for offline navigation if you have the available maps cached on your device.

nooktablet said:
So with gps you can use mapping/location app offline (no Internet access needed)? That would be great for turn by turn direction
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There are basically three ways to identify you location on the face of the planet - when you are connected to a wi-fi hot spot, its position can be identified (not yours, so it's appriximate), if your device has a gsm radio, so it can connect to a cellular network, then it can identify your location by your proximity to the nearest towers on this network, it's called agps and many devices nowadays use this to identify your approximate position on the globe, because it's quick, and once they know your approximate position, they use gps to get your precise location. Well, and the last one is gps, which was already explained, a gps chip inside your device talks to satellites in the space to calculate precisely where you are. The advantages of this method is that you don't need to be connected to the internet via wi-fi or 3g, it uses less energy, so lasts longer and gives you more freedom. You need to have some kind of mapping software to be installed on your device for this method to work (like abovementioned excellent TomTom or Garmin or iGo, there's a whole bunch of them), but once you have one of these, you have a full featured car/personal navigation kit, with voice guided turn by turn navigation anywhere in the world where you have map coverage.
BTW, SGP 5.0 makes and excellent gps!

baladev said:
There are basically three ways to identify you location on the face of the planet - when you are connected to a wi-fi hot spot, its position can be identified (not yours, so it's appriximate), if your device has a gsm radio, so it can connect to a cellular network, then it can identify your location by your proximity to the nearest towers on this network, it's called agps and many devices nowadays use this to identify your approximate position on the globe, because it's quick, and once they know your approximate position, they use gps to get your precise location. Well, and the last one is gps, which was already explained, a gps chip inside your device talks to satellites in the space to calculate precisely where you are. The advantages of this method is that you don't need to be connected to the internet via wi-fi or 3g, it uses less energy, so lasts longer and gives you more freedom. You need to have some kind of mapping software to be installed on your device for this method to work (like abovementioned excellent TomTom or Garmin or iGo, there's a whole bunch of them), but once you have one of these, you have a full featured car/personal navigation kit, with voice guided turn by turn navigation anywhere in the world where you have map coverage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are correct, in a sense, to say that there are three methods of location detection. However, I respectfully disagree that location via tower belongs in the same boat as GPS and Wi-Fi detection.
Location detection via wifi is exact down to a few feet, which is based on an IP address. GPS tends to be very accurate, and depending on certain variables can be off by a few hundred feet.
Towers, as you mentioned, are more or less a means to an end. It offers a very, very general idea of location, but can off by up to miles. Again, as you mentioned this rough idea of your location is then more precisely pinpointed by GPS satellites.

Lol there is somebody who does not what is gps..i use GPS in my player 5.0 a lot with "my track" application ..and off course you can install some offline navigation for car ..i use IGo because it has best maps for my country ..(in apple maps in my country my town of 200 000 people does not even exist ..there is no on the map ) but for car i use tablet for navigation..bigger better hh.
---------- Post added at 10:42 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:38 AM ----------
Higgs_Boson said:
You are correct, in a sense, to say that there are three methods of location detection. However, I respectfully disagree that location via tower belongs in the same boat as GPS and Wi-Fi detection.
Location detection via wifi is exact down to a few feet, which is based on an IP address. GPS tends to be very accurate, and depending on certain variables can be off by a few hundred feet.
Towers, as you mentioned, are more or less a means to an end. It offers a very, very general idea of location, but can off by up to miles. Again, as you mentioned this rough idea of your location is then more precisely pinpointed by GPS satellites.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Location via 3G gives me very accurate position in town to 10m but you can do any navigation
Sent from my S7 using xda app-developers app

Higgs_Boson said:
You are correct, in a sense, to say that there are three methods of location detection. However, I respectfully disagree that location via tower belongs in the same boat as GPS and Wi-Fi detection.
Location detection via wifi is exact down to a few feet, which is based on an IP address. GPS tends to be very accurate, and depending on certain variables can be off by a few hundred feet.
Towers, as you mentioned, are more or less a means to an end. It offers a very, very general idea of location, but can off by up to miles. Again, as you mentioned this rough idea of your location is then more precisely pinpointed by GPS satellites.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, i wasn't categorising different ways of identifying your position, so you really have nothing to respectuffy disagree with. I just explained them all.
Location detection via wi-fi gives you the position of the wi-fi hot spot, so if you are close to it, your position is precise, if you are 100m away from it, your position will be 100m off. It is also stationary, it doesn't move with you, so it's useless for turn by turn navigation.
Location detection via towers can be quite precise (comparable to precision of gps location detection), depending on where you are. If you are in a densely populated area, like a city (with many towers around you), your location will be very/quite accurate, on the other hand if you are in a rural area, with weak signal you may not even get a fix.
My preferable way of location detection is through a gps chip in my device. This way i'm not dependant on any external factors (apart from satellites in the space and the charge of my device) and free to go wherever i want.

nooktablet said:
Lol I don't even know what gps is.
What is it? How is it different from location service? How is it useful?
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
"The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a space-based satellite navigation system that provides location and time information in all weather, anywhere on or near the Earth, where there is an unobstructed line of sight to four or more GPS satellites. It is maintained by the United States government and is freely accessible to anyone with a GPS receiver." Taken from Wikipedia.
It's used mainly for Turn by Turn direction and can be used to track travel distance. For instance I use the GPS with Runkeeper to track my runs/walks/jogs.
Location Service on the iPod uses Wifi Networks to triangulate your position. Which is good if your in a city with a lot of wifi access however if your not your boned.

I think the old Galaxy Players (4 and 5 inch) were made with spare parts from the entire Galaxy S (Vibrant,Captivate, etc) and Nexus S series which was quickly going obsolete. I seriously think that Samsung would support the new Galaxy Player series with legitimate updates. There's a pretty big gap in performance specs between devices that came out with Gingerbread and ICS and with the old Galaxy music player series coming out with Gingerbread, the performance before the ICS "spec bump."
I'm probably gonna pick up a 5.8 and develop ROMs for it if anybody was wondering. The specs should be enough for a few more years or Android releases
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda app-developers app

If it is under $300 dollars maybe... $200 yes.

Related

All I want for christmas is to be able to use what I paid for

I've been modifiying PDA phones for a while now but this is something I can't get over/should have expected from Sprint. GPS is present yet unusable on my Titan. I just now unlocked my titan and flashed to dcds 1.5.7/1.40.0 and I am hoping to be able to use the GPS with tomtom 6.
The thing that puzzles me is I read a post stating an indiviudal was using tomtom 6 on his mogul! how did he do it?
av0 said:
I've been modifiying PDA phones for a while now but this is something I can't get over/should have expected from Sprint. GPS is present yet unusable on my Titan. I just now unlocked my titan and flashed to dcds 1.5.7/1.40.0 and I am hoping to be able to use the GPS with tomtom 6.
The thing that puzzles me is I read a post stating an indiviudal was using tomtom 6 on his mogul! how did he do it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
he must be using a bluetooth gps device
so for now there is no way out? Is there any revision of this phone (Alltell, etc.) that has GPS enabled for application use?
av0, let's set the record straight here for a moment.
The mogul uses new hardware- chips that haven't been seen inside of Windows Mobile devices before. These chips allow services that haven't been available before either, such as EVDO rev. A and possibly assisted GPS.
Now, these chips may be capable, and HTC may be able to write drivers for it, but Microsoft never released the proper modules to control and take advantage of them. So, in the case of Rev A, we're waiting for MS to update some of their code so that HTC can release a new firmware, which will then be distributed to Sprint, Alltel, VZ, etc...
But for now, we have to play the waiting game. It doesn't exist on ANY carrier just yet!
Now, the GPS is the same thing... this particular GPSOne chip is new to the windows mobile scene. It supports some pretty nifty modes, including real stand alone GPS with an assisted mode- IE, uses the tower triangulation to get an even faster fix, then switch over to standalone mode (as opposed to the traditional way which is currently found in some PPCs, in which getting the initial fix can take up to 5-10min). Its in the chip specs to do this, but as far as I know MS's GPS modules only support standalone GPS information (no assisted faster fix), and its only been a rumor that Sprint/HTC would actually take advantage of this capability anyway. Either way, the phone was released before Windows Mobile was ready to use these higher-end features. We're waiting for them to catch up.
In the mean time, they removed GPS from the advertising, and Rev A has always been "coming soon".
Sit back. The rest of the phone finally works great now (thanks to 2.17 ROM, and a lot of great custom roms based on it), so one thing at a time. This great phone is going to get even better soon!
Concerning GPS...
Our Titans have the chipset for it and according to this FCC document, some of us (excluding Sprint Moguls) may have the antenna as well.
Someone in this thread extracted an Italian version of Kaiser's GPS files which I installed one morning and after playing around with it for about an hour, I couldn't get anything going. My Titan is cradled next to a large window all day and by early afternoon, I noticed a GPS icon in my top bar. When I picked up the phone, it went away and I was never able to reproduce it. I have no idea if it means I was receiving a GPS signal, but I'm hoping developments in activating the Touch Dual's GPS could lead to a working solution for Titan.
borealcool said:
Concerning GPS...
Our Titans have the chipset for it and according to this FCC document, some of us (excluding Sprint Moguls) may have the antenna as well.
Someone in this thread extracted an Italian version of Kaiser's GPS files which I installed one morning and after playing around with it for about an hour, I couldn't get anything going. My Titan is cradled next to a large window all day and by early afternoon, I noticed a GPS icon in my top bar. When I picked up the phone, it went away and I was never able to reproduce it. I have no idea if it means I was receiving a GPS signal, but I'm hoping developments in activating the Touch Dual's GPS could lead to a working solution for Titan.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the Touch Dual have the same chipset as the Kaiser?
The Titan uses a slightly modified Qualcomm chip for CDMA, and as such it should not be any suprise that the drivers from the GSM chipset don't work.
I'm of the opinion that the GPS control part of the chips are not the same because of the way CDMA uses the Assisted part of AGPS. Trying to port drivers from another existing device is a fruitless effort as no one has yet written drivers for our particular chipset.
THEY ARE NOT THE SAME.
Just sit back and wait for Sprint or someone to release it first. Then we can start porting it to all the other devices with this chip.
good bit of info on this thread. thanks guys
Dishe said:
The Titan uses a slightly modified Qualcomm chip for CDMA, and as such it should not be any suprise that the drivers from the GSM chipset don't work.
I'm of the opinion that the GPS control part of the chips are not the same because of the way CDMA uses the Assisted part of AGPS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
** Correct.
if this new update from sprint/htc brings rev a and GPS, will that make it possible to enable the GPS on the verizon xv6800 (by flashing the rom or whatever it takes)
OMG the doors to the heavens above have opened.
I'm not even asking for that much! I just want the phone to not lockup and I want to hear my callers on bluetooth! This phone was so rushed out the door is shows bad.

Cell tower mapping software

Anyone know if any software exists that uses the GPS and mapping software, but also tells you locations of cellular towers on the map?
Doesn't www.navizon.com software do this? im not sure so if anyone else knows and can chime in. i do recall it showing on there login page it does show the cell tower locations.
Meh..i've tried navizon, and it's a bloated piece of software if you ask me....
i'm looking for something small that merely has a map that uses the gps, but just shows the locations of cell towers....it probably doesn't exist...
gcincotta said:
Meh..i've tried navizon, and it's a bloated piece of software if you ask me....
i'm looking for something small that merely has a map that uses the gps, but just shows the locations of cell towers....it probably doesn't exist...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Second that, I think it is tough to set up to work well and it doesn't have near enough intuition.
As a new direction, is there a free place to get points-of-interest downloads to incorporate into TomTom that show towers, speed cameras, nudist beaches (just kidding)...
gcincotta said:
Meh..i've tried navizon, and it's a bloated piece of software if you ask me....
i'm looking for something small that merely has a map that uses the gps, but just shows the locations of cell towers....it probably doesn't exist...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well being as you have tried navizon, that means you have an account. If you log into the account from their website, you can view cell tower only info on a map. I know this is not exactly what you are trying to do (you want it on your ppc I assume) however this is the only way I know of (currently) to see tower info on a real map. It might suffice for your needs for now...
Serfboreds,
I have downloaded speed camera POIs for TomTom6 from http://tomtom.gps-data-team.com/ I dont know how accurate it is because there are very few speed camera's in my area (Kansas City). But when I was in France and Australia it was spot on.
Nuguy,
Love your signature. "Mine is also a theft deterent device. Go ahead, try to take my wallet..." Best mobile phone ad I have ever seen. I even downloaded it and sent it to my friends in Australia so they could have a laugh too.

GPS Fails in unusual manner

I was driving around today and had Google Navigation running. All of a sudden it couldn't find a satellite. For miles this continued happening. I have a GPS Test app and it said that the gps was on but no satellites in view. I was on a highway a few hundred feet to either side in a open elevated location. I've been through here before without issues.
I checked a map and Clearwire is now covering the area. I stopped at a store and got a gps signal Inside the store but not outside.
Anyone else experience anything like this?
Sent from my X10a using XDA Premium App
I had some problems with my GPS as well.. all worked after re-flashing and matching kernel + baseband...
Using the new pre rooted GB rom wont allow me to find any satellites at all:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=16130033&postcount=138
But I didn't flash GB- I'm still on 2.1, and my GPS works fine at my home which is not covered by the Clearwire LTE service. As for it not working in the GB, the baseband is specific for different regions and you probably need to change the build.prop file to use the proper timezone/time servers for the service.
It was totally strange as I wasn't anywhere where I shouldn't get GPS, it was working and then just stopped while I was on the highway. To not be able to find a single satellite when you have 360 degree of view of the sky, is indicative of something else going on like LTE service blocking the signals. Which has been reported in the national press. I was driving along the fringes of the coverage area.

Which Gear S for travel between EU and USA?

I live in Germany, but travel and work in the USA quite often. I have a US spec T-Mobile Note 4 and I'm thinking of grabbing the Gear S.
My Note 4 handles the networks in the USA and here well (vodafone), so I wouldn't be using the Gear S as much for data, but I don't want to be stuck if I need to use it and I don't have my phone. I will use it for day to day use and while traveling, as well as for music and fitness tracking while running. With all of that said, would I get enough functionality out of the watch if I purchased a US spec? Does the aGPS need a data connection, or will it be fine functioning as a distance tracker/mp3 player/heart-rate monitor without a 3G connection?
I guess that's the gist of the question. Calling and texting should work regardless, but will the aGPS work without data in Europe? Should I just get an EU model? I should eventually (2 years?) move back to the USA or to Asia, but by then I fully expect to move on to the next smartwatch.
I live in the UK and travel to the US. My watch was imported from Russia and I re flashed it with UK firmware.!
I suggest you purchase your Gear S in the EU. The mobile set up here is better for SIM use only purposes, and then use a US sim in it when you're back home. The Gear S is not locked to any network so should take any SIM.
Or simply use Bluetooth and run the GearS via the Note for notifications and calls, plus the health app etc. That's how I run it here.
Thanks for the suggestion. I think you're right. I'm going to see how my Note 4 performs for the next couple of weeks and then pull the trigger unless something new is announced imminent. I've got an OLD Motoactiv currently filling the role of smartwatch and it's great for fitness, but huge and the battery life and functionality are limited.
Gear S is dual band device. Regardless where you purchased, it won't work on both EU and US because the bands don't match. You will need a quad-band device to work. So forget about it being working any way other than tether to your phone via BT.
foxbat121 said:
Gear S is dual band device. Regardless where you purchased, it won't work on both EU and US because the bands don't match. You will need a quad-band device to work. So forget about it being working any way other than tether to your phone via BT.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I already know it's dual band. I already know it won't work in both.
I was asking if at least the aGPS would work in both since I would have my Galaxy Note 4 which works in both for most use cases besides my fitness use which would need the aGPS.
Depends on which app you use. Without the network connection, S Health and Here maps are hopeless (takes very long time and Here map typically will give up before that). Nike+ will work as it does not try to resolve location on the watch.
Of course, if you have the phone with you, it doesn't matter. The watch will use phone's GPS all the time if it is available.
foxbat121 said:
Depends on which app you use. Without the network connection, S Health and Here maps are hopeless (takes very long time and Here map typically will give up before that). Nike+ will work as it does not try to resolve location on the watch.
Of course, if you have the phone with you, it doesn't matter. The watch will use phone's GPS all the time if it is available.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok. What WILL use the aGPS without a data connection to track running? If there is something, I think I'll get a US spec for use in the EU since I'll have my phone in every other instance besides running with the watch.
If there isn't a way to use the aGPS without the data connection, I'll have to get the EU spec and just use my Motoactv on the rare occasions I want to track my running in the US while I'm on a trip.
Common mis-conception about aGPS. It is no difference than other GPS. The 'a' part means it can speed up the initial acquisition if there is a network connection to off load the calculation elsewhere. It still fully capable of receiving its own GPS signal. It doesn't mean the GPS won't work without the network connection. All modern cell phone GPS is like this.
Without a network connection, the initial acquisition takes a real long time (5 to 10 minutes depending on many variables) on the Gear S. With the network connection, it is about 20 seconds. Nike+ opt to record raw satellite data and let the server to do the calculation of exact location. It is extremely fast for Nike+ app to get lock and start recording (about 5 seconds or less).

How's the GPS accuracy?

Hi!
Hope someone can inform me about the following:
I am considering buying this phone for running workouts, and was wondering how accurate the GPS is?
And when having a fix, does the GPS logging start right when you press start in your sports app?
Thanks in advance,
Dennis
I haven't measured exactly but later when viewing my recorded walks on map, it looks about right.
The nice thing about this phone is, it supports all the major navigation systems: GPS (USA), GLONASS (Russia), BDS (China) and GALILEO (EU) so you have the max number of possible satellites to use of which the phone will pick the ones with the best signal.
Draqula said:
I haven't measured exactly but later when viewing my recorded walks on map, it looks about right.
The nice thing about this phone is, it supports all the major navigation systems: GPS (USA), GLONASS (Russia), BDS (China) and GALILEO (EU) so you have the max number of possible satellites to use of which the phone will pick the ones with the best signal.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks so much! The fact that it picks up more satellites, is that a specific trait of this phone, that you know? Or do more relatively recent phones do this? Like the Samsung A3 2017 for instance?
dmxl said:
Thanks so much! The fact that it picks up more satellites, is that a specific trait of this phone, that you know? Or do more relatively recent phones do this? Like the Samsung A3 2017 for instance?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, it's not only specific to XZ1.
Most phones on sale today support GPS (the grand old system built by USA), BDS (maintained by China) and GLONASS (Russian system, doesn't have full coverage yet).
Galileo (the system built by European Union) is the latest one and that is supported by the least number of phones.
If you do a free text search on gsmarena.com phone finder for Galieo...
... you will get about 80 phones with Galileo support.
The thing is that Galileo system is not yet complete - they have not yet brought all the planned satellites to orbit, no full coverage yet.
So in Estonia when I have checked, what satellites does my phone "see", I get mostly GPS and GLONASS satellites with just a couple of GALILEO sats and some BDS.
Taking all that into account I can't really say if it's worth to specifically get a phone that support Galileo, maybe in a couple of years it could have a bigger effect.
Draqula said:
No, it's not only specific to XZ1.
Most phones on sale today support GPS (the grand old system built by USA), BDS (maintained by China) and GLONASS (Russian system, doesn't have full coverage yet).
Galileo (the system built by European Union) is the latest one and that is supported by the least number of phones.
If you do a free text search on gsmarena.com phone finder for Galieo...
... you will get about 80 phones with Galileo support.
The thing is that Galileo system is not yet complete - they have not yet brought all the planned satellites to orbit, no full coverage yet.
So in Estonia when I have checked, what satellites does my phone "see", I get mostly GPS and GLONASS satellites with just a couple of GALILEO sats and some BDS.
Taking all that into account I can't really say if it's worth to specifically get a phone that support Galileo, maybe in a couple of years it could have a bigger effect.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks again for your extensive elaboration! I was familiar with GSMarena, yeah. I'll have a look. Have a great day!

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