Nope. Sprint now has duplicatable fail Epic GPS modes under condition it should work in and they are trying to get samsung to fix it.Basically this seems to be coming down to a problem of some phones work fine and others don't.
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Nope. Sprint now has duplicatable fail Epic GPS modes under condition it should work in and they are trying to get samsung to fix it.Basically this seems to be coming down to a problem of some phones work fine and others don't.
"Dude," you are wrong. ALL modern smartphones locations work indoors.
Ones with correctly working location aplciaitons simply move through the most accurate to less accurate depending on RF conditions.
Nope. Sprint now has duplicatable fail Epic GPS modes under condition it should work in and they are trying to get samsung to fix it.
My Epic's GPS will eventually lock on, but it takes several minutes every time. Using GPSTest, it will report actually seeing ~11 satellites, but 'using' 0. Finally after 3-5 minutes, it will start to use a few and eventually go up to using 9 or so.
It wouldn't be that big of a deal, except my iPhone 3G (what I'm replacing with the Epic) locks on in about 5 seconds, no matter if I've had the phone off or not. And that phone is 2+ years old. Certainly GPS technology hasn't reverted...
Assuming of course you get reception in that concrete bunker.So please don't misinform people. You can be in a concrete bunker with an Evo, A treo Pro, a Touch Pro 2 and your LBAs (your phones location based applicaions) will get location with no GPS, varying form 10 meters to 1000 meters depending..

Then how do you explain all the people reporting that theirs works perfectly fine?Nope. Sprint now has duplicatable fail Epic GPS modes under condition it should work in and they are trying to get samsung to fix it.
I tried GPS (wireless off) the other day and it seems to track me using My Tracks pretty well as I walked back and forth about 20 feet in the parking lot.
I went for a 2 mile run today and also ran My Tracks. Wireless was ON this time. But, the tracks are pretty darn accurate so I think I had a GPS fix. It could tell which side of the 1-lane street I was running on.
mine locks in 5 secs or so. acurracy is still not absolutely super but it does lock in less than 30 secs. and uses most if not all the sats in view. I think its area specific that causes some of the problems.
I can't imagine it being area specific. I don't know much about GPS or satellites in general, but shouldn't I have about the same view of satellites in Chicago that someone would have in say... Memphis or Omaha? Its not like we're on vastly different parts of the globe that you'd be able to lock on < 30 seconds, and it takes me 4 minutes.
And no, I'm not surrounded by buildings or trees or anything else that blocks my view of the sky. Like I said, it can 'see' the satellites, just doesn't 'use' them for a few minutes.
Assuming of course you get reception in that concrete bunker.
Then how do you explain all the people reporting that theirs works perfectly fine?
I didn't say there isn't a problem. What I said is that some are having problems and some are not. Which is what leads to all the hostility and anger in these threads.
I am in no way suggesting 'I KNOW WHATS GOING ON' Ive gleaned my understanding, and I may be way off base, by those here with greater knowledge and been good enough to share thier viewpoints despite the hostility. As far as the hostility, too many are taking it personal that the potential top-dog device has flaws, and to some, VERY serious flaws.
Does the Epic GPS have issues? Most likely. Samsung has already admitted the Galaxy S line has issues, and never really said the Epic was completely fixed (they said it was tested, not completely fixed).
OK, the GPS on the Epic is officially crap.
Here is a snapshot from My Tracks. The first run, the one on top, is from earlier this week with WiFi networks *on*. It's surprisingly accurate.
The second run, the one on bottom, is the exact same run with WiFi networks off. This needs to be fixed within 30 days or the phone goes back....what a joke.
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Note: I'm assuming that the GPS lost signal or My Tracks stopped recording at some point in the second run. But the first part of the run should be exactly the same, and obviously it isn't.
Of all the tracks reported about the Epic GPS, this is the first one I have seen that make me cringe. This does not seem to be a simple problem with tracking accuracy. It is as if the second track started in the wrong place enteirely, then the whole track was offset accordingly. When the second track was run, what was the phone showing about satellite locks?
I doubt that toggling the "Use wireless networks" setting had anything to do with it, unless it was the first track that was in the wrong place! But obviously you would have told us if that were true.
Maybe it would help us if you uploaded the My Tracks tracks to Google My Maps and then posted a link to the actual tracks, instead of just posting an image.
I don't get it.
What is the big deal of having WFI networks on if it helps the situation? Obviously it looks like you got a perfect track that way.
Track 5 - Google Maps
Actually it's showing that GPS either didn't lock or it didn't start recording until partway into the run.
656 feet. :-(Thanks, I get that now. What is the setting your My Tracks for "Minimum Accuracy" ("Recording will be paused if your position is not at least this accurate")? If the accuracy of your GPS was FUBAR during the second run, which seems apparent, that would explain why My Tracks truncated the track.