Multi-day GNSS Galileo outage -- Civilization survives

George Herbert george.herbert at gmail.com
Fri Jul 19 07:20:11 UTC 2019


Worthwhile noting however that they’re not reliably pushing notifications to people on their notifications list.

Worthwhile checking fundamentals you do depend on with your own low level monitoring.

-George

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jul 18, 2019, at 10:30 PM, Mikael Abrahamsson <swmike at swm.pp.se> wrote:
> 
>> On Fri, 19 Jul 2019, Sean Donelan wrote:
>> 
>> So much for the disaster scenarioes about a global clamity, planes falling out the sky, the end of civil society because a global navigation satellite system fails.  The European Galileo GNSS was down for days, and life went on.
> 
> It wasn't even in full production, and I am not aware of much equipment that solely relies on Galileo.
> 
> A lot of devices today can use multiple GNSS and this is great, as this incident shows that one of them can go offline. Relying on only one of them is risky.
> 
> This outage and its lack of ramifications doesn't imply that if GPS went offline there woulnd't be consequences. Galileo is just a few years old, and wasn't even in production. If GPS would go offline, you'd see a lot different fallout. Lots of things rely on GPS solely.
> 
> -- 
> Mikael Abrahamsson    email: swmike at swm.pp.se



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