The Sky Map
Imagine the sky is covered in satellites that act like flying lighthouses. They constantly shout out a signal saying "I am here!" Your phone listens to these shouts.
Counting the Time
When your phone hears a satellite, it counts how long the signal took to arrive. Since light travels super fast, a tiny delay means the satellite is far away. If your phone listens to four satellites instead of three, it can figure out not just where you are on the map (latitude and longitude) but also how high up you are.
Mixed Signals
But what if you are inside a big building? Satellites might be too weak or blocked by walls. So your phone looks for Wi-Fi routers nearby. It knows the address of many Wi-Fi networks in the world. If it sees three specific routers, it can guess where those routers are and therefore where you are.
Why It Works
Sometimes clouds or tall buildings mess up the signal. To fix this, your phone uses extra help from the ground, called cell towers, which tell it roughly where it is in the city. This mix of space signals and street-level hints makes sure you never get lost.
Examples
- You order a taxi and the driver sees your exact location on their screen.
- Your smartwatch counts steps and records your running route in the park.
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See also
- What is Global navigation satellite systems (GNSS)?
- How commercial satellites are changing modern warfare?
- How are AI deepfakes created and detected?
- How are generative AI tools changing creative industries?
- How do AI voice cloning technologies actually work?