Unlike today’s turn-by-turn navigation, a 16th-century GPS might have been all about survival: avoiding bandit-prone roads, timing tides for river crossings, or tracking stars as backup.
As of Wednesday (Jan. 15), the ankle bracelet program will be used to keep high-risk and repeat offenders in check. It's called the Global Positioning System (GPS).
There’s a whole world of GPS-alikes out there. Let’s take a look. The Global Positioning System (GPS) that we all know and love flew its first satellite in the distant past of 1978 ...
In an effort to assist the waiting passengers to keep track of movement of city buses, the Tiruchi district administration, ...