Marsali_1
Well-Known Member
I think it has been acknowledged several times, above, that the "baddies" are not interesting in sending pleasure boaters astray.Nobody is going to go.to all the bother to lure a pleasure yacht into some kind of trouble
I think it has been acknowledged several times, above, that the "baddies" are not interesting in sending pleasure boaters astray.Nobody is going to go.to all the bother to lure a pleasure yacht into some kind of trouble
Ah, right. Now I got the missile reference. Yes, that's right, I think.I'm still unconvinced by the backpack. I'm sure it's possible but you still need line of sight and you're advertising your position to the world.
Yes, commercial ships (and aircraft?) will likely have terrestrial low‑frequency radio navigation receivers before long but that's not what YBW is about.
I absolutely did mean smashing them up with missiles. By the time you've got aircraft circling the UK slowing down amazon deliveries things are already pretty much open warfare.
Encrypted signals -- if that's what you're talking about -- solves the problem of forging signals, but does not solve the problem of meaconing. You're right of course that military GNSS is more robust than what everyone else gets, even airliners.
I think it has been acknowledged several times, above, that the "baddies" are not interesting in sending pleasure boaters astray.
How governments are responding to the issue is driven by its effect on the economy, and on commercial navigation and air safety, so naturally what happens to Amazon trucks and airliners is relevant to the question of what can we expect in our own domain.I'd agree the baddies are not interesting in sending pleasure boaters astray. I certainly didn't get the memo that this thread wasn't about leisure boaters. If it's actually about aviation, amazon delivery drivers and commercial shipping it would be better topic for the lounge (Unless it's current affairs.)
For a yachtsman, the effects of over-reliance on GNSS within critical national infrastructure such as comms, food logistics and finance are probably more of a worry than finding the entrance to Cowes.How governments are responding to the issue is driven by its effect on the economy, and on commercial navigation and air safety, so naturally what happens to Amazon trucks and airliners is relevant to the question of what can we expect in our own domain.
I think we all agree that it's not really a life and death question for us, but that presumes that we keep up our nav skills. I do know not a few sailors who don't, or who never learned in the first place, so all the more, it's worth discussion and raising awareness.
Depends on the yachtsman, probably!For a yachtsman, the effects of over-reliance on GNSS within critical national infrastructure such as comms, food logistics and finance are probably more of a worry than finding the entrance to Cowes.