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lilwill157 | New York USA
TOKYO--One of the anticipated products at Sony Computer Entertainment's TGS booth was the PlayStation Portable's GPS receiver, which is coming out in Japan in just two months on December 7. The peripheral was available for viewing by the public for the first time at Sony's TGS booth. But, unfortunately, an eyes-only experience was as far as it went. Four PSP units with GPS receivers were on display in a showcase, but they weren't available for hands-on and photography was strictly prohibited.



Sony's GPS unit for the PSP was shown off to the public at TGS.
From what we saw, the PSP's GPS unit seemed fairly portable. The receiver is extremely compact at less than two square inches (45mm x 41mm x 17mm), meaning it's a little bigger than an average person's thumb. Plus it supposedly only weighs 16 grams, which is about half an ounce (0.56oz).

While there wasn't any new GPS software at TGS, we got to see the four titles that Sony announced will support the GPS unit last month:

Minna no Golf-jou (SCEI, 2007) Minna no Golf-jou is a spin-off of SCEI's popular Hot Shots Golf series, and it functions as a map utility for real golf courses. The software includes data of all golf courses in domestic Japan and lets the golfer check out everything from his distance to obstacles, as wells as the greens. The software can also be used as a management tool for keeping track of score data.



Note the relative size of the GPS unit compared with the PSP itself.
Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops (Konami Digital Entertainment, December 2006) Metal Gear Solid's new PSP action adventure game will make use of the GPS receiver to search for and collect new characters that can be recruited as soldiers.

Planetarium Creator Ohira Takayuki Kanshuu: Home Star Portable (Sega, October 2006) Sega's constellation navigator is coming out two months before Sony's GPS receiver, but it's going to have support for the peripheral. Using the GPS receiver, players can acquire their current location and display the exact stars that they should be seeing up in the sky.

Navigation Soft (Edia, December 2006) This standard car-navigation software features all the roadmaps in Japan. Aside from searching for car and walking routes, the software can also be used as a directory to search for nearby shops and other facilities. The maps and database can be updated using the PSP's network capabilities.



Here it is on a white PSP.
Product detail:

Sony PSP GPS Receiver (PSP-290)

Release date: 12/07/2006

Price: 6,000 yen ($51)

Comes with case accessory


Hardware specs:

Reception Frequency: 1575.42MHz (L1 ban, C/A code)

Reception System: 20 Channels

Reception Sensitivity: Following: -153dBm, Captured: -140dBm

Position Update Interval: Approximately 1 second

Position Precision: 5m (2DRAMS, -130dBm)

Hardware size: 45mm x 41mm x 17mm (Width x Height x Depth)

Weight: Approximately 16 grams

link



my question is will the GPS work in other countries to cause i will be going to the Dominican Republic for vacation so i wonder if it will work there?????/
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Replies

09/28/06 Kmann06
We don't know how good the quality will be. at this point all we can do is wait and see, and the idea of a do all device is good since it does so much a psp can really become a reflection of the person that uses it, this device touches on so much as far as functionality, so if your the kid that justs wants to plat gta under the covers when is past your bed time, or the guy that watches espn podcasts while taking abreak at work, it offers so much, so i dont understand why people rag on the functions that they dont use, when it's not like you had to pay for a update since the thing came out. i see the camera and the gps as a way of evloving that aspect with usefull add-ons for the the camera , how cool would it be to be cleaning up listing to music on the psp then it statrs ringing with a pic telling it's ya homeboy and he callin seeing if you wanna play madden. as far as the gps you never kno it might let you render a battel field in rainbow six of say your street for on-line play. who do u think would have the advantage in that fight. basicly if your not goona buy it thats your loss

edited: Sep 28 2006 
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09/29/06 SluGGo
I agree with Chance. I'm an adult, a professional, and a PSP fanatic. I have been comtemplating purchasing a GPS system for my Jeep for a while. I like to camp, go offroading, rock crawling etc. This device could be GREAT! I already have a mount in my jeep for my PSP and a stereo jack to connect it to my sound system. On long trips its invaluable as a movie player and now with the prospect of video phone - GPS etc. THATS AWESOME. It's all about application! A 13 year old kid WILL NOT GET THE SAME EXPERIENCE AS A 29 YEAR OLD TRAVELLER!

These "arguments" as to whether a new feature/product is useful or not are purely subjective. There is no argument for a subjective situation. Opinions are welcome, everyone has one, but saying "This sucks!" just because you won't get the full experience from a product is childish.

GPS will be useful for people who travel, bike, hike, walk etc. A PSP camera will be useful for people without a cameraphone or digi-cam. VOIP will be useful for kids without cellphones.

The PSP , as promised, is evolving and growing... the question is "Do you want to keep your gills and flipper-feet, or do you want to grow lungs and thumbs? Do you want to stay in the trees or do you want to explore the rest of the world?"

Darwinian references aside, Sony isn't hardwiring all this sh*t onto the PSP they are OPTIONS. Buy 'em , don't buy em.

Personally, I'm excited....

'nuff said.
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10/11/06 helm
If you are going to use a GPS to do more than find your way to you friends house buy a true GPS that can handle the weather and the bumps that happen when you travel. I like my PSP but there is no way I would use it when I need a GPS. To me its just not built to handle the true outdoors.
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10/12/06 Kmann06
SluGGo said: "I agree with Chance. I'm an adult, a professional, and a PSP fanatic. I have been comtemplating purchasing a GPS system for my Jeep for a while. I like to camp, go offroading, rock crawling etc. This device could be GREAT! I already have a mount in my jeep for my PSP and a stereo jack to connect it to my sound system. On long trips its invaluable as a movie player and now with the prospect of video phone - GPS etc. THATS AWESOME. It's all about application! A 13 year old kid WILL NOT GET THE SAME EXPERIENCE AS A 29 YEAR OLD TRAVELLER!
."


Thats what ive been trying to say
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10/12/06 DCLXVI
agreed.. people always flame on things they can't pay for or don't know how to use (or have no use for themselves). it's stupid.

but you also can't really expect 13 year old kids to respond as 29 year old travellers.... must be pretty frustrating all those nice things coming out and you will have to wait for your parents to buy it for you or not.. or you have to save money for 6 months... Maybe it's more easy to just hate it then..
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10/12/06 darkblade
hehe, what do u do when your 13 and saving money for a ps3 when suddenly ur dad takes the cash saying its urgent?
and im not hating anything, GPS would be nice, but i won't be using..so i dont care much, i'd want the cam though


edited: Oct 12 2006 
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10/12/06 SluGGo
More reason to look forward to finishing school, getting a high paying job, and buying all the toys you want!

I'm almost 30 and NOW I can afford all the toys that my parents couldnt/wouldnt buy for me. I'm just a big kid....

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