In Tussle With GPS Companies, LightSquared Pointing to GPS Industry Downtrends
In a regulatory and legal battle with GPS companies, LightSquared now is highlighting the decline of the GPS and Personal Navigation Device (PND) industry. Company senior adviser Reed Hundt met with FCC front-office Office of Strategic Planning & Policy Analysis, Wireless, General Counsel, Office of Engineering & Technology and International Bureau staff to discuss GPS market data, the company said in an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 12-340. "Consumers today are overwhelmingly using smartphones for general location and navigation use cases," meaning PND sales are dropping and the installed base is expected by 2020 to be half of what it is today, the company said. Meanwhile, GPS units used in high-precision agriculture and construction make up a small portion of the overall installed base, and companies increasingly are turning to other options such as internal measure units and real-time kinetics, LightSquared said. Garmin dominates the PND market, while John Deere and Trimble are the major players in the use of GPS for high-precision agriculture and construction, and LightSquared's plans for a ground-and-satellite-based LTE broadband network have been opposed by the three over concerns of interference with the Global Navigation Satellite Service bandwidth used by the GPS companies (see 1507010018). Regardless of whether LightSquared is able to reach a settlement with the GPS companies, "the nation cannot afford to risk interference that could debilitate the reception and/or accuracy of GPS signals used for public safety operations," National Public Safety Telecommunications Council Chairman Ralph Haller said in a letter to the FCC posted Wednesday.