Defacto Industry GPS Chip Hits Next Generation
| Author | Gordon Kelly |
| Published | 29th Jul 2009 |
SiRF, it may have serious issues with upper and lower case letters but the company's SiRFStarIII GPS chip is by far the most prominent in the sat nav and smartphone world. It is starting to get long in the tooth however, which is where the SiRFStarIV comes in...

The new line will launch with the 'GSD4t' which the company claims will bring:
- Twice the search capacity of the SiRFStarIII architecture, resulting in better sensitivity, half the time to get a lock and improved positional accuracy
- Advanced micro-power management that allows the chip to run in the background all the time via a 'TricklePower mode' meaning fixes and tracking can be more easily maintained
- The ability to work indoors by storing its last location and working with accelerometers and sensors to calculate positioning
Interestingly, SiRF (technically 'CSR' after the two merged in June - but it provides less keyboard fun) says the flexibility of affordability of the SiRFStarIV in bulk quantities could also see it used in a much wider range of electronics. This should help the proliferation of GPS into laptops while cameras are expected to be the next major beneficiaries.
So it may just be a GPS chip, but the SiRFStarIV looks set to be a jolly important one...
Link:
Press Release
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GearGeek said on 29th July 2009
Tony Walker said on 30th July 2009
Wow! The SiRF Star III was a fantastic GPS chip so if this one is even better then it will indeed be worth waiting for.
@GearGeek one of the TomToms based on the III... more
GearGeek said on 30th July 2009
Tony Walker, thanks for that. 6 months might be just a little bit too long, so i might go for a current TomTom. Do all the current range use the III chip and if not is it relativel... more
Tony Walker said on 2nd August 2009
@GearGeek
Tomtom themselves just quote "a high sensitivity chipset". I've just googled "go 740 sirfstar" though and that appears to use it. ... more
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Any idea when these might start to make their way into Sat Navs etc? I'd like to upgrade my very very old Tomtom but i'll probably hold off if these are fairly imminent.