Global Positioning System Review – Criteria for A Good GPS

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What are the Criteria for a Good GPS

When reviewing the global positing system on the market today it is important to look at the implications for the community and other factors that are crucial to the success of any community project of such a caliber. It is not always easy to come up with a list of success factors for project that means so many different things to so many different people.

The creation of a global positing system is an ongoing process that requires the unified approach to the planning and implementation of the strategy. When looking at the criteria that determine success, they must be taken within the context of the entire project and not just one aspect. It is the interdependency of the variables that makes the global positing system as volatile as any other project.

Key Issues for the GPS

  1. It must be well funded depending on the model that has been used. If it is done with the assistance of the state, there has to be an ongoing budget allocation to ensure that the project can continue to run even when the short term cash flow issues are resolved. There is a debilitating practice within large projects such as the global positing system to allocate funding on a temporary basis but make no provision for the future existence of the project ideas. That means that the whole thing will stall after a time.
  2. The global positing system has to make use the existing infrastructure within the community. This is a very important point because the GPS cannot be divorced from its objectives. The objectives are to make sure that there is adequate direction in the transportation arrangements for a given geographical location. It is not about creating new structures for the purpose of making them alone. The structures are supposed to assist the GPS rather than hinder the potential progress that it can bring to the community. It also has to be remembered that the existing structures might be so dilapidated that it no longer makes sense to let them continue being used in spite of the impact on the community. Recycling is one of the concepts that might work very well in such a situation.
  3. With the global positing system it is important to ensure that it actually works. If people are falling into lakes and ditches then questions have to be asked about the appropriateness of both the strategy and the technology that is being used. The elephant in the room has to be purged if the global positing system is to work for the community. Many of the schemes that we see in the developed countries are based on ignoring some of the serious problems that are attached to the existing global positing systems. This practice effectively masks the real issues that are associated with the GPS and does not allow for long term development and progression in terms of using the system to effect change within the community.
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