Editor and Publisher Glen G. Gibbons | First issue January, 2006 | |
Frequency Every other month (print) and daily (web) Circulation (In order of number of subscribers)North America, European Union, East Asia, Russian Federation, South America, Middle East Publisher Glen G. GibbonsElizabeth A. Schmidkunz |
Inside GNSS is an international controlled circulation trade magazine owned by Gibbons Media and Research LLC. It covers space-based positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) technology for engineers, designers and policy-makers of global navigation satellite systems (GNSS). In the United States GNSS is identified mainly with the government-operated Navstar Global Positioning System (GPS). Insidegnss.com is a site of online news, events, digital newsletters and webinars, and archived magazine articles.
Contents
History
Inside GNSS began publication in January 2006 by Gibbons Media and Research LLC, a private company based in Eugene, Oregon USA and owned by Glen G. Gibbons and Elizabeth A. Schmidkunz.
Circulation
The English-language print publication has a circulation of 30,000 qualified subscribers, of which 7,000 are outside the United States.
Editions
The suite of publications includes:
Content
The Inside GNSS editorial content has been heavily weighted towards issues of the four major GNSS operators: the United States (GPS), Russia (GLONASS), China (BeiDou) and the European Union (Galileo). Regional and augmentation systems such as those developed by the United States (WAAS, SBAS), Japan (QZSS) and Europe (EGNOS) as well as eLoran, the terrestrial radionavigation system, are also covered.
As GNSS systems have developed, the magazine has covered the integration of GNSS with other PNT technologies to improve user equipment in places where satellite signals are hard to obtain, the implications for manufacturers and policy-makers as more satellite signals and new systems become available, and the political and legal problems and opportunities that arise as location-based technology becomes increasingly accurate.
Inside GNSS was the first publication to cover several GNSS political decisions and controversies and the first outside of scholarly publications to cover several GNSS technical milestones. The magazine presented the first stories about:
Staff
The editor and publisher is Glen Gibbons, an Oregon journalist who has covered GNSS continuously since 1989, six years before the first U.S. satellite constellation was fully operational in 1995. In 2003, he received the U.S. Institute of Navigation's Norman P. Hays award for inspiration and support contributing to the advancement of navigation. He was the founding editor of GPS World, Galileo’s World, and "GPS World Newsletter." The magazine's Washington correspondent, Dee Ann Divis, received the Robert D.G. Lewis Watchdog Award from the Society of Professional Journalists Washington D.C. Pro Chapter (SPJDC) in 2012 for the extensive coverage of the LightSquared communications network and the controversy over its interference with GPS signals during 2011 and 2012. Divis also won the SPJDC's Dateline Award for Washington Correspondent in both 2012 and 2013. In 2009, Richard Fischer, a former Advanstar Communications vice-president and general manager joined Inside GNSS as Director of Business Development. Gwen Rhoads has served as the magazine's art director since 2006, and Peggie Kegel has been the magazine's circulation director since its founding.
In addition to Gibbons and Divis, the contributing editors are:
Günter Hein, head of Galileo and EGNOS Operations and Evolution for the European Space Agency and a member of the European Commission's signal task force.
Mark Petovello, a professor of geomatics engineering at the University of Calgary (Alberta, Canada) and a member of the Position Location and Navigation research group.
European correspondent Peter Gutierrez, a senior reporter and editor based in Brussels, Belgium, who covers Europe’s GNSS programs.
The magazine has an international Editorial Advisory Council that includes several pioneer developers of GPS technology, including co-inventor of the Global Positioning System Bradford Parkinson, A.J. van Dierendonck, Tom Stansell, Phil Ward and GPS policy developer Jules McNeff.