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<article language="en">
	<journal>
		<journal_title>Social Geography Discussions</journal_title>
		<journal_url>www.soc-geogr-discuss.net</journal_url>
		<issn>1816-1499</issn>
		<eissn>1816-1502</eissn>
		<volume_number>2</volume_number>
		<issue_number>1</issue_number>
		<publication_year>2006</publication_year>
	</journal>
	<doi>10.5194/sgd-2-27-2006</doi>
	<article_url>http://www.soc-geogr-discuss.net/2/27/2006/</article_url>
	<abstract_html>http://www.soc-geogr-discuss.net/2/27/2006/sgd-2-27-2006.html</abstract_html>
	<fulltext_pdf>http://www.soc-geogr-discuss.net/2/27/2006/sgd-2-27-2006.pdf</fulltext_pdf>
	<start_page>27</start_page>
	<end_page>62</end_page>
	<publication_date>2006-09-01</publication_date>
	<article_title content_type="html">&quot;You have reached your destination!&quot; Position, positioning and superpositioning of space through car navigation systems</article_title>
	<authors>
		<author numeration="1" affiliations="1">
			<name>T. Thielmann</name>
		</author>
	</authors>
	<affiliations>
		<affiliation numeration="1" content_type="html">SFB/FK 615, Project &quot;Media Geography&quot;, University of Siegen, Germany</affiliation>
	</affiliations>
	<abstract content_type="html">Recent cultural theory has paid increasing attention to the category of
space. What has received less attention, however, are ideas of navigation
through space. From a media scientific viewpoint, maps as a representation
of space have played a central role since the very early stages of the
creation of spatial information systems. The relevance of maps has also been
revitalised in recent years through new computer visualizations and
dynamizations of cartographic imagery which has led to the
establishment of &quot;mobile cartography&quot; as a novel topic for research.

&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
This paper argues that future developments resulting from convergence in
geography, media and communication technologies can be inferred based on the
increasing phenomenon of car navigation systems. But this new subject matter
for social geographic research may itself become superseded, because future
GPS-based localization will operate with greatly reduced symbolic sign
systems. The newest mobile positioning applications no longer direct the car
driver through traffic by simply using arrows, but represent the
environment true to reality.

&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
On the monitor of these navigation systems, based on &quot;augmented reality&quot;,
the user sees the world and the road ahead from the same point of view as it
is seen from the driver&apos;s seat. The &quot;conversion&quot; of abstract maps by the
driver is no longer applicable. In addition, &quot;augmented reality&quot; in
combination with a head-up display can ensure that drivers are looking
straight at their route, displayed directly onto the windshield. The
constitutional moment of this medium is the constant oscillation between
environmental space and two-dimensional projection space.

&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
The new generation of navigation systems therefore result in concrete
manifestation of what Edward Soja (1999) describes as the rise of the
perspective of a third space. The driver himself is in the first space and
through the windscreen sees a first space that can be experienced
physically. Via the head-up display, a second space is simultaneously
projected before his eyes as a mental concept of space. These spaces, when
overlaid and integrated into each other, represent something like a
&quot;both/and&quot; instead of an &quot;either/or&quot; through this hybridity, mobility and
simultaneity. Such a complex understanding of space opens up new spaces.</abstract>
	<references>
	</references>
</article>

