Comment by myself248
Some places have free RTK networks their citizens can use. Michigan's department of transportation, for instance, runs a CORS network that anyone can request access to. (At least as far as I can tell. The signup form doesn't ask for affiliation or payment.) It's just distributed over the internet, the assumption being that you probably have internet access already.
One of these days I'll figure out how to set up a free NTRIP caster on my Galmon station so it can do double-duty. The trick then is advertising and discovery.
It would be lovely to have, say, a standard wifi SSID or a standard LORA channel that your local corrections network would broadcast on. That way you could have a large number of client devices not each needing their own internet access SIM card or whatever. I wonder if the corrections stream would fit into an FM RDS payload or something.
Trouble is, there's so much money in the L-band corrections services, and so little money in replacing them for free...
Oh, yeah, the cryptocurrency folks have weighed in, there's a thing called "goodnet" which appears to be microtransactions in exchange for NTRIP streams over some medium. I haven't looked further into it.
Thanks - that's a lot of good info :)
Sparkfun page suggests one can do some of these adjustments via software too:
https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/what-is-gps-rtk/all
>1 cm accuracy is also possible with a few lower cost receivers (such as the NEO-M8T) by capturing raw streams from the GPS satellites and then post processing the logs with an open source program called RTKLIB.