Could you just run the positions through a low pass filter?
Something of the order
x(n) = (1-K)*x(n-1) + K*S(n)
where
S is your noisy samples and x, the low pass filtered samples. K is a constant between 0 and 1 which you would probably have to experiment with for best performance.
Per TK's suggestion:
My pseudocode will look awfully C like:
float noisy_lat[128], noisy_long[128];
float smoothed_lat[128], smoothed_lon[128];
float lat_delay=0., lon_delay=0.;
float smooth(float in[], float out[], int n, float K, float delay)
{
int i;
for (i=0; i<n; i++) {
*out = *in++ * K + delay * (1-K);
delay = *out++;
}
return delay;
}
loop:
Get new samples of position in noisy_lat and noise_lon
// LPF the noise samples to produce smoother position data
lat_delay = smooth(noisy_lat, smoothed_lat, 128, K, lat_delay);
lon_delay = smooth(noisy_lon, smoothed_lon, 128, K, lon_delay);
// Rinse. Repeat.
go to loop:
In a nutshell, this is a simply a feedback integrator with a one-sample delay. If your input has low frequency white-ish noise on top of the desired signal, this integrator will average the input signal over time, thus causing the noise components to average out to near zero, leaving you with the desired signal.
How well it works will depend on how much noise your signal has and the filter feedback factor K. As I said before, you'll have to play around a bit with the value to see which value produces the cleanest, most desirable result.