Hi Qiang-- As part of my Masters I did a comparison study between the Android G1 (1st Android smartphone) and A Trimble Juno. The G1 (on pure GPS mode, no cell service or assisted GPS) performed more "truthfully" than the Trimble. I have it written up here:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/285698231_Smartphones_in_the_field_preliminary_study_comparing_GPS_capabilities_between_a_smartphone_and_dedicated_GPS_device?ev=prf_pub This is ONLY for Android, and technologically dated. I have no research data for iPhone (at the time iPhone only offered aGPS and I wanted stand-alone GPS for comparison to the Trimble) At conference presentations I often received audience stories of how they found anecdotally the phone to be more reliable than the stand-alone GPS (my favorite being the researchers in Greenland). I have several colleagues who have switched to deploying smartphones for fieldwork, as well as individuals at state gov't agencies. As for apps, it depends if you're what you're interested in doing... Hope that helps some =) -Anna Klimaszewski-Patterson Ph.D. Candidate Department of Geography University of Nevada, Reno On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 6:23 PM, Qiang Zhou <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear colleagues, > > Does anyone have experience in using Cell Phone GPS and Google map for > field work? > It seems that iCloud is a plus for data safety. But I am not sure about > the data quality. > If anyone had tried this before, would you please let me know: is there > any APP for the task, and what to be careful? > > Thank you very much. > > Sincerely, > > Qiang Zhou, Land Change Scientist > ASRC Federal InuTeq, contractor to USGS EROS > 47914 252nd Street > Sioux Falls, SD 57198 > tel: 605-594-2843 > fax: 605-594-6529 > [email protected] >
