If you are looking for an address where you are what you say is correct.
But if you are in Atlanta and you want to find an address in a small town
in another state, say Brooksville, Florida, it does NOT work. Try it
yourself. The interface is wonky in my opinion but that does not matter
terri
On Fri, Feb 9, 2018 at 11:34 AM, 'Vic5491' via Osmand
wrote:
> If you are looking for an address where you are what you say is correct.
> But if you are in Atlanta and you want to find an address in a small town in
> another state, say Brooksville, Florida, it does NOT work. Try it yourself.
> The
Hello,
days are becomming longer and temperatures are rising. So I think of hiking
and bicycling.
Up to now I plan my tracks using tools on my PC like bikemap.net,
naviki.org or wandermap.net, save the tracks I've created and copy them to
my tablet or smartphone and can follow them with Osmand+.
As long as they are in the GPX format, you can transfer the files to your
device by putting them in OsmAnd/Tracks/ You might also find
this video useful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjbqrVkFEtY
On Friday, February 9, 2018 at 10:43:51 AM UTC-8, won...@gmx.de wrote:
>
> Hello,
> days are becom
You can create routes (as opposed to tracks) directly in OsmAnd using the
map markers feature. See: the "Plan route" section in:
http://osmand.net/blog?id=osmand-2-8-released .
On Friday, February 9, 2018 at 10:43:51 AM UTC-8, won...@gmx.de wrote:
>
> Hello,
> days are becomming longer and tempe
And finally, you can create a route ahead of time using OsmAnd's remote
routing method, then save it as a GPX for later use. Both this and the Map
markers method I noted before are explained
here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o84C0z3Kydc 8:31 minutes in.
Sorry for the fragmented answer.