On 10/4/2015 3:32 PM, Greg Morgan wrote:
3.) It would be helpful to put in a count of tiles in the red dot. I
was surprised to see some large red dots contain only three tiles
while others contained many. It did not feel like the intuitive dot
size matched the actual size of the effort.
Also
Thanks, Greg, for your suggestions. I commented on most of them in the feedback
forum (http://bit.ly/missing-roads-feedback) where you posted them as well, and
I will follow up with the team to see what we can do about some if not all of
them.
I hope the manual I published on Friday (http://bit
You know what I mean. This would be a Mapping Party method. Why
loan out GPS hardware?
OK, Android, too. Best GPS-phone-enabled app to absorb a decent
Mapping Party wander and upload to a laptop. (Something like
GPSBabel, but streamlined for GPS-phone-to-laptop, could be a USB
cable, coul
Looking at Strava, Galileo, Sygic, MAPS.ME and Cyclemeter GPS now.
SteveA
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TC Haddad writes:
Also look at GoMap! It's the best iOS editor I've used...
I agree that GoMap! is a top iOS editor. I'm specifically looking
for a path, a method: data collected (from the GPS on an iOS device,
like a iPhone) and then uploaded (USB cable, WiFi, Bluetooth...) to a
laptop.
I've tried OsmAnd, OSMTracker and KeypadMapper 3.
The latter two do not show a map.
The first one does.
Still prefer a dedicated GPS-device, in my case a Garmin 10 + photo camera.
Reasons:
* I can take more pictures and faster with the camera. All the smartphone
apps requires to many clicks and
Marc Gemis writes:
I've tried OsmAnd, OSMTracker and KeypadMapper 3.
(and more).
Thank you, Marc! I "prefer" (as it's familiar, though maybe old
school) a dedicated GPS and a USB cable, too. But then there ARE
smartphones enabled with GPS, and they CAN and SHOULD do this sort of
"capture a
Keypadmapper can send the recorded data via email.
OSMTracker can upload the GPX-trace directly to OSM
I use Bluetooth to get the data from OSMTracker or OsmAn to my laptop.
regards
m
On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 7:53 AM, stevea wrote:
> Marc Gemis writes:
>
>> I've tried OsmAnd, OSMTracker and Key
Steve,
For most of my data collection, I find that the built in photos app is
actually all I use. Each photo is geotagged, which comes in handy if I
forget exactly where I was when I took the photo. I end up picking up
details when looking at the pictures later that I didn't originally see
(phon
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