There is an application for Android Mobile Topographer (Pro). In Pro version it is 15 EUR?
It has many very interesting features to measure and use GPS including calibration on known point etc. There is only one problem with this application. It has no automatic backup of measured data. So only way around is export data to an available format and save it manually. Topographer crashed on my Android tablet and I loose all my GPS points. On other hand the uninstallation and new installation was without any problem. Just to backup a folder with exports before. m.s. > 11. 9. 2017 v 20:53, Xavier Pennec via Therion <[email protected]>: > > One of the problem for a predefined accuracy of gps measures is that it > really depends on each measurement. I usually use a stddev of 2 to 3 times > the figure of merit (FOM) of the GPS averaging procedure for x and y > coordinates and 4 to 5 times for the altitude. This can range from a few > meters (this has to be on a plateau with no trees) to 50/100 m for > measurements in forests with a few satellites only (there are also often > reflections on cliffs that perturb the measure). > > Xavier > > Le 11-Sep-17 à 19:10, Benedikt Hallinger via Therion a écrit : >> No, i meant the following: >> >> currently one has to give std-dev explicitely: >> fix 1.2a 0.5 0.5 0.5 >> >> it would be nice to use instead: >> fix 1.2a gps >> where the term "gps" is some predefined accuracy, like in grade definition >> >> >> Am 2017-09-11 10:08, schrieb Bruce Mutton via Therion: >>> Benedikt wrote >>>> The option to use "alias names" for fixes instead of directly numbers >>>> would be good, this would allow to ship standards with therion and allow >>>> the user to to define custom ones, just like in grade definitions. >>> >>> Not sure I understand correctly what you mean. >>> >>> We can make alias now, using equate. This is what I usually do for gps >>> fixes. >>> >>> In a cave survey 'index data file'... >>> centreline >>> cs lat long >>> fix gpsEntrance01 <lat> <long> <altitude> [<stderr> etc ] >>> fix gpsEntrance02 <lat> <long> <altitude> >>> etc >>> >>> equate gpsEntrance01 53@<survey1> >>> equate gpsEntrance02 1@<survey14> >>> equate gpsEntrance01 AliasNameCreatedByThisStatement >>> endcentreline >>> >>> ie 53@<survey1>, gpsEntrance01 and AliasNameCreatedByThisStatement are all >>> alias' of each other. They all refer to the same physical point. The last >>> name is created by the equate statement, whereas the others all exist prior >>> to the execution of the equate statements. >>> >>> Or were you meaning something different? >>> >>> Bruce >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Therion mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> https://mailman.speleo.sk/listinfo/therion >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Therion mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://mailman.speleo.sk/listinfo/therion > > -- >> ------------------------- >> Xavier Pennec >> Senior Research Scientist / Directeur de recherche >> Asclepios project-team, INRIA Sophia-Antipolis >> 2004 Route des Lucioles, BP93 >> F-06902 Sophia-Antipolis Cedex, France >> +33 4 92 38 76 64 >> +33 6 78 35 16 90 >> http://www-sop.inria.fr/asclepios/ >> ------------------------------- > > _______________________________________________ > Therion mailing list > [email protected] > https://mailman.speleo.sk/listinfo/therion _______________________________________________ Therion mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.speleo.sk/listinfo/therion
