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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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vzett wrote:
Ray, Along these lines I would like to be able to use GE off line as a navigation aid. Some of the areas I cruise in have fairly gross differences between charted lat/long and GPS lat/long. It seems the difficulty is getting past the GE cache limit, 2GB if I am correct. So, what I would like to do is download a fairly large area and then track my progress via GPS. Doing this in combination with my chart plotter, radar, etc. If you can solve THAT issue then I think you have something unique. Maybe also illegal. Or, if there is a already a way to do that, I would appreciate hearing about it. Many thanks, Howard Howard, The 2GB cache will cover a lot more ground than most imagine, especially in terms of boating distances. The key is to 'preview' your trip while connected and not concentrate zoomed-in viewing outside of areas you're likely to need. An easy way to cache a route is to use the Path Tool in Google Earth to rough out a track, highlight it in the places menu, then click the 'Play Tour' button at the bottom of the Places menu. This will cause GE to 'fly' your route at low altitude. You can adjust your flying speed in Tools - Options - Touring to pace it with your internet connection speed to grab the imagery. You can get a similar effect with more 'stand-off' range by creating a folder and filling it with placemarks spaced along your route. GE will zoom out more while flying between placemarks vs flying a route line. If you're really into experimenting, then Google Earth Voyager will let you 'scan' a defined area. GE Voyager is easy, but you've got to follow the instructions pretty close (see http://destinsharks.com/google-earth-maps/162 for more information). As far as offline charting with GE goes, EarthNC Plus Google Earth charts are designed for this use case such that navaids, depths, etc.. are all available on your local hard drive. Real-time tracking is available with GooPs GPS to Google Earth software, and a low-cost USB GPS. The entire set-up, less laptop, is only $160 including a USB GPS unit. - Virgil Virgil, Well now I have something to do this coming weekend. I'll give it a go. Somewhere else I saw directions for saving the various cache files under different names. Unfortunately no live connections are available where I'm going. But then again, that is why I go where I go. Many thanks, Howard |
#12
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Jan 8, 9:31 pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 16:41:17 -0800 (PST), vzett wrote: Real-time tracking is available with GooPs GPS to Google Earth software, and a low-cost USB GPS. The entire set-up, less laptop, is only $160 including a USB GPS unit. Interesting. Exactly what software components and options are needed? Is there documentation on how to pull down the Google Earth data? Here's a write-up on managing the Google Earth cache: http://earthnc.com/forum?forum=5&topic=2&page=1 - Virgil |
#13
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Thanks.
On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 03:45:46 -0800 (PST), vzett wrote: On Jan 8, 9:31 pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 16:41:17 -0800 (PST), vzett wrote: Real-time tracking is available with GooPs GPS to Google Earth software, and a low-cost USB GPS. The entire set-up, less laptop, is only $160 including a USB GPS unit. Interesting. Exactly what software components and options are needed? Is there documentation on how to pull down the Google Earth data? Here's a write-up on managing the Google Earth cache: http://earthnc.com/forum?forum=5&topic=2&page=1 - Virgil |
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