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Hi, all --
I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G see http://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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![]() wrote in message ... Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G see http://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ The technology is definitely here but I'm not sure if it's here for the water. It's definitely here for the land. I use a Garmin Forerunner 301 for recording my cycle training rides which average 200-300 miles a week. But this is more a land-based unit for land-based workouts such as longer cycling training rides, races or running. The Forerunner has it's own computer-based software that comes on a CD and can be installed to Mac or Windows OS. It's called Training Center. You download what the Forerunner records to your PC. It has some nice tracking features and will place your entire route on a basic road or trail map. It also has a heart rate monitor that keeps track of your workout with respect to heart rate, calories, speed, distance, elevation, zones, laps etc. If you wish to get more detailed maps (Google satellite and topo), weather conditions at the time and a whole lot more as well as comparing your training and routes to what others have recorded you can download for free something called "Motion Based Agent" http://www.motionbased.com/support/h...ort.help.agent You get a lot of good stuff for free and if you want to upgrade ($$) you get a lot more. You didn't say but you're probably looking for something like this but for marine wanderings without the physical fitness parameters. I guess it would still show your route on the map but a watery map unless you're near shore or in the Intracoastal. Check the above site for compatibility with your hardware. I think I recall it saying something about certain Magellan units being compatible. Wilbur Hubbard |
#3
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Forget Motion Based. They are in the process of being bought out by Garmin.
I just tried to use it for the first time in a week or so and it's too slow to be workable. It timed out more often than not. Took over five minutes to upload a couple of days worth of workouts to the inbox. I could not get it to process even one workout to the main page. I sent an e-mail to their support dept and they were kind enough to reply in a timely manner but it doesn't look good. "Thanks for contacting MotionBased support. "I'm very sorry you've been experiencing slow times on the site. We are working hard on improving the speed and performance of the site. We have made great strides both with MotionBased and the new site, Garmin Connect. "Let me know if you need anything further. "Best, "Kathryn MotionBased Staff" ----------------------------------------- When I click the Garmin Connect site it looks like they are dragging their feet bigtime. It must be a low priority project for Garmin. Missing go dates. Missing projections. Also, it looks like there will only be support for limited Garmin hardware in the foreseeable future. Garmin doesn't seem to put a whole lot of priority on customer service. The message I often get from them is, "Buy our stuff, then STFU." I uninstalled this waste of space from my computer. Maybe in a year or two they might get it operational. I'll stick to the local software, Training Center, which is limited but at least it works. Wilbur Hubbard "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message anews.com... wrote in message ... Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G see http://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ The technology is definitely here but I'm not sure if it's here for the water. It's definitely here for the land. I use a Garmin Forerunner 301 for recording my cycle training rides which average 200-300 miles a week. But this is more a land-based unit for land-based workouts such as longer cycling training rides, races or running. The Forerunner has it's own computer-based software that comes on a CD and can be installed to Mac or Windows OS. It's called Training Center. You download what the Forerunner records to your PC. It has some nice tracking features and will place your entire route on a basic road or trail map. It also has a heart rate monitor that keeps track of your workout with respect to heart rate, calories, speed, distance, elevation, zones, laps etc. If you wish to get more detailed maps (Google satellite and topo), weather conditions at the time and a whole lot more as well as comparing your training and routes to what others have recorded you can download for free something called "Motion Based Agent" http://www.motionbased.com/support/h...ort.help.agent You get a lot of good stuff for free and if you want to upgrade ($$) you get a lot more. You didn't say but you're probably looking for something like this but for marine wanderings without the physical fitness parameters. I guess it would still show your route on the map but a watery map unless you're near shore or in the Intracoastal. Check the above site for compatibility with your hardware. I think I recall it saying something about certain Magellan units being compatible. Wilbur Hubbard |
#4
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Aug 21, 2:19*pm, wrote:
Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. *Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. *Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. *Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G seehttp://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ http://goopstechnologies.com/ |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Aug 21, 8:16*pm, "Capt.Bill" wrote:
On Aug 21, 2:19*pm, wrote: Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. *Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. *Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. *Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G seehttp://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ http://goopstechnologies.com/- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - And http://www.findmespot.com/Home.aspx |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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wrote in news:a8347b07-841e-4181-a7f4-fd8bbb1531f8@
8g2000hse.googlegroups.com: I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. It was all great until you said "free". I think Skip has the right idea, though....Spot: http://share.findmespot.com/shared/f...ots.jsp?&glId= 0sKGa9AJRCF45FaX5L5g6PLcZGvSb3nMe Looks like they had to do a bit of tacking in Buzzards Bay, today....(c; They're in Vineyard Haven, tonight. The last fix was 14 minutes ago.... Take a look. You might find Maemo Mapper, a freeware program the hackers wrote for the Nokia N800/N810 Linux internet tablets very handy. MM will track you in realtime on one of several different mapping programs like Google Maps and Virtual Earth and lots of others you can switch between without destroying your track. It saves the track data to a file you can copy off and use with Google Earth or Virtual Earth to replay the trip in standard format. Just put "Maemo Mapper" into YouTube.com to see how well it works. There are even instructional videos from some of the users posted to help you. All the open source freeware the hackers write for it are stored on a Nokia sponsored website: http://www.maemo.org/ Maemo Mapper is available free on: http://maemo.org/downloads/product/OS2008/maemo-mapper/ You DID say you wanted FREE, right? Once it's installed, its wizard installer will ask you if you want to see the "demo repositories" for all the map sources. Most of them are pay for sites, but their map repositories are open to use, anyways. If the tablet is connected via Bluetooth to a cellphone as modem, it will have the range of the cellphone offshore to download more map tiles on-the-fly. You can also get a Map Loader to download a ton of map tiles from your favorite source to store on the tablet's memory cards before you put to sea. That software is available at: http://maemo.org/downloads/product/O...mapdownloader/ The free mapping softwares are all on: http://maemo.org/downloads/OS2008/travel/ There's a new map software the boy geniuses are working on for the tablet, now: http://maemo.org/downloads/product/OS2008/hike/ Hike doesn't use expensive maps. Hike runs off a PICTURE of a map, taken with a digital camera like the one in the Linux tablet or a better one in your cellphone. I see a GREAT use of Hike in a small yacht! Take a picture of each nautical chart for your sailing area..... Introduce the picture to the HIKE software and do its reference point calibration procedure for each picture..... Store them on the tablet's memory card to bring up any time you need one... No expensive chart plugs, no expensive charting software or hardware. The N810 has an internal 12-channel WAAS-compensaged GPS built into it! The N800's gps is via bluetooth externally, which has a great advantage of portability. The N800 tablet must be within 60' of its GPS receiver, which you'd leave somewhere for a clear view of the sky. Then you can roam anywhere on the boat with the GPS data via Bluetooth without having to worry about the tablet being in view of the sky. It just needs that radio link to its tiny GPS receiver. Maemo Mapper is so accurate on Virtual Earth it will place your car with the GPS receiver up on the dash WITHIN THE VERY PARKING SPACE the car is currently parked in.....or perfectly tracking down the correct LANE of the interstate at 70 MPH. Your track even shows you changing lanes... I don't know how long the track can be. I have two 16GB SDHC memory cards and never traveled that far that it ever crashed. |
#7
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On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 15:12:29 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: wrote in message ... Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G see http://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ The technology is definitely here but I'm not sure if it's here for the water. It's definitely here for the land. I use a Garmin Forerunner 301 for recording my cycle training rides which average 200-300 miles a week. But this is more a land-based unit for land-based workouts such as longer cycling training rides, races or running. The Forerunner has it's own computer-based software that comes on a CD and can be installed to Mac or Windows OS. It's called Training Center. You download what the Forerunner records to your PC. It has some nice tracking features and will place your entire route on a basic road or trail map. It also has a heart rate monitor that keeps track of your workout with respect to heart rate, calories, speed, distance, elevation, zones, laps etc. If you wish to get more detailed maps (Google satellite and topo), weather conditions at the time and a whole lot more as well as comparing your training and routes to what others have recorded you can download for free something called "Motion Based Agent" http://www.motionbased.com/support/h...ort.help.agent You get a lot of good stuff for free and if you want to upgrade ($$) you get a lot more. You didn't say but you're probably looking for something like this but for marine wanderings without the physical fitness parameters. I guess it would still show your route on the map but a watery map unless you're near shore or in the Intracoastal. Check the above site for compatibility with your hardware. I think I recall it saying something about certain Magellan units being compatible. Wilbur Hubbard Riding a bicycle does not qualify you to comment about boats. ****head! |
#8
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On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 17:12:46 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: Forget Motion Based. They are in the process of being bought out by Garmin. I just tried to use it for the first time in a week or so and it's too slow to be workable. It timed out more often than not. Took over five minutes to upload a couple of days worth of workouts to the inbox. I could not get it to process even one workout to the main page. I sent an e-mail to their support dept and they were kind enough to reply in a timely manner but it doesn't look good. "Thanks for contacting MotionBased support. "I'm very sorry you've been experiencing slow times on the site. We are working hard on improving the speed and performance of the site. We have made great strides both with MotionBased and the new site, Garmin Connect. "Let me know if you need anything further. "Best, "Kathryn MotionBased Staff" ----------------------------------------- When I click the Garmin Connect site it looks like they are dragging their feet bigtime. It must be a low priority project for Garmin. Missing go dates. Missing projections. Also, it looks like there will only be support for limited Garmin hardware in the foreseeable future. Garmin doesn't seem to put a whole lot of priority on customer service. The message I often get from them is, "Buy our stuff, then STFU." I uninstalled this waste of space from my computer. Maybe in a year or two they might get it operational. I'll stick to the local software, Training Center, which is limited but at least it works. Wilbur Hubbard "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message tanews.com... wrote in message ... Hi, all -- I am just starting toward my goal of being able to track real-time or near-real-time points along a particular wandering and then download/ export/whatever those to Google Earth or a similar mapping tool. Aside from the hardware itself, the goal is to do it for free. I've just been given a Magellan Triton 200 for my birthday, and I want to know if this is the right unit for me. Their tech support says that I cannot export a full track (the entire collection of auto- recorded points along the way) but instead only manually-saved waypoints, but on the other hand it looks like it might work. Getting the data out and into something like Google Earth format, though, is perhaps another challenge. I've seen a single thread that pointed to earthnc.com that looked a little interesting but 1) it seems to be tied to nautical use, which is too limited for me (air + water & ground is nice as well), and 2) it looks like it costs anyway. Maybe I've misread it and/or maybe it will work anyway and/or maybe something else is out there that would serve me better. Has anyone here worked with the Triton in particular or other handheld units in general to provide any opinions and assistance, and is anyone in the habit of exporting auto-recorded tracks to something that will let you follow along and review and share? TIA & HAND :-D -- David T-G see http://justpickeone.org/davidtg/email/ The technology is definitely here but I'm not sure if it's here for the water. It's definitely here for the land. I use a Garmin Forerunner 301 for recording my cycle training rides which average 200-300 miles a week. But this is more a land-based unit for land-based workouts such as longer cycling training rides, races or running. The Forerunner has it's own computer-based software that comes on a CD and can be installed to Mac or Windows OS. It's called Training Center. You download what the Forerunner records to your PC. It has some nice tracking features and will place your entire route on a basic road or trail map. It also has a heart rate monitor that keeps track of your workout with respect to heart rate, calories, speed, distance, elevation, zones, laps etc. If you wish to get more detailed maps (Google satellite and topo), weather conditions at the time and a whole lot more as well as comparing your training and routes to what others have recorded you can download for free something called "Motion Based Agent" http://www.motionbased.com/support/h...ort.help.agent You get a lot of good stuff for free and if you want to upgrade ($$) you get a lot more. You didn't say but you're probably looking for something like this but for marine wanderings without the physical fitness parameters. I guess it would still show your route on the map but a watery map unless you're near shore or in the Intracoastal. Check the above site for compatibility with your hardware. I think I recall it saying something about certain Magellan units being compatible. Wilbur Hubbard For up to the minute news listen to a ****head riding a bicycle? Not! |
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