Newbie: GPS+iPAQ+Google Map co-ordinates - General Topics

I have a task to collect the Google Map co-ordinates of hotels and guest houses located in a region of the UK.
My idea is to purchase a GPS receiver to use with a Pocket PC handheld device (that I bought years ago), visit the hotels and by utilising the GPS, enter the latitude and longitude co-ordinates into a database application I have installed on this PDA. This database already has the address details of each hotel so my task in the field (well on the street to be more accurate) is to verify the existing information is correct and adding the co-ordinates. Once back in my office, I will then synchronise the PDA database with an Access database on a PC.
However as I do more research I have found there are many applications already in this field although I am not sure which would be suitable for my needs. Are there any that you could paste in a list of 300 hotel names, then walk to a location and simply click a button to store the GPS co-ordinates for a particular hotel?
Facilities at my disposal
Mobile Phone: LG Viewty with unlimited mobile internet @ £1.00 per day
PDA: iPAQ 3850 (no Bluetooth)
OS: Microsoft Pocket PC Version 4.2.xxx
Database: Data On The Run
512Mb SD card installed
iPAQ external battery jacket with available CF slot
I have yet to purchase a GPS or any mapping software.
Therefore I would be extremely grateful for any advice on the best way to approach this (what to buy etc). I should add that I have no need for navigational features.

Related

Off Road GPS Software

I know TomTom is good at on road navigation. Is there any Decent GPS software that uses OS maps, maybe 1:50000 or 1:25000 off road for hill walking etc.
I've tried most of them, and I reckon the best for O.S. maps is
http://www.memory-map.co.uk
They have a CD with all of them on it.
If you don't mid georeferencing them yourself, you might also try http://www.gpsdash.com or www.oziexplorer.com.
GPSDash is the only one that lets you georeference on your PocketPC. The others make you reference the maps on the PC and export them.
Ozi Explorer is faster, and re-projects maps from other formats into WGS84 (so you can use lat/long on OS maps instad of easings/northings). if you are using a bluetooth GPS, there is an issue with using Ozi on the XDA2 (see http://216.218.220.254/ozice/faq_ppc2003.html) which you can solve using Bluetooth Tools (see the article).
A free (but basic) alternative is www.locbrowser.com
One other thing to bear in mind is that TomTom 2.7 upwards will have messed up your bluetooth stack (unless you're running WM2003SE), so you need to soft-reset your Pocket PC after using TomTom before any other GPS program will work. It happens because Tomtom doesn't release the com port even after it has shut down.
Hope that's useful!
Thanks for the suggestions, I will have a look at them. What Would be perfect is a moving 1:25000 map with a cursor where I am. With waypoints and route planning in advance, like real GPS units do.
I have not had any issues with TomTom3 however i dont have any other GPS software to test it with. Yet.
Thanks. M8.
I use Memory-Map and it has all that you mention. 1:25000 is limited at present to National Parks etc but more areas are coming. We've full reviews on our site. You also get both PC and PPC clients so can plan on the PC, upload to the PPC and then copy the actual route you took back to the PC afterwards.
MM2004 has many additional features such as 3D bump mapping on the PC to give a virtual 3D respresentation of an area. Both PC and PPC Clients can be used with a GPS.
yes i like the look of this, will download over the weekend and trial it out in the parks 20 mile away.
Possibly a little late but the trial has no GPS functionality. Just in case you were planning to test this!
Doh, thanks for letting me know, i hadnt downloaded it yet.
Whats the point of a trial that doesnt trial the full software. Its just forces people to look elwhere.
To be fair few offer any trial at all so Memory-Map are to be applauded for offering something.
And as you can only 'trial' it with the small sample map they offer which is unlikley to be of your area then its only purpose is to show you the interface etc.
It is however the best in its field for good reason and I can highly reccomend it.
OK, will take a look at their software, and the maps, for the price it does look good value.

windows mobile application gps application for city walks

Hi,
Ok, I'm looking for an windows mobile application that can help me with making a city walk that must be viewable by regular computers and most recent mobiles.
So e.g. a camera application that add gps coordinates to the photo , a gps application with which I make/walk routes ...
Anybody has any idea's ?
Rgds,
TreMain
update
After some google research I've found Sunnysoft MapView and PhotoTrackrTM for Digital Camera and robogeo .
If you are interested in updates how it works, let me know then I'll tell
you how the above works together for the city walk I'm busy with.
tremain said:
Hi,
Ok, I'm looking for an windows mobile application that can help me with making a city walk that must be viewable by regular computers and most recent mobiles.
So e.g. a camera application that add gps coordinates to the photo , a gps application with which I make/walk routes ...
Anybody has any idea's ?
Rgds,
TreMain
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GPS nav with photos / guider
Hi Tremain
www.c1mobile.com.au supports GPS Guidance with camera, photos, even video and voice files based on GPS geofencing - The "Museum" guidance module was designed to help tour groups around a city with the full tour-guide experience - It's a full voice-guided nav, despatch and vehicle tracking tool used primarily by tech-service fleets (Eg Telstra) .. Only catch is that it's designed for Microsoft Windows UMPCs and tablets (ie Windows XP) not Windows Mobile currently.
The big issue with Windows Mobile has always been the limited multi-tasking capabilities of WM5/6.. Trying to play a movie and navigate, plus send tracking info back to the C1 Mobile server.. And handle updates to the handheld has simply meant that small UMPC's like the Everun
http://store.pressdigital.com.au/mobile-umpc-c-979.html
.. have become the most popular tools for in-field GPS work with multimedia guidance.
Food for thought!
Cheers
Andy
www.pressdigital.com.au
Press Digital Support Team Lead
(Australia's Windows Mobility Solutions Specialists)
Division of www.c1au.com

GPS software for smartphone (no touchscreen)

Hi.
I have a HTC Kaiser which I've gotten to work beautifully with tomtom 6 and the latest USA maps. However, I also have a Samsung Blackjack II which does not work with the tomtom 6, I'm sure that out of the thousands of smartphone users out there, they can't all use google map or something free online crap (I don't have unlimited data). So please, Windows 6 smartphone users out there, tell me what you use for GPS navigation. Thanks.
I just setup Navizon on my mother's blackjack 2 last night. Google maps or windows live should work also, but Navizon has 2 advantages --
1) It also does positioning by cell signal and Wifi signal if it can't lock on GPS.
2) If it does have a gps lock, you collect points while you're using it as it collects data on what cell phone towers you can pick up in different areas, to improve it's cellular positioning system. These points add up fairly quickly (at least, they do on my kaiser) and for every 10k points you earn, they'll pay you $15 via paypal.
If you decide to sign up for navizon, I'd appreciate it if you use my referral link, as then I get bonus points for telling you about it. The referral doesn't reduce your point count or take away from your use in any way, so it's a win-win. Of course, If for some reason you don't want to, you can also go directly to their main site without the referral code and sign up.
Here's the link:
http://my.navizon.com/Webapps/UserAdmin/register.aspx?referral_code=5A575C5F5D5F
HTH!
Gai-jin
you can get tomtom for smartphones !
Oh, one other thing, to get navizon working on the blackjack, I had to install a patch to get the gps working... I believe the url was http://modaco.com/gpsactivatorbj2 -- If that's not right, google for modaco gps activator blackjack 2 -- that should find it.
I prefer Garmin Mobile XT on my HTC Vox. It works with less hiccups than TomTom and has a lighter footprint.

Maps/ Atlas or somthing to find a street offline

I got a T-Mobile SDA and no data plan or edge or any of that. I use Devicescape and wifi and its ok. I am looking to find some free application with map of a city a live in or state I live in.
Is the any free application for it or do I have to buy it and if I must buy it then what am I looking for? (name of application I mean)
Thank you
Microsoft pocket street and trips for smartphone.
take a look at the microsoft website of street and trips, you should find all the info.
How about Microsoft Live Search. It works with my bluetooth GPS and had a ton of other information. I still use TomTom 5.2 for navigation on my phone, but Live Search is a pretty nice product.
Try gpsvp
I use gpsvp. It can download Google maps (both road map and sat imagery) over WiFi and save in the storage card. So I can use it offline. No auto navigation. But shows where I am with great acuracy. Saves the track as I drive, lets me mark POIs, and much more.(I use BT gps reciever). Free download.
-Jole

GNSS Internet Radio and Built in GPS

Hello,
I am new to the forum and also the owner of an HTC Fuze. I have been playing around recently with the GPS on the phone and got me thinking. I live in NY and we have a CORS network of gps base stations that are fed by the use of ntrip.
I was wondering if their was any way to use the gps signal on my phone and the connection to this CORS network to give me sub inch accuracy on my phone...then not sure what I would do with it then. But I do live on a farm and I would like to see some type of precision agricultural use.
I guess I need a way to have the GPS on the phone talk with the GNSS internet radio and then give me spot on guidance and such.
Please let me know your thoughts or if I need to explain better.
Thanks,
Clayton
bump
bump. Any ideas? Anyone
Great idea cwrisrey !
That will save the cost of a geodetic device, which is many times the cost of a Fuze. Further, it will lead the accuracy of the buildin GPS into millimum class.
Not dig into this further, would you go further to tell these:
Is that CORS data encrypted?
Is that accessible through public internet or VPN?
Is there copy right or intellectuall property right issue involved? (I don't think so, but better make it clear first)
Once again, great idea. Please do remember to update this thread once you got any progress. Thanks.
More info
Hello wg5566,
This site would probably answer alot of your questions clearer than I could:
http://www6.nysdot.gov/spiderweb/frmIndex.aspx
* Is that CORS data encrypted?
-I don't believe so, I think that it is just a form of compression, to distribute across the internet.
* Is that accessible through public internet or VPN?
Yes, the NYS CORS anyway. It accessible from the public internet (although they require you to register with them) But I believe there are other free streams. I also believe it was modeled after being able to be sent threw GPRS.
* Is there copy right or intellectuall property right issue involved? (I don't think so, but better make it clear first)
-I believe the ntrip is based on a GNU, I think the source code is available. http://igs.bkg.bund.de/index_ntrip_down.htm
Windows CE version:
http://www.ilmb.gov.bc.ca/crgb/gsr/downloads/installGNSS.CAB
Please, let me know your thoughts...
Thanks,
Clayton
My fast thoughts:
First make sure there is no satisfied freeware currently available for WM.
If so please ask a moderator to move this to the development & hackings section. And Add tyis sentence on the title: Call for developers for revolutionary GPS app!
I'm sure somebody here can develop this. You know the geodetic device was invented many years ago with very weak profiles comparing to current WM devices. The hardware on our phone should be capable to deal with these calculations, and the WM Pro platform should be capable to support such an app. Anyway it should not be a biggy for many masters here. But it is a biggy for gps users with high accuracy demand for any reason.
Edit: Did you try install that wince cab on your phone? I think some of WINCE apps can just run on WM. Please backup your data first.
Edit2: I tried to install it on my device, at first it did not show up in start menu, then I found the cab just put files and shortcut in the folder names in French. But there is no registry involved in the cab. Only three files. And then program UI itself is in English. Just run the executable from the folder will go right out of the box. So please try it. I did not try to connect & loggin yet, due to not registered account.
Edit3: Looks like the cab is only access the data from internet, convert the data format and export the data, but we still need a geodetic/gps software to process/use the data.
Disclaimer: I attatched these three files for the only purppose of exchanging software developement infomation. Anybody if download it please do not use it for any purppose other than this. Thanx.
Some thoughts on the subject
Hi All,
The idea of using NTRIP to make a Windows Mobile GPS device sub-meter accurate crossed my mind. After some research I found this thread.
Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find any software capable of doing this. My idea is that it should be possible to accomplish this goal, using a combination of existing tools (which would be really cool!).
As wg5566 notes, there is a (WM) tool called GNSS Internet Radio, which is capable of downloading NTRIP corrections. It turns out this software works, but does have some flaws. Someone wrote another open source tool which is better (?), but unfortunately it isn't built for Windows Mobile (see: http://lefebure.com/software/).
More searching revealed a (dead?) project on codeplex: SharpGPS. It's an unfinished demo. It does however seem to be designed to do exactly what we're suggesting in this thread.
My idea: Completing the WM version of SharpGPS with parts of GNSS Internet radio / lefebure NTRIP client should result in a tool that's capable of upgrading a WM devices' gps signal to sub-meter accuracy through RTK/DGPS corrections over NTRIP.
Any ideas / suggestions about this?
It's already been done for the commercial market
Land surveyors, construction companies, and farmers use RTK GPS and RTK GNSS correction services on a regular basis. Some are free and some are paid subscription. They can be either NTRIP protocol with casters or individual TCP or UDP connections. Examples of software available are Carlson SurvCE and MicroSurvey. Read Carlson's support site for how they deal with the data flow using such networks on SurvCE (Windows Mobile and CE).
I have worked in land surveying using such equipment, and it generally requires dual frequency receivers, RTK corrections, and high quality antennas to achieve 1-2cm 95% CI horizontal precision. The current GPS chips in cell phones are only single frequency and so the best you could expect under ideal conditions is 2'-3' precision using some form of differential correction like WAAS or beacon or DGPS via NTRIP. Under average conditions, the precision will likely be in the 10-20' range. The dual frequency receivers take care of the large errors caused by radio waves traveling through the ionosphere.
Due to the limitations of batteries, antennas, and space for more chips in cellphones, the future of location accuracy will likely include some combination of GPS/GLONASS and cellular radio signal frequency timing calculations from cell towers. True Position, with its U-TDOA technology, is one example of measuring the time differences of cell phone radio waves using cell towers with known coordinates. Rumors (from surveying journals) have it that there are current patents in place that can allow for sub foot precision using such methods when sufficient cell towers are present for multilateration.
Has anyone found success on this topic? WM or Android...
Would be very interested, since there is a free NTRIP feed available in Switzerland... anyone?
*bump* it up
Been there still trying. Problem is no carrier phase off internal gps.
Grimli said:
Hi All,
The idea of using NTRIP to make a Windows Mobile GPS device sub-meter accurate crossed my mind. After some research I found this thread.
As wg5566 notes, there is a (WM) tool called GNSS Internet Radio, which is capable of downloading NTRIP corrections. It turns out this software works, but does have some flaws. Someone wrote another open source tool which is better (?), but unfortunately it isn't built for Windows Mobile (see: /lefebure.com/software/).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lance lefebure is a really cool guy I'm sure he wouldn't have any problem building a wm version but it is going to takea lot more than that to get rtk to a cell phone.
Very good ,thanks.
Ed hardy bikini said:
Very good ,thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are confused just ask questions and I will do my best to answer them. I am in the ag industry and deal with RTK networks and different ways of connecting them and tons of different gps units on a daily basis.
Look at this:
http://stakemill.wordpress.com/2010/07/19/ashtech-mobile-mapper-100-supports-esri-arcpad-10-0/
and this:
http://www.ashtech.com/-2359.kjsp?RH=1272644205746&RF=1270806507068
Is that still a phone !?
wg5566 said:
Look at this:
Is that still a phone !?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope PDA with support for external GPS with a builtin reciever that even sees glonass satellites (russian constelation). That was made specifically to do RTK mapping. It does have a GSM radio for data to connect to the cors.
Phone positioning using CORS
To perform a CORS (Network Reference correction we need a GGA stream from the GPS in your device. This allows us to remove the anomalies and provde the correction stream. As phones use a sirf II chip or similar they do not have input capability to output the NMEA stream to achieve this.
This one works great! it will connect to an Rtk receiver and get the nmea string from it or will use the internal GPS to be able to register on the CORS network. It will then stream the corrections over Bluetooth to a receiver or even a repeater radio. It won't however correct the internal GPS. http://antrip.dyndns.biz/Home/DownloadTrial

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