Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

News: Long live the Glorious Revolution!

Author Topic: GPS  (Read 1477 times)

Offline Flemingovia

  • *
  • Posts: 669
  • Official Taijitu Minister of Apathy
GPS
« on: January 23, 2007, 08:28:50 AM »
Hand held GPS! I got a handheld GPS for geocacheing for my birthday.

I are excited!

Offline The Empire

  • *
  • Posts: 2829
  • Glory to the dark gods!
Re: GPS
« Reply #1 on: February 05, 2007, 06:59:39 AM »
I can understand that, How does it work? How long does it last on one battery charge and what other fancy gadgets can you link it up with?

Join the Word Bearer legion and brin glory to the dark gods! Taijitu stalker extraordinaire - no Taijituan presses a key without my knowledge, Resident Cannibal - I prefer females, Resident ginormous dragon - It is not a good idea to mess with a dragon who is packing heavy firepower

Offline Flemingovia

  • *
  • Posts: 669
  • Official Taijitu Minister of Apathy
Re: GPS
« Reply #2 on: February 05, 2007, 07:56:00 AM »
Basically, you enter a latitude and longitude, and it will point you towards that point. There is more to it than that, but that is the gist. A GPS can get you to within about 10 feet of any point on earth.

GPS systems have given rise to two sports: Waymarking and geocaching. In waymarking people post on the net the lat/long of interesting sites, viewpoints, buildings etc, so that others can visit them.

In Geocaching people hide small treasure troves, and post the lat/long of the trove. The GPS will get you close, but you need to hunt - like a treasure hunt. there are often clues and stuff to solve too.

The battery on my GPS lasts about 30 hours, and it will link to my computer so that I can download waymarks and caches.

Offline The Empire

  • *
  • Posts: 2829
  • Glory to the dark gods!
Re: GPS
« Reply #3 on: February 05, 2007, 09:18:55 AM »
Cool, I knew how the GPS network works and also know that civilian GPS recivers are limited to a certain number of satelites less than military GPS recivers who need far better accuracy.

Geocoaching sounds extremely fun, also, what map-systems are your GPS compatible with? I know that we in Sweden use nationalized map-grid systems paralell to international ones and that map-system is quite different.

Join the Word Bearer legion and brin glory to the dark gods! Taijitu stalker extraordinaire - no Taijituan presses a key without my knowledge, Resident Cannibal - I prefer females, Resident ginormous dragon - It is not a good idea to mess with a dragon who is packing heavy firepower

Offline Flemingovia

  • *
  • Posts: 669
  • Official Taijitu Minister of Apathy
Re: GPS
« Reply #4 on: February 05, 2007, 02:19:35 PM »
in the UK most Geocaches come with grid references for the Ordinance Survey maps. Civilian GPS systems are limited to 16 channels - I do not know how this compares with the military. Given the number of times they blow up their own side, I suspect they are less accurate that this (lol). The sport of geocaching arose once the military stopped scrambling some of their signals.

Geocaching is really fun, a good excuse for a walk in the country.

Offline The Empire

  • *
  • Posts: 2829
  • Glory to the dark gods!
Re: GPS
« Reply #5 on: February 05, 2007, 04:15:30 PM »
I would say much of the "friendly fire" is due to crappy training when it comes to rapidly and correctly identify a target and that that training probably doesn't encompass "allied" vehicles or painting schemes...
Plus large concentrations ofd overconfident troops in relatively small areas.

I bet geocoaching sounds great and would like to try it someday :)

Join the Word Bearer legion and brin glory to the dark gods! Taijitu stalker extraordinaire - no Taijituan presses a key without my knowledge, Resident Cannibal - I prefer females, Resident ginormous dragon - It is not a good idea to mess with a dragon who is packing heavy firepower

Offline Boring Newcomer

  • *
  • Posts: 5
Re: GPS
« Reply #6 on: May 11, 2007, 04:24:38 PM »
I swapped a inexpensive digicam of mine against a old Garmin with a additional handle bar attachment but haven't tested it yet.

Internal batteries should last about 20 hours and I Also have some 12V adapter to power it from the motorcycle battery. OK, a handheld is surely only a lame substitute for a real navigation system with included maps. - OTOH: It might serve some purpose to avoid driving 3 circles through Amsterdam while searching for the youth hostel, or getting back on your way or to your tent during a motorbiking vacation, when you usually take the narrowest available road which offers the sharpest turns. - I fear any less than extremely sophisticated navi, designed for cars, might get mad there.

And sure careless hiking or exploring cities - safe whereever you park and let it lead you back sounds promising too. BTW, am I the only one who ever spend ages finding hir vehicle on a huge and crowded shopping mal's parking lot? - I rode something extremely unique but didn't realize that all the cars around it were higher...

Does anybody know where there is a free service providing coordinates of street adresses?