GPS devices use signals from satellites to determine location. Before hiking, download offline maps and plan routes or import tracks. During hiking, use GPS apps like OruxMaps to navigate routes or follow tracks. Apps provide compass directions and estimated times to navigate between waypoints or track points. After hiking, tracks can be viewed to see the path taken and get statistics.
Aimed at touring cyclists. Looks at how to how to prepare a route and navigate during the ride, log your route and the hardware and software you will need. The examples use a iPhone, but most of the software is available for Android.
Aimed at touring cyclists. Looks at how to how to prepare a route and navigate during the ride, log your route and the hardware and software you will need. The examples use a iPhone, but most of the software is available for Android.
How Does GPS Work? And Why Do You Need To Understand It? Bob Mayer
Understanding how GPS works will give you insight into how effective it is, how accurate and how much you rely on it. Why does your car get your location faster at certain times? How many satellites are there? Does your cell phone GPS need reception for the GPS to work?
This slidedeck presents a brief scan of the web mapping and geographic information (GIS) tools that were explored during the Indigenous Mapping Workshop 2014 (IMW2014) held at the University of Victoria 25-28 August 2014.
The workshop was attended by 100+ participants, representing more than 40 First Nations, Metis and Inuit communities from across Canada.
The Workshop was jointly hosted/organized by the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, the Firelight Group, Google Earth Outreach, and the University of Victoria, Anthropology Department.
The scan is not comprehensive, favouring the tools that were explored in the Day3/4 "deep dives".
More information on the tools and workshop are available here: http://imwcanada.earthoutreach.org
Drawing an orienteering map is often portrayed as a complex task best left to the experts. In some cases that is true but that should not stop anyone from taking advantage of relatively new tools available on line to make realistic orienteering maps with all the right symbols of their neighborhood park, school ground or other interesting area. This show is designed to point Americans to the resources they have readily available FOR FREE.
Slides used in a Digimap webinar in February 2013. Covers available map data in the Digimap Collections (subscription services for UK further and higher edcation) and its use in ArcGIS. Information on data formats, data conversion tools and data styling.
Rob Savoye, Freelance Developer, OSM Data Manipulation | Workshop | SotM Asia...Kathmandu Living Labs
State of the Map Asia (SotM-Asia) is the annual regional conference of OpenStreetMap (OSM) organized by OSM communities in Asia. First SotM-Asia was organized in Jakarta, Indonesia in 2015, and the second was organized in Manila, Philippines in 2016. This year’s conference, third in the series, was organized in Kathmandu, Nepal on September 23 – 24, 2017 at Park Village Resort, Budhanilkantha, Kathmandu, Nepal.
We brought nearly 200 Open Mapping enthusiasts from Asia and beyond to this year’s SotM-Asia. The event provided an opportunity to share knowledge and experience among mappers; expand their network; and generate ideas to expand map coverage and effective use of OSM data in Asian continent. We chose ‘from creation to use of OSM data’ as the theme of this year’s conference, emphasizing on the effective use of OSM data. We also brought together a government panel from four different countries in this year’s SotM-Asia. We believe this event will deepen the bond and enhance collaboration among OSM communities across Asia.
More information about the conference can be found on: http://stateofthemap.asia.
How Does GPS Work? And Why Do You Need To Understand It? Bob Mayer
Understanding how GPS works will give you insight into how effective it is, how accurate and how much you rely on it. Why does your car get your location faster at certain times? How many satellites are there? Does your cell phone GPS need reception for the GPS to work?
This slidedeck presents a brief scan of the web mapping and geographic information (GIS) tools that were explored during the Indigenous Mapping Workshop 2014 (IMW2014) held at the University of Victoria 25-28 August 2014.
The workshop was attended by 100+ participants, representing more than 40 First Nations, Metis and Inuit communities from across Canada.
The Workshop was jointly hosted/organized by the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, the Firelight Group, Google Earth Outreach, and the University of Victoria, Anthropology Department.
The scan is not comprehensive, favouring the tools that were explored in the Day3/4 "deep dives".
More information on the tools and workshop are available here: http://imwcanada.earthoutreach.org
Drawing an orienteering map is often portrayed as a complex task best left to the experts. In some cases that is true but that should not stop anyone from taking advantage of relatively new tools available on line to make realistic orienteering maps with all the right symbols of their neighborhood park, school ground or other interesting area. This show is designed to point Americans to the resources they have readily available FOR FREE.
Slides used in a Digimap webinar in February 2013. Covers available map data in the Digimap Collections (subscription services for UK further and higher edcation) and its use in ArcGIS. Information on data formats, data conversion tools and data styling.
Rob Savoye, Freelance Developer, OSM Data Manipulation | Workshop | SotM Asia...Kathmandu Living Labs
State of the Map Asia (SotM-Asia) is the annual regional conference of OpenStreetMap (OSM) organized by OSM communities in Asia. First SotM-Asia was organized in Jakarta, Indonesia in 2015, and the second was organized in Manila, Philippines in 2016. This year’s conference, third in the series, was organized in Kathmandu, Nepal on September 23 – 24, 2017 at Park Village Resort, Budhanilkantha, Kathmandu, Nepal.
We brought nearly 200 Open Mapping enthusiasts from Asia and beyond to this year’s SotM-Asia. The event provided an opportunity to share knowledge and experience among mappers; expand their network; and generate ideas to expand map coverage and effective use of OSM data in Asian continent. We chose ‘from creation to use of OSM data’ as the theme of this year’s conference, emphasizing on the effective use of OSM data. We also brought together a government panel from four different countries in this year’s SotM-Asia. We believe this event will deepen the bond and enhance collaboration among OSM communities across Asia.
More information about the conference can be found on: http://stateofthemap.asia.
Global Situational Awareness of A.I. and where its headedvikram sood
You can see the future first in San Francisco.
Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to secure every power contract still available for the rest of the decade, every voltage transformer that can possibly be procured. American big business is gearing up to pour trillions of dollars into a long-unseen mobilization of American industrial might. By the end of the decade, American electricity production will have grown tens of percent; from the shale fields of Pennsylvania to the solar farms of Nevada, hundreds of millions of GPUs will hum.
The AGI race has begun. We are building machines that can think and reason. By 2025/26, these machines will outpace college graduates. By the end of the decade, they will be smarter than you or I; we will have superintelligence, in the true sense of the word. Along the way, national security forces not seen in half a century will be un-leashed, and before long, The Project will be on. If we’re lucky, we’ll be in an all-out race with the CCP; if we’re unlucky, an all-out war.
Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the wilful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.
Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.
Let me tell you what we see.
STATATHON: Unleashing the Power of Statistics in a 48-Hour Knowledge Extravag...sameer shah
"Join us for STATATHON, a dynamic 2-day event dedicated to exploring statistical knowledge and its real-world applications. From theory to practice, participants engage in intensive learning sessions, workshops, and challenges, fostering a deeper understanding of statistical methodologies and their significance in various fields."
Analysis insight about a Flyball dog competition team's performanceroli9797
Insight of my analysis about a Flyball dog competition team's last year performance. Find more: https://github.com/rolandnagy-ds/flyball_race_analysis/tree/main
The Building Blocks of QuestDB, a Time Series Databasejavier ramirez
Talk Delivered at Valencia Codes Meetup 2024-06.
Traditionally, databases have treated timestamps just as another data type. However, when performing real-time analytics, timestamps should be first class citizens and we need rich time semantics to get the most out of our data. We also need to deal with ever growing datasets while keeping performant, which is as fun as it sounds.
It is no wonder time-series databases are now more popular than ever before. Join me in this session to learn about the internal architecture and building blocks of QuestDB, an open source time-series database designed for speed. We will also review a history of some of the changes we have gone over the past two years to deal with late and unordered data, non-blocking writes, read-replicas, or faster batch ingestion.
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Round table discussion of vector databases, unstructured data, ai, big data, real-time, robots and Milvus.
A lively discussion with NJ Gen AI Meetup Lead, Prasad and Procure.FYI's Co-Found
Learn SQL from basic queries to Advance queriesmanishkhaire30
Dive into the world of data analysis with our comprehensive guide on mastering SQL! This presentation offers a practical approach to learning SQL, focusing on real-world applications and hands-on practice. Whether you're a beginner or looking to sharpen your skills, this guide provides the tools you need to extract, analyze, and interpret data effectively.
Key Highlights:
Foundations of SQL: Understand the basics of SQL, including data retrieval, filtering, and aggregation.
Advanced Queries: Learn to craft complex queries to uncover deep insights from your data.
Data Trends and Patterns: Discover how to identify and interpret trends and patterns in your datasets.
Practical Examples: Follow step-by-step examples to apply SQL techniques in real-world scenarios.
Actionable Insights: Gain the skills to derive actionable insights that drive informed decision-making.
Join us on this journey to enhance your data analysis capabilities and unlock the full potential of SQL. Perfect for data enthusiasts, analysts, and anyone eager to harness the power of data!
#DataAnalysis #SQL #LearningSQL #DataInsights #DataScience #Analytics
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
https://www.meetup.com/unstructured-data-meetup-new-york/
This meetup is for people working in unstructured data. Speakers will come present about related topics such as vector databases, LLMs, and managing data at scale. The intended audience of this group includes roles like machine learning engineers, data scientists, data engineers, software engineers, and PMs.This meetup was formerly Milvus Meetup, and is sponsored by Zilliz maintainers of Milvus.
1. GPS Tutorial for Hikers
How to efficiently use your mobile as GPS navigator for hiking
By Marc TORBEY
Examples from the Android software OruxMaps
V1.0
1
2. Table of contents
• Basics about GPS for hiking slide 3
• Before the hike slide 12
• It’s hiking day! slide 20
• After the hike slide 31
2
4. Abbreviations used
• GE Google Earth (free software for computers)
• GPS Global Positioning System
• OM Orux Maps (GPS application for Android phones)
• POI Point Of Interest (on a map)
• WP Waypoint
4
5. GPS
Global Positioning System
• Several satellite around planet Earth, broadcast GPS “signals”:
– GPS devices receive satellite signals… no transmission
– Weak signals from remote satellites, so…
• perceptible Outdoors only!
• 1st “GPS fix” requires user to be still (not moving)
• Origin of GPS systems
– USA: NAVSTAR
– Russia: GLONASS (since 2010)
– UE: Galileo (available in 2020).
• Goals of GPS systems:
– Basic goal: knowing your position on a map
– Navigation: sea, land (car)
– Orientation: hiking trips
5
6. GPS maps
Typically a digital map is either
• A sophisticated software object comprising a
drawing of the landscape (with roads, public
monuments, …) + a database of POIs + some
intelligent software capable of giving you
directions to reach your destination POI.
– Requires Internet connectivity, to access the
latest maps and POIs.
– Usually expensive
Example Google maps
• Or a simple picture, showing the landscape
and possibly the roads.
– No navigation capabilities but…
Ok for hiking!
– Can be used off-line by
software like OM
– Usually available free of charge
– Ex: Google Earth/ Hybrid
6
7. GPS objects - Waypoints
• A Waypoint is a point on the map, created in order
to locate an important place on the map…
– either by the “Create waypoint” function of the OM mobile
(marks the user’s current location)
– Or by clicking a point on the “Map”
– Or by some software
• On Google Earth it is called a Placemark. (Add →
Placemark)
• On Nokia phones it is called a landmark
• Any WP can be used as target for orientation
– A compass indicates the direction and the distance to it.
See page 26.
7
8. GPS objects - Routes
• A Route is an ordered set of waypoints,
used to guide you throughout your hike.
• It is created from waypoints …
– on the mobile, with software like OM
– Or on the laptop using some software
8
9. GPS objects - Tracks
• A Track is a path walked by a hiker and recorded on his GPS
device.
– Used after your hike, to locate where you’ve walked and get statistical
data.
– A track recorded by another hiker could be uploaded to your GPS
device (e.g. smartphone) and used to walk along this track as shown on
your mobile’s map.
9
10. File types – Useful software programs
• File types:
– Each GPS vendor has developed its own GPS software which uses proprietary
file types to describe the GPS objects. Example :*.lmx, *.trk, *.loc, *.hwr, etc.
• Garmin navigators use *.gdb (Garmin database, version 3)
• Google Earth uses *.kml (keyhole markup language)
– The .gpx type was created as an effort to have a common file type, normally
understood by all GPS navigators and GPS software.
• A gpx file may contain any combination of WPs, routes and tracks.
– OruxMaps uses .gpx and .kml types
• Useful software programs to have:
– Google Earth is great for planning hikes! It requires a fast Internet connection.
– A software to translate between all the different file types:
• “GPS Babel” is the freeware to use.
– A software to view a track on a map and get statistical information about it:
• “GPS Track Viewer” is a good freeware, or on line, for example at
http://gpstrackviewer.free.fr/
10
11. Navigation towards a target point
• A few basic definitions
– The target, is the next waypoint you want to
reach on your route
– The heading, in degree (0° to 360°, 0° being
the north, 90° the east), which is the angle
between the geographic north and the
current direction you are looking at (the
orientation of your phone); (ex: +30°)
– The bearing of the target, in degree, which
is the angle between the geographic north
and the targeted waypoint, at your current
location; (ex +120°)
– The direction of the target, in degree, which
is the angle between your current heading
and the bearing of the target, at your current
location; (ex : 120° - 30° = +90°)
11
Target
WP
x
device
heading
Target
bearing
Target
direction
N
W E
S
Direction = bearing - heading
12. Before the hike
1. Downloading a digital map
2. Preparing to follow a route
3. Preparing to follow a track
12
13. Downloading a map
for off-line use
Before you go hike in some nice place… you need to have a digital map of that
place, accessible off-line on your mobile.
• With OM, you can Create a map easily, for off-line use
– Make sure you have Internet connection on your mobile
– In the Maps menu, select Switch map, then select the ONLINE tab.
– Select your preferred map type, among the dozens proposed:
• Good worldwide map types are Google Hybrid and Microsoft Hybrid
• Look for the best available map covering the area of the planned hike
• Check the max zoom level you want to have.
– In the Maps menu, select Map Creator
• Select the map area you want to download: click 2 opposite corners of a rectangle, then
ok
• Input a map name
• Select the zoom levels you want (usually min= 10, max = 16, 17 or 18)
– Check the map size in Mb (max = 1024 Mb), decrease max zoom level if needed.
• Tick Don’t stop downloading if there are missing tiles’ then click Download
13
14. Planning a hike
Creating a Route or Importing an existing track
• When you want to go hiking, in a place which you do not know well,
there are 2 ways to find your way:
1. Using a software like GE, create a route = a set of several successive
waypoints you intend to walk by, presuming there is a way to walk from
one WP to the next.
2. Or, it is possible to hike along a track recorded by someone else…
• from Wikiloc website or any other similar site = a database of tracks, or
• sent to you by another GPS user you know, or even
• recorded by yourself during a previous hike
In both cases, in order to exchange files between your computer and your mobile,
you could create once and for all, the following folder on your mobile:
…/oruxmaps/file_exchange
14
15. OM
mobile
N waypoints + 1 Route
N placemark files
• kml files
Import the kml file into OM
Create & Save N placemarks
File→ Save Place As…*.kml
Google Earth (3D)
Connect mobile,
Copy kml file to device
• 1 kml file
N waypoints
PC file manager
N times
Merge N placemarks
into 1 kml file
N x File→ Open
then Save Place As…*.kml
Build a Route
OruxMaps
Save it as KML
15
Planning a route using GE (overview)
16. Planning a hike route using GE (1/2)
Creating & importing the waypoints to the mobile device
• Planning a hike route = creating N placemarks on GE
– On your computer, using GE :
• repeat N times: Create several Placemarks on planned hike : Right-click
on each of these placemarks, then select Save place as Plxx.kml.
• Close GE.
• Then merge these N files: re-open GE, File→Open then select all N files
together (shift click). They appear in the left pannel under Temporary
Places. Right-click this folder name and ask to Save Place As kml.
– Connect laptop to mobile, (unlock mobile screen). Then using
windows file manager: copy the unique kml file to the mobile, under
…/oruxmaps/file_exchange
– Using OM, Import the waypoints : Open the Waypoints menu, and :
• Select Manage
• Click Options android button, and select Import Wpts.
• Select the folder /oruxmaps/file_exchange
• Double-click on the the kml filename to import the WPs inside
16
The procedure described in this slide can also be used to import WPs
from GE into OM (without aiming at creating a route)
17. Planning a hike route using GE (2/2)
Creating a route file using OM
– Using OM, Build the Route:
• Open the Waypoints menu, and select Manage
• Use the Search menu or the Filter Menu to select only the WP making up
your Route
• Change the order of the WP by moving WPs up and down (point on left side
icon )
– When finished Save the route
• Click the Export button then select “KML”
The Route can now be seen as file “Waypoints__yyyymmdd_hhmm.kml” in
the oruxmaps/tracklogs folder of the mobile.
Such a route file can be loaded anytime later and used for waypoint
navigation. See slide Route navigation
17
18. OM
mobile
[N waypoints +] 1 Track
Connect mobile,
Copy kml file to device
• 1 gpx file
[+N waypoints]
PC file manager
OruxMaps
Wikiloc
(or any other
similar website)
www.wikiloc.com
Internet Browser
Or Download track
file from website
Check your track file
was correctly received
By Email
bis
Save track file
(from email)
18
Importing an existing track (overview)
19. Importing an existing track
• How to proceed
– Go to the Wikiloc webpage http://www.wikiloc.com
• Search for some track you like to walk (you can preview it on GE) and
• download it to your computer, as a *.gpx file
– bis Or save a .gpx track file received by email
– Connect your Mobile to your computer and, using windows file
manager, copy the *.gpx track to it, for example under
…/oruxmaps/tracklogs
– On OM, check the presence of the imported file
• Either by using the Route menu: → Load file
• Or by using a mobile file manager
– Other websites:
• www.gpsies.com
• www.mapmytracks.com
19
21. Starting the hike
At the starting point of the hike:
1. Switch on GPS reception on the Android phone
2. Launch OM and set GPS tracking On (also available in tracks menu).
3. Load the Offline map covering your hiking area
• In the Maps menu, select Switch map, then the OFFLINE tab
• Optionally, load the WPs on the map (Select all WPs , then ‘eye’)
4. Load (or create) the Route you intend to follow (see next slides)
• to record your track, press “Start recording”
in Tracks Menu
– Or Load the Track you intend to follow (see next slides)
5. Optionally, (for more safety), mark on the map the starting place by
creating a new waypoint.
• If you know the exact altitude of this starting point, you could calibrate your
altimeter, (Options → Tweaks → Calibrate barometer)
21
Start walking and follow your GPS indications
22. Route navigation
(Called in OM “Waypoint Navigation”)
1) From a previously created route
KML file,
a) Click button ‘Routes’ then → ‘Load File’
b) Double-click the desired file name
“Waypoints__yyyymmdd_hhmm.kml”
c) Then in pop-up window called“Navigation
options” select ‘Wpt. Nav.’
2) Or from a set of Wpts in OM: see slide
Creating & following a route in OM (from existing WPs)
3) Or from nothing : route created directly on
map. See slide 25.
The Wpt. Alarm plays an alert message when
you approach each WP 22
23. Options during waypoint navigation
Useful to navigate
the route backwards
Stop the navigation (at
the end of your hike)
Adjust your target WP
as you walk (in case you
missed a WP)
Stops playing the warning
audio message when you
approach a target WP
23
Options available in the Maps
menu, during Navigation
24. Creating & following a route in OM
(from existing WPs)
You have in your database plenty of WPs. You can select a few
of them to make a Route, and start immediately following it
1. List all your WPs: Button 'Wpts. → manage'
2. Browse the entire list, or use Search function, and tick the checkbox
to the left of the WPs you wish to include in your Route.
3. Once you have selected all WPs, use WP 'Filter' option with option
'Selected Items‘ . By clicking on the 'ok', in the listing should appear
only the desired WPs. (Or Filter by some other Wpts characteristics).
4. Reorder the Wpts as desired: hold the icon of the far left of each WP
(drag and drop the Wpt up/down) .
5. Upload the route to the map viewer: press the second button from the
left of the button bar (Routes).
24
25. Creating a route in OM (1/2)
(without anything, directly on the map)
25
You don´t have a prepared Route or Track, nor even WPs. You can
still plan a route, directly on your OMs map viewer.
To Create the route manually:
1. From the map viewer, Select button 'Tracks’→ Create'.
This opens a box at the bottom of the screen, used to add Route points by
hand (and simultaneously create a WP if the checkbox 'Create Waypoint'
is active).
2. To do this move the map with your finger, place the cursor () where you
want to put the Wpt. and press the button. To erase the last WP created,
use the '-' button. To complete the route, press the button 'OK' ; and to
exit and cancel the route, select the button.
3. Now you have the Track file created and stored in the database. Then
remove it from the screen (from the map viewer, button 'Tracks→Remove')
…
26. Loading & following a route in OM (2/2)
(from a hand-created route)
You have created in your database a
route manually (prev. slide). You intend
now to follow it.
1. From the map viewer, select ‘Tracks’ or
‘Routes’→ Manage. Some routes are
listed.
2. Click on the filename of the route you
want to follow (Called “yyyy-mm-dd
hh:mm”) and select from contextual menu
“Load as a Route”
3. Chose ‘Wpt. Nav.’ from pop-up window.
2013-06-28 14:28
26
27. Navigation to a target WP
Using OM’s compass “Radar (TC-4)” – Options, Tools, Radar
Estimated
Time of Arrival
Estimated Time Enroute
Target ‘s icon
Direction of
the target
(wrt mobile)
Target’s name
GPS accuracy
Bearing
angle between the
target & the North
(Fixed if you do
not move)
Heading
the direction of the
mobile (0 ◦ = N)
Distance to
the target
Heading
Angle between the
mobile and the North
(varies if you rotate the phone)
If you rotate the mobile
until the 2 arrows coincide
→ you’re headed straight
towards the target)
ex both angles = 126◦
Heading = Bearing
Select WP & Navigate To
Or follow a Route (Wpts Navigation)
27
28. Heading straight towards the target WP
If you rotate the mobile until the 2
arrows coincide → you’re headed
straight towards the target!
Heading = Bearing (ex 310◦)
28
29. Following a recorded track
Load the track path on the map viewer of OM:
– Select the Route menu: → Load file
– In the /file_exchange folder, double-click the
gpx filename (e.g. Chabrouh-Hrajel.gpx).
– In the Navigation options pop-up window ,
select Follow, click OK
– Select a map covering the area, and start
walking along the drawn path.
29
30. Finishing the hike
At the finishing point of the hike
• In OM:
– Stop the navigation (in Maps menu, “Stop Follow” or “Stop Wpt. Nav.”)
– If track recording was on, Stop it by pressing “Stop recording”
in Tracks Menu
– Set GPS tracking Off
• On Android notification screen,
• Switch off GPS reception
30
31. After the hike
1. Get some instant statistics
2. Visualize in 3D on your computer the path you have walked!
– Make sure you have ticked these 2 options in the OM settings for Tracks/Routes : Auto
KML creation and Auto GPX creation
3. Share your track on wikiloc !
31
32. Instant statistics on OM
At the end of the hike (and during the
hike), you can get some statistics
directly on your mobile:
• In OM, in Tracks menu, Select
“Statistics”
– You get a lot of interesting statistical
data about your hike.
– See example here
• Click on “See Graphics” button to see
the profile of your hike
– Tick Altitude and /distance
32
33. OM
mobile
[N waypoints +] 1 Track
Open kml file
Google Earth (3D)
Connect mobile to laptop,
Copy kml file to laptop
• 1 kml file
N waypoints
PC file manager
OruxMaps/tracklogs
Track elevation
profile
Track path
33
Path visualization in 3D (overview)
34. Path visualization in 3D
At the end of the hike, the trackfile is saved on the mobile as gpx and kml
files (in oruxmaps/tracklogs folder)
• Connect the mobile to your computer and, using the file manager
• Copy the .kml (and .gpx if needed) to your laptop.
– Optionally: you can view the .gpx track profile + statistics using some GPX viewing
software or website: Using an Internet browser: Go to gpstrackviewer.free.fr website,
upload *.gpx track file to view the track in 2D. Optionally you can click the button
“obtain a URL” and send the link to your friends in your report.
• View the track in 3D using Google Earth:
– Launch GE, select File→ Open and open the .kml file. Right-click anywhere on the
path (between 2 track-points) and select “Show Elevation profile” .
• Optionally report your hike to your friend by email: attach the *.kml track file
– report the main statistical data: track length, time, total ascent, max elevation…
34
35. Sharing your track on Wikiloc
PC file Manager
Cleaned-up track [+ wps]
• gpx file + 6 +
Check track on GE
Click link ‘View in 3D in
Google Earth’
Wikiloc
(or any other similar website)
www.wikiloc.com
Internet Browser
Upload to website
3D view: Google Earth
Only if the hike is worthy
of being shared with the
global hikers’ community
35
36. Posting your track on Wikiloc
• You have to create a Wikiloc account, once and for all, to be able to
post (upload) tracks.
– Go to www.wikiloc.com website and select Sign up.
• Posting your track
– Preparation on your computer
• Your recorded trackfile in gpx format
• Some interesting waypoints added during the hike, also in gpx format (use
GPS Babel if needed)
• A maximum of 6 photos taken along the way (reduce their size first)
• A short text description and counsels (driving directions, shuttle, views…)
– Using your Internet browser:
• Go to www.wikiloc.com, Sign in to your account,
• Ask to upload a new track
• upload the *.gpx track file and optionally the waypoint files
• Paste your description text, Upload the photos (it is possible to add a legend to
each photo).
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