Yet Another Cycling Forum
General Category => The Knowledge => GPS => Topic started by: donpedro on 29 May, 2008, 10:30:17 am
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- The short: Worth the bother? ???
- The long: My SonyEricson K810i was stolen and as my phone was tided to a operator so I need to pick a new one.
They just got the new weatherized C702 that has the same basic functions as my old phone, but with an added A-GPS function (don't think the Wayfinder-software is included!). It also have Google-maps, a basic weather function and some tracker for training data.
I realise that the A-GPS can't compete with stand alone units but would it be at all useful for audax, touring and hiking and what functions would I miss?
http://www.gsmarena.com/sony_ericsso...review-230.php (http://www.gsmarena.com/sony_ericsso...review-230.php)
http://mobilearsenal.com/review/sony...roduction.html (http://mobilearsenal.com/review/sony...roduction.html)
http://www.gpsworld.com/gpsworld/art...l.jsp?id=12287 (http://www.gpsworld.com/gpsworld/art...l.jsp?id=12287)
(http://www.letsgodigital.org/images/artikelen/13/sony-ericsson-c702.jpg)
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Prompted by this post I started up the Nokia Maps GPS thing on my N95 8gb for the first time to have a look. Takes a while to get a position but it looks pretty good. It gives latitude and longitude, altitude and current speed as well as plotting the position on the map.
I've not yet downloaded the maps so it downloads them on the fly using up my monthly data allowance, but once I get them loaded on the phone from the computer it'll be totally free unless I want to subscribe to the voice directions.
I've never used a proper GPS unit so can't compare them, but I'm pretty impressed.
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Thanks kyuss! A serious piece of engineering that one but to much dosh for me! It's a "Smartphone" with Symbian OS where as the C702 is a "dumb" one so you have lots of different solutions to choose from. From the little info I can find on the C702, it seem it have to rely on a Wayfinder subscription type of service. Couldn't get a straight answer from the sales staff as I'm not after a gizmo to point me towards the nearest McDonald's. Biking, hiking and kayaking was all together a foreign concept to him... ::-)
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I've just got myself a "proper" GPS but I have been using an HTC 3300 PDA / phone with GPS for some time. Mapping is from Memory Map (great OS mapping), an A to Z London map (excellent), and CoPilot European maps for routing - all on one card! It was an extremely useful device in emergencies. Also, bike mounts are available on Ebay for virtually every phone that can possibly have GPS. I used mine quite a lot for this.
Drawbacks:
1. Not waterproof - the big downside.
2. Battery life: a few hours only really, although I was able to plug a USB battery holder in as charge-on-the-go power.
3. Memory Map is great for route planning but scaling is wrong for small devices.
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I looked at adding a GPS "Enabler" to my phone, but no-one can answer the question about maps.
It appears tha the maps are downloaded which requires subscription and data costs
THe shortcut appears to be to contact Memory-Map etc and see which "Smartphones" work with their systems and save the data costs.
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Memory Map's site has a technical support board (http://www.memory-map.co.uk/board/), which might answer your map questions.
I've recently got a Nokia N82, which also has Nokia Maps on it. It seems to contain a proper GPS receiver, not just a network-based system. The Maps part is free apart from data download costs, and if you do that via your PC rather than over the mobile network, then you're not using up your data deal. There's a three month trial of the Navigation option, but after that I'd have to pay.
I wasn't sure about its usefulness, but within a couple of days of getting it, I was using it to answer someone's 'how do I get to...?' query. Lock up time is pretty good. I'll give it a proper road test next week on my C2C, and compare it with the traditional paper maps system. I suspect it's great for point to point, but I've not yet found a way of putting a route in to follow.
If there's a link with Google Maps on the phone, could you do your route on the pc, then log into your Maps account using the phone and link to it that way?
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Phones like C702 and the N82 have A-GPS which is Assisted GPS. Essentially the phone has a real GPS receiver in it, but also uses crude location information from the cell details to speed up locating the receiver. A-GPS can also be used to offload processing onto systems on the network, as well as being able to deal with corrupted or fragmentary data, so it's better able to deal with GPS in an urban environment than non-Assisted devices.
It looks interesting, although I've found that my new Active-10 seems to be able to deal with London buildings pretty well most of the time anyway, the worst error I saw on my commute in was of the order of 10's of feet, and generally temporary.
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Went to the shop to drop of the police report and quickly checked out he Sony Ericsson C702 (http://www.sonyericsson.com/cws/products/mobilephones/overview/c702?cc=gb&lc=en) today. But I couldn't get much out of the sale staff on the navigation and training functions. So at home I checked the website again and realised there is no info there either!
I then tried to phone the shops support line but they could only guess, didn't even know it was released and in the shops here in Stockholm!
But it seems that the GPS OS that works with this phone and that might be included is called Wayfinder Navigator:
http://www.wayfinder.com/?sid=49 (http://www.wayfinder.com/?sid=49)
Probably OK for car drivers but not sure it works for cycling/audax. Anyone used the British version or have an opinion?
There is another interesting service called Wayfinder Activ that has a downloadable free basemap.
Wayfinder Active is a way cool GPS app | CTIA show - Cell phone news from the CTIA 2008 show - CNET Reviews (http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-12261_7-9911445-51.html)
You then buy and download topographic maps for a country or a certain area. This service has not been released in Britain yet but could become a big hit here in Sweden. It is a Java-application and the rout logs can then be uploaded to a community and sent home via e-mail There are some functions to evaluate and save training data to, a bit like Polar and Suunto.
http://www.activeoutdoor.com/ (http://www.activeoutdoor.com/)
Looks a bit crude still and for some reason the manual is only available in English so far!
http://www.wayfinder.com/filearchive/5/5801/WF_Active_071130_FINAL_WEB.pdf (http://www.wayfinder.com/filearchive/5/5801/WF_Active_071130_FINAL_WEB.pdf)
It also have geotagging of photos, Google maps and a weather service included but not much info on these features either...!
What's the point of constantly releasing new products if you cant provide customers and sale staff with information ahead of the release is what I'd like to know! >:(
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I've just got myself a "proper" GPS but I have been using an HTC 3300 PDA / phone with GPS for some time.
Drawbacks:
1. Not waterproof - the big downside.
To weatherproof mine on the few times I've used it on the bike, I just got one of those resealable sandwich bags and popped it over the top of the phone and mount. It seemed to do the job ;) mind you, I've only used it for fairly short journeys.
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If you have got a Windows Mobile PDA with GPS built in you could go for CoPilot from ALK.
If you have a BlackBerry with GPS built in you could go for Telmap. This will also work on Windows Mobile units with GPS.
If you have a device with GPS built in you could use Google maps together with your device. Download the client at Google Maps (http://www.google.com/gmm) - its free. It works very well if you're walking. Might work just as well on a bike but i haven't tried it.
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I am looking at the Nokia 6210 Navigator for my Q-NT adventures, reason - it has voice directions which as I wear specs will enable me to keep moving instead of stopping to look at a screen all the time.
Has anyone any experience with these and any idea of battery life, Vodaphone in Oxford say as GPS is an application it should have a good battery life (understanding that I am not phoning all the time of course), does this make sense ?
Quint
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I cannot comment on the models specified but what I can say is that using the GPS/TomTom on my XDA Orbit will drain the batteries in a couple of hours which means that when using it in the car as a satnav it *must* be plugged in. My XDA is 2+ years old but I'd need a lot of convincing before I believed current gps phones have moved on significantly.
I'd be interested to hear from the iPhone brigade on their experiences.
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If I want to use the sat nav facilities on my gps mobile, I have to pay about £40 a year for the software licence.
Instead I spent the £40 on a navigo sat-nav unit, hacked it, and it now functions as a £100 Tom Tom ;)
Very occasionally I use the map facility in unfamiliar towns when on foot.
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Mrs F has just downloaded Trails and installed it on her iPhone. Very nice - shows you a full-fat OpenCycleMap background (and you can download the tiles first, so no need for reception while you're on the move), saves a GPX track, draws a lovely elevation profile, and so on. Eats battery, though.
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When I spoke in the vodaphone shop I was assured that as GPS is an application it shouldn't eat the battery and would give a reasonable battery life JUST using GPS, I shall try to get hold of Nokia and ask as otherwise it will be a waste of money
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I use sport tracker and google maps simultaneously on my Nokia E71 when on new routes. I only use it a couple of hours a day at most, but it's not had a noticeable effect on battery life at that level of usage.
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Anybody been playing with the iPhone's GPS lately?
A vague thought is dynohub charging iPhone with weather protection. Possible or silly?
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It's def. possible
On the last Easter Arrow I did, 4 years ago, we were discussing this. It'd be trivial for someone like Solidlights to fit a USB power socket onto their light to allow it to power a GPS. I'm surprised no-one does it. Yet.
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They do:
Busch and Muller E-WERK Power Supply - £135.28 | Dotbike
(http://www.dotbike.com/ProductsP8333.aspx?utm_source=google&utm_medium=base&utm_campaign=FGL)
It's ball-twistingly expensive though.
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I keep on meaning to have a look at this, but I don't currently have a dynamo on a bike, so it's not too big an issue.
If I was going to build one, I'd probably use some sort of switching regulator to bring it down to 5V, with a crowbar on the output to protect the device if anything went wrong. I need to pin down our power supply bod, and pick his brains!
One issue could be that many of the devices which you would want to power, have their USB connectors hidden behind rubber, waterproof covers. Having them plugged into a power connector, whilst in use, will negate the waterproofing quite seriously.
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it's one where you'd ideally want an inductively coupled charger, isn't it ?
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it's one where you'd ideally want an inductively coupled charger, isn't it ?
Yep, although I do wonder what a wet case would do to all the stray field near to the inductive coupling point, I guess it would just soak up a bit more energy.
You would really still want something which mechanically connected the charger and chargee, so that you could design a system which had the minimal amount of field "exposed".
I have my suspicions that some of the suggested designs for this sort of thing use a charging mat, and you just plonk the device on there when you want it to charge. This would obviously be horribly inefficient, but in a mains powered environment, it would loose so little it wouldn't really matter. Trying to apply the same technology to a bike mounted devices could be "interesting".
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Yep, although I do wonder what a wet case would do to all the stray field near to the inductive coupling point, I guess it would just soak up a bit more energy.
Should be fine; it'd be a low-enough frequency magnetic field that the water would have no effect. It needs to be MHz before it's an issue.
You would really still want something which mechanically connected the charger and chargee, so that you could design a system which had the minimal amount of field "exposed".
Our electric toothbrush is inductively coupled, it sits on a peg to charge, and I guess that the coil is in the peg
A couple of planar coils in close proximity should allow decent coupling for a boxy device.
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Bicycle Dynamo Phone charger, Home (http://www.pedalpower.com.au/) for the charging side of things. They've got reduced prices currently, so noticeably under 100 GBP.
A better option is possibly Dahon's Reecharge (http://www.dahon.com/accessories/2010/biologic-reecharge) and Bike Mount (http://www.dahon.com/accessories/2010/biologic-bike-mount-iphone), which appears to offer waterproofness and recharging in one package. The cost is higher though.
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A better option is possibly Dahon's Reecharge (http://www.dahon.com/accessories/2010/biologic-reecharge) ...
Except it doesn't actually appear to be available (yet?)
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A better option is possibly Dahon's Reecharge (http://www.dahon.com/accessories/2010/biologic-reecharge) ...
Except it doesn't actually appear to be available (yet?)
March supposedly (http://www.roadcyclinguk.com/gear-news/biologic-iphone-bike-mount/4923.html). I've made enquiries already.
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One issue could be that many of the devices which you would want to power, have their USB connectors hidden behind rubber, waterproof covers. Having them plugged into a power connector, whilst in use, will negate the waterproofing quite seriously.
This is something that annoys me immensely about the USB eTrexes. The older serial versions have a proprietary connector which consists of four gold-plated contacts flush with the outside of the case, which, while still protected by a rubber flap, seem pretty decently waterproof. Since the connector slides over the top of them, held in place by the shape of the case itself, this gives extra protection, and I'd be reasonably confident about using the thing in heavy rain. The mini-USB connector is a massive step backwards in this respect, as it forms a nice channel for water to get inside the case.
Adding a suitably shaped rubber flange to a mini-USB cable might work well enough for an eTrex, as it would tuck in under the open cover, but I wouldn't want to try that approach on devices with more exposed connectors. I think the pragmatic solution is to run on battery power when it's wet, and have the dynamo charging a spare battery in a nice dry bag somewhere. Which is clearly annoying for most phones, and impossible for certain popular Apple products...
Inductive coupling is a nice idea, but waterproof electrical connectors are a solved problem. And it's not like the devices we want to use have either...
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...The mini-USB connector is a massive step backwards in this respect, as it forms a nice channel for water to get inside the case.
Adding a suitably shaped rubber flange to a mini-USB cable might work well enough for an eTrex, as it would tuck in under the open cover, but I wouldn't want to try that approach on devices with more exposed connectors....
On my Active 10 GPS it would be difficult to waterproof the Mini-USB, since any pressure from rubberising would tend to force the connector out. ... and additionally when the cover is open, there's a 3.5mm jack which is also exposed, and which currently doesn't really have any function (I think it'll be used for headsets, if and when they ever add on the functionality for things like voice announcements of POIs etc).
Ho hum, maybe they'll deal with this in the Active 20 or 30 ...
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OT - The voice functionality might already be there, in the Satmap. It is in the Garmin 60 series, I think. (Yes I know they only go 'beep' but they too have an audio-out connector.)
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Well Ovi Maps is now fee on Nokia (compatible) phones, in Brittany last Autumn we got lost and decided bugger the data charges (which turned out to be neglible) and switched on the voice directed A-GPS, I had it programmed to avoid motorways but allow unmetalled roads.
It took us along a stone farm track and through some beautiful villages right to where we needed to be on a shortest route setting, brilliant.
Back in England we used it at night (voice vital) to reach a pub/hotel riding in darkness most of the time, again brilliant.
Fairly short battery life is overcome by a gadget from Amazon that uses an AA battery to re charge your phone, this is my answer as you can plot a route on Ovi on your computer.
Hope this is of help.
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Several points:
I believe I phones are "touchy" about the charging source.... I know that many of the standard apple charger will not work with them
Data costs can be prohibitive, especially if maps are loaded as image files.. check your "fair usage policy" as many of the unlimiyted tariffs are far from that.
Memory Map does work well on phones as far as the mapping is concerned - simply load your map either from the "visible area" or a whole section.
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I can only speak as far as the Nokia 6210 Navigator goes
1. Charging source - Nokia sell an identical device as the one I got and it works very well.
2. Data charges - the secret to avoid these (at least with Ovi Maps) is to download the maps you need off the home PC, any data used in using the GPS is minimal and I was pleasantly surprised when my bill came as I was fearing the worst.
3. Waterproofing - With voice on the Nokia I stuff the phone in a bank money bag and then put in the chest pocket of my Cycling jacket, no problem.
It all seemed to simple but there was no cycle friendly voice sat nav available with a good battery life/suitable for cycling, it took a long time to find the answers as all the companies (ie Garmin) seemed to think cycling was not a method of travel that needed/deserved Sat Nav with voice, that seems to be changing (hopefully)