
wow, that title is a bit misleading though... or is that what we were talking about?
sorry for causing such a disturbance.
peace.
Green1 wrote:Do you go offroading with a globe? or a local map?
over the distances on a local map, it's irrelevant.
Green1 wrote:When and why GPS was made is irrelevant to the discussion 1 . GPS again has NO information about land masses, rivers, roads, or any other feature, only your location on this planet 2 . as for "they made new maps"... who is "they"? 3 every map is made by a different company, and most use data much newer than 1984... and surprisingly (for you) 4 many still put that NEW data on a NAD27 datum... because the DATUM is UNRELATED to the DATA 5 . Each cartographer does things differently, the DATA is not "public domain" and there is no magic 1984 view of the world with all the features on it that is being used here.6
Just the SHAPE of the globe.
you MUST use the same datum that your map uses, no matter what 7. And disregarding a perfect map because you don't like the datum would be a very silly move indeed!
Many maps are still published in NAD27, I'm not going to avoid them to get a WGS84 map that is WORSE! 8
The DATA is serperate from the DATUM, 9 you just don't seem to understand that the 2 are completely, 100% unrelated.
Think of the datum as a piece of paper, if I use a 1927 piece of paper, or a 1984 piece of paper has no bearing whatsoever on the map I draw on it with my pen 10 . the paper is blank until the cratographer draws on it
NO, IT MOST CERTAINLY DOES NOT!!!!!!!!!!![2] Well, yes and no. The global location on this planet happens to involve land masses, rivers, roads & other features.
Most modern automotive GPS units can tell you what lane you are driving in on a multi-lane roadway, and GPS can be accurate to within less than a metre, your problem wasn't that the GPS was too accurate, it was that the programmer wasn't forgiving enough. A good programmer will set it up such that you "arrive" when you are within a hundred metres or so, and failing that, will set it so that it shows as visited once you proceed deliberately past the location.FalcoColumbarius wrote:Firesong, you were mentioning about the accuracy of GPS these days ~
When I first loaded up my Garmin/Nroute system I decided to go for a drive. I plotted a course up the Fraser Canyon with a stop over at this cool coffee place in Hope called "The Blue Moose" (you'd probably like this place). When I got to the cafe there was no parking immediately in front of it so I parked across the street, no big deal, right? Had my coffee, got back in my wagon and proceeded up the Number 1. As I am driving up the road my GPS keeps telling me that I have to turn around because I have yet to arrive at the Blue Moose ~ because I parked across the street and walked the rest of the way ~ my van never made it to the Blue Moose. This was trippy. GPS can be a great pastime, still learning.
Yeah, mine more often than not will have the arrow pointing in the right direction after I have made a number of position changes, like backing and forwarding the van around in a car park. I am aware that it is the programmer, garbage in garbage out, right? I have used Microsoft and I have to agreed that it is terrible. Now I have Garmin PC Mobile as a platform but I am unaware that one could programme the accuracy of any given destination. Where would I find this feature in the menu?Green1 wrote:Most modern automotive GPS units can tell you what lane you are driving in on a multi-lane roadway, and GPS can be accurate to within less than a metre, your problem wasn't that the GPS was too accurate, it was that the programmer wasn't forgiving enough. A good programmer will set it up such that you "arrive" when you are within a hundred metres or so, and failing that, will set it so that it shows as visited once you proceed deliberately past the location.
I find some are better than others at this, I found that Microsoft Streets and Trips was horrid at this, my TomTom is hit or miss, and my old garmin was pretty good.
Most likely, you can't... (though I could be wrong, I've seen that sort of thing in some software, it's just very uncommon) the person who originally programmed the software decided this one for you. Unfortunately for you, they chose a more precise definition of "arrived" than you have. I know my old garmin II+ chose to mark a location as visited once you stopped getting closer and started getting further away, regardless of distance, my TomTom seems to vary it's definition based on... well... I have no idea... I just know that sometimes it realizes I got there, and other times it spends the next hour or 2 telling me to turn around... Streets and trips seemed to want me to drive right in to the living room... it also refused to recalculate any route without manual intervention, so if you missed it, instead of telling you how to get back there it would simply tell you you're off-route... it was about the worst navigation solution I've tried yet. (though in fairness, it was 5 years ago, they may have improved since then)FalcoColumbarius wrote:I am unaware that one could programme the accuracy of any given destination. Where would I find this feature in the menu?
Great view out front (except when you're climbing and can't see over the nose), but the view out back is nil, and you have that great big blind spot under you. Checking that blind spot gives you an excuse to turn and bank like you're flying a Spitfire...psilosin wrote:Laura...your Delica is lifted REALLY high to have a view out the windshiled like that!!!
Green1 wrote:Most likely, you can't... (though I could be wrong, I've seen that sort of thing in some software, it's just very uncommon) the person who originally programmed the software decided this one for you. Unfortunately for you, they chose a more precise definition of "arrived" than you have.