Archive for the ‘ GPS ’ Category

New Sports Tracker Released, While N900 User Are Left In The Dark

 

newSportstrackerreleasedN900forgot

As the Nokia Sports Tracker closed its doors, the new non-Nokia Sports Tracking Technologies opened to our disappointment supporting only Symbian Nokia devices. The popular application has been a hit on Symbian, but it puzzles us why there’s no support for the flagship N900. Sports Tracker isn’t the only service to leave N900 owners in the dark, Nokia’s own OVI Maps and OVI Contacts, just to name a few, have yet to give the N900 their blessings.

All is not lost as the N900 has the eCoach application which has most of the Sports Tracker functionality, including uploading to a service called Heia Heia. However, we would love to see Sports Tracker on N900 and or that eCoach could upload to the service.

Would you like to see some N900 love from the new Sports Tracker?

More uses for that GPS

Moreusesforthatgps So you got that fancy new Nokia with the GPS feature, what’s next? Most people just tend to use the Nokia Maps and that’s it. While the Nokia Maps is a great and useful app, there’s so much more you could do. I’ve looked around and come up with a few options to help you get just a little bit more out of that GPS feature. Before you add any of these apps I do recommend always keeping your device up-to-date by getting the latest firmware. This not only helps by making the device more stable, adds fixes, sometimes making the device faster, but also new features are constantly added, one of them is: Assisted GPS (A-GPS).Assisted GPS (A-GPS) is an enhanced version of GPS. A-GPS retrieves assistance data over a data connection (like GPRS or 3G), which helps GPS in your device to calculate the coordinates of your current location when your device is receiving signals from satellites. A-GPS is designed to get a fix on satellites faster and more reliably, meaning you get a smoother GPS experience. It reduces the time a GPS enabled device requires to find its current position, known as Time To First Fix (TTFF), for most geographical locations worldwide. A-GPS is most useful in urban areas, where you could be navigating through "urban canyons", or in a moving car.A-GPS improves user experience in all applications which are using integrated GPS in your device.”

This feature was added to the N95 through a firmware upgrade, by not keeping your device up-to-date you could miss these type of features. It is rumored that the E90 will also get the feature pretty soon.

Now that we have that covered let’s have look at the apps. Let’s start with the obvious one first. Nokia Sports Tracker is a GPS based activity tracker. GPS is used to find information such as speed, distance and time and these are automatically stored to your training diary. Next we have LOCR (Locator), Shozu and Yahoo ZoneTag, all of these can be used to upload photo’s, but the neat part is that all of them can geo-tag your images. Basically they use your built-in GPS to find the exact coordinates of where the image was taken. Flickr and Google Maps can then be used to show the location. How cool is that?!

How about some games? The first one is The Journey and its successor The Journey II. These are basically location based adventure games. These use the phone’s GPS capabilities to keep track of your movements. You start the game at a default location, maybe your home and during the course of the game you’ll have to take your mobile and use your actual streets and surroundings to play the game. The game saves the locations and in the course of the story you will have to return to your default location. It’s a cool idea, but I do suggest using your home as the default location you have to return to. If you like racing games better there’s Realreplay. You simply choose the track you want to race on, select your opponent and start right away! Your own race will be recorded by the GPS system, which makes it possible to see your own current position and the route your opponent took when he or she recorded his or her race. In some games this is known as the “Ghost” mode.

If you’re more into astronomy there’s one of my favorites: Microsky. MicroSky is a planetarium for mobile devices with Java-support and a connection to the Internet (preferably GPRS or UMTS). It is a very small J2ME-Midlet client/server application which retrieves its starcharts from the skyserver. It can display 2.500.000 stars, 8.000 deep sky objects, the constellations, the planets, local horizon, 1000 current comets, and minor planets. The great thing is that I found out that it actually uses the N95’s built-in GPS receiver, but just make sure that another app that uses the GPS like SportsTracker is open. You can get a free copy of MicroSky here.

And lastly we have the Google Mobile Maps. I’m a bit unsure about this one, but I’m going to add it anyway. There’s no mention that it uses GPS (that I know of) but it upon first usage it was centered exactly where I’m located. So maybe, just maybe it somehow uses the GPS system. No worries, Google Mobile Maps now has a native S60 app with support for the internal GPS!

Well that’s more apps then what I initially thought would be available. I’m pretty there are a few more, but I will keep you updated once I find a few more. What other GPS enabled apps do you know of?