Importing GPS information


 
Post new topic Reply to topic
   ArchitectureWeek DesignCommunity Forum Index » PowerCADD Discussion
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Greg



Joined: 13 Apr 2004
Posts: 228
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 7:41 am    Post subject: Importing GPS information Reply with quoteFind all posts by Greg

I have been using a very cool iPhone app called "GPS kit" which can produce a path of points as you move to determine a "track". It then can export it in kml format (for Google Earth), gpx format (I presume a standard GPS format) or link it to Google Maps.

I am not very familiar with GPS data, but does anyone know if any of these can be imported into PowerCADD as an object and coorelated with other survey data?

Thanks.
Back to top
View user's profileSend private message    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
patrickm



Joined: 13 Apr 2004
Posts: 399
Location: santa barbara, ca

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 8:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by patrickm

I can't comment on Greg's post, but it reminded me of an iPhone app that I'll get after I get an iPhone:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=288338285&mt=8

It is called Tilt Meter Pro, and uses the iPhone's position detector (or whatever it is called) to measure slopes. A friend just bought it for his iPod Touch and said that it was great for determining as-built roof slopes, which is exactly what I'd be using it for. He said it was the best $.99 he has ever spent.
Back to top
View user's profileSend private message    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
jasonlocher



Joined: 14 Apr 2004
Posts: 649
Location: Austin, Texas

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 8:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by jasonlocher

patrickm wrote:
I can't comment on Greg's post, but it reminded me of an iPhone app that I'll get after I get an iPhone:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=288338285&mt=8

It is called Tilt Meter Pro, and uses the iPhone's position detector (or whatever it is called) to measure slopes. A friend just bought it for his iPod Touch and said that it was great for determining as-built roof slopes, which is exactly what I'd be using it for. He said it was the best $.99 he has ever spent.


a built in inclinometer! This will be great for all those lawyers who sue for ada ramp violations!
Back to top
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailAIM AddressYahoo Messenger    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
Alfred Scott



Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 749
Location: Richmond, VA

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 9:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by Alfred Scott

I have a similar iPhone app called Clinometer, which is too cool for words but I've yet to find a productive use for it.

Greg, the GPS information talked about here is information for Google Earth, and it's basically the same thing as creating a bookmark in Google Earth and then emailing it to someone. I don't know how precise the information is, that is, whether it is in a high-precision number format, but the controlling factor here is the accuracy of the gps location information created by the iPhone. It's just not accurate enough for survey data purposes.

The survey data that is produced by a Total Station or any GPS-based survey instrument is output in a standard survey data format. You can import that into PowerCADD with Paolo's Topography Tools, and Paolo and I have collaborated closely to bring this into PowerCADD, and so you can then use TopoTools to create contours, but you can't export this to DWG so you can look at it in Google SketchUp (which can put the survey contours into Google Earth), which is one the two reasons I stopped work on WildTools.

I don't know how to get the gps location information into the standard survey data format, but I suspect it's simple and something you could do in a spreadsheet. Eric Easter is the most knowledgeable person I've talked to about this, and I'm sure he would know.

Basically, you produce a text file with four lines of location data.

What I'm working on right now (Benchmark) is an aircraft performance program, see

http://www.seqair.com/FlightTest/Benchmark/Benchmark.html

and I have decided to produce a min-version of this in an iPhone version so you can have the performance section of your flight manual available on an iPhone. I'm working with a major engine manufacturer on this right now.

Alfred
Back to top
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailVisit poster's website    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
Alfred Scott



Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 749
Location: Richmond, VA

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 10:17 am    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by Alfred Scott

Okay, Greg, I have some 'action' for you.

I have just bought GPS Kit to see what it does, and I've just had a video iChat with Paolo about this. He has looked at the website for the application and is interested in seeing what he can do. Paolo does not have an iPhone, so he asks that you send him files of the tracking information. Please send this Paolo Rossi at one of these

iparos@tin.it
paolo@iparos.it
iparos@mac.com

You can also contact him via iChat at the last one.

You will need to own his Topography Tools to use this, so expect to buy the software. I'm very sure Paolo will have this information being imported into PowerCADD within a month.

Alfred
Back to top
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailVisit poster's website    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
How Goes It



Joined: 02 May 2005
Posts: 393

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 2:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by How Goes It

The iPhone may be good enough for something like geocaching, but it's never going to be used for surveying. Last I checked, a static survey setup was going to cost me somewhere around $5k-7k or so. And it wasn't supposed to be all that great amongst high structures or around a lot of trees.

I believe that at best, the iPhone will do along the lines of the geocaching gps units out there, which are supposed to have horizontal accuracy of around 3 meters.

In comparison, here is a survey piece of equipment -- http://pro.magellangps.com/assets/datasheets/ProMark3_EN_l.pdf

But if your looking for a cheap down and dirty way of getting some rough survey points into a drawing --- distances relative to other points --- import a Google Earth picture and scale it properly. Set the prefs. for higher resolution.

I used Google Earth's ruler to measure a section of the eaves on the house just now. As low res. as the picture was, I measured 14.33 feet using Google Earth. I then used my tape and measured 14.8 feet. Less than 1/2 a foot off in a short distance.

For you form•Z guys, here's a nice way to get those Google Earth images into your CAD. And, these images come in mapped to a flat object, where you can draw over the top and then trim and loft this image mapped object.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m99Jm4q3Mng

And of course --- once you model over the top of your mapped image, you can always bring a vector plan view (or other view) into PowerCADD.
Back to top
View user's profileSend private message    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
How Goes It



Joined: 02 May 2005
Posts: 393

PostPosted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 2:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by How Goes It

By the way, regarding this cheap construction survey method ---

Some company from India is suppose to start on a Google Earth type alternative, that is to have 10 times the resolution.

Whether or not homeland security will allow them to post U.S. images on the net, is another thing --- realizing that we subsidize many nations and likely India in some way or another.
Back to top
View user's profileSend private message    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
Alfred Scott



Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 749
Location: Richmond, VA

PostPosted: Fri Nov 28, 2008 8:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by Alfred Scott

To report, Greg got Paolo the points and Paolo now has them importing into PowerCADD with this Topography Tools. However, Paolo needs information on how to convert lat/long information into the local coordinate system. I'll get Eric Easter to get this to Paolo, and users in the U.K. might want to get him the equivalent.

Alfred
Back to top
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailVisit poster's website    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
Alfred Scott



Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 749
Location: Richmond, VA

PostPosted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 1:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quoteFind all posts by Alfred Scott

More information: Paolo has figured out how to import the generic lat/long files into PowerCADD so that the starting point is (0,0) and it will be up to the user to push the objects around to get them aligned on the drawing.

Alfred
Back to top
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailVisit poster's website    share:   blogger     del.icio.us     digg     slashdot    
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic Reply to topic
   ArchitectureWeek DesignCommunity Forum Index » PowerCADD Discussion Page 1 of 1

 




Latest Posts   ·   Blogs   ·   Jobs Board   ·   Classifieds   ·   User Galleries   ·   Scrapbook   ·   Open 3D Gallery
 Architecture Search   by name of Building, Architect, or Place:  
Buildings     Architects     Types & Styles     Places     Models     GB Image Index     ArchWeek Library
Professional Directory   Web Directory   Competitions   Conferences   Events & Exhibits     Products     Media Kit
DesignCommunity   ·   ArchitectureWeek   ·   Great Buildings   ·   Archiplanet   ·   Books   ·   Free 3D   ·   Search
Special thanks to our sustaining subscribers Building Design UK, Building Design News UK, and Building Design Tenders UK.
© 2004-2009 Artifice, Inc. · Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group · Thème myApple v2.0.1 créé par myTemplate