+st_richardson Posted October 13, 2002 Share Posted October 13, 2002 I've recently purchased a palm m130 with 128mg memory card. I'm looking for useful programs and tips. I particully interested in all the ways to link with the web and use it geocaching. Thanks. Quote Link to comment
+georgeandmary Posted October 13, 2002 Share Posted October 13, 2002 One thing you can do is become a full member and download the pocket queries. The let you download cache pages to an ebook format so you can have them available on your palm. That's about the most useful thing you can do. george Pedal until your legs cramp up and then pedal some more. Quote Link to comment
dboggny Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 delorme xmap and topo 4 allow you to put waypoints, maps and routing directly on the hand held. maps can be put on the card and with such a BIG card, you can put Big maps on. delorme stuff however, has a very annoying and hard to use user interface so it will take a while to learn to navigate. finally for actually finding a cache, cetus gps which is free cant be beat. you can get the .loc file from the pocket querry and run it through warm fuzzy's converter and synch them right onto a palm. i do 450 at a time and have the e book and waypoints in cetus. this all assumes that you are gonna get a gps for the palm, if not, just put the e book from the pocket querry on. SR and dboggny. Quote Link to comment
+Stunod Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 I find GeoNiche to be a much better program than CetusGPS. It was designed for geocaching, and has some nice features such as cache notes and a hint decoder. The only problem I have with it is that you can't use it with EasyGPS (although a new release is coming soon...maybe it will be included then). "Just because I don't care doesn't mean I don't understand." Quote Link to comment
+parkrrrr Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 quote:Originally posted by Stunod:I find GeoNiche to be a much better program than CetusGPS. Well, except for the fact that the guy who wrote it doesn't want me to support its waypoint format in my waypoint converter, even though I'm not asking him to do any work. I've already reverse-engineered the format of the databases, and I might just support it anyway, but I'll never use it because "Ray Dar" isn't interested in the community part of Geocaching. Quote Link to comment
+DougsBrat Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 quote:Originally posted by st_richardson:I've recently purchased a palm m130 with 128mg memory card. I'm looking for useful programs and tips. Thanks. I wrote this one to make notes and such 'in the field' while geocaching. GeocachingDB It does not have GPS functions like the previous programs do, but I like it. No matter where you go... There you are! NTGA member Quote Link to comment
+st_richardson Posted October 14, 2002 Author Share Posted October 14, 2002 quote:Originally posted by DougsBrat: I wrote this one to make notes and such 'in the field' while geocaching. Looks interesting and very usefull. Can you down load info? The only drawback I see is the time to enter data. Quote Link to comment
+DougsBrat Posted October 14, 2002 Share Posted October 14, 2002 quote:Originally posted by st_richardson:Looks interesting and very usefull. Can you down load info? The only drawback I see is the time to enter data. not at this time... I use cut and paste for the heavy data input usually from avantgo page, mobipocket, or just the note pad from pc synced to the palm. If the GPX format becomes available on geocaching perhaps I could use this to load the info in a PC conduit and sync to palm. No matter where you go... There you are! NTGA member Quote Link to comment
+Krenath Posted December 2, 2002 Share Posted December 2, 2002 I've just recently inherited a Palm IIIc and the first thing I thought about doing with it is connecting it to my Etrex Venture and making GeoCaching a lot easier. I had a lot of ideas in my head about what would be possible of one combined a Palm and a GPS. So far, most of them are still just ideas. What I'm finding is that while many small utilities exist that each do some tiny little thing, one needs to have three to five separate utilities just to cover most of the bases. And even then, you're forced to do some heavy data entry. The ideal Palm Geocaching tool should, in my opinion, combine the following: 1. Conduit support for downloading complete cache data. (if I wanted to enter everything manually, I'd just bring a paper notebook) 2. Moving map display with hotsync-downloadable basemaps 3. Full cache data(waypoint, name, type, description, difficulty, hint text...) which is instantly available by clicking on the waypoint position. GeoNiche seems great except for: 1. lack of waypoint info upload capability 2. limited waypoint information, though Notes feature certainly helps. 3. limited waypoint icon options. 4. touching waypoint icon doesn't bring up waypoint info. 5. lack of basemap support (biggest wishlist feature here, but most optional, IMO) Add those features and I'd gladly register GeoNiche for $50, as opposed to the asking price of $24.95 GeoCacheDB definitely seems to have the waypoint information storage I'm looking for, but lacks any map capability or waypoint info hotsync ability. If this could be integrated somehow with GeoNiche, it could form the basis for an outstanding GeoCaching application GPilotS, at the very least, allows me to download waypoint info from my GPS, but my GPS didn't store all that much data about each waypoint in the first place... It also lacks basemap download and *seriously* limits the information that can be stored concerning each waypoint. It wouldn't be so frustrating to have a need for a large collection of programs if it were simply possible to have them all reference a single database file of waypoint information so one could hotsync one file and update the data for all such programs. It's starting to look like I'm going to have to get into programming my own Palm GPS application just to integrate the features I want and cut down on duplication of effort. That'll take forever. Heh, I've already got a .LOC-to-.GPX script for my own use. I have my email program download the Palm Queries, run the converter script, post the updated information to a SQL database, then I have a separate script to generate a GPX file from the SQL database. (Hm. I wonder what it would take to generate a PDB from scratch...) Quote Link to comment
+Brown Dwarf Posted December 2, 2002 Share Posted December 2, 2002 Magellan makes a Palm Companion GPS [uSD$100 after rebate] that rides on the Palm. Mapopolis has good maps for the US and Canada that load into the Palm. It's possible to jigger the .loc file from the custom queries to form a file of waypoints that can be superimposed on the Mapopolis maps [uS but not Canada] -- so you wind up with maps, GPS, and cache descriptions all in your Palm. Some glitches along the way, so it's not a perfect combination, but pretty good. Quote Link to comment
+RPaske Posted December 2, 2002 Share Posted December 2, 2002 One of the more useful items for pda and uploading individual cache otes is Geoclipping. http://home.earthlink.net/~rschoolf/geoclipping.htm Quote Link to comment
+Nurse Dave Posted December 2, 2002 Share Posted December 2, 2002 I'm guessing if you're posting here you already have a GPSr of some sort. If not, we use a palm m130 with a Navman add-on GPSr. Works great and you get a larger screen than any other hand held unit and it's in colour. ---Real men cache in shorts. Quote Link to comment
dangps Posted December 2, 2002 Share Posted December 2, 2002 I just picked up a Magellan companion - they have a $100 rebate going on so it's only $65 in the end, not bad. I must recommendTigerGPS.com, I ordered at 3pm and they emailed me twice and shipped my order the same day. Thats also where I got that price. Works great for me! Quote Link to comment
+benjamin921 Posted December 3, 2002 Share Posted December 3, 2002 I wrote a small program to log your finds here for my palm. I use a m130 as well. I'll trade you permission to use this for your 128mg card just kidding. Please feel free to try it. Quote Link to comment
Railfan Posted December 5, 2002 Share Posted December 5, 2002 quote:You can get a great GPS add-on for only $65. I just picked up a Magellan companion - they have a $100 rebate going on so it's only $65 in the end, not bad. Actually, the Palm Store ( http://store.palm.com ) has the Magellan Companion for $49 after the $100 rebate. I picked one up about a month ago. Quote Link to comment
+RayDar_ Posted June 11, 2003 Share Posted June 11, 2003 Kenrath Wrote: quote:GeoNiche seems great except for: 1. lack of waypoint info upload capability 2. limited waypoint information, though Notes feature certainly helps. 3. limited waypoint icon options. There is a new version of GeoNiche that addresses these issues. The new version can import geocaches, with the description of the cache going into the notes you mentioned. There are also ten new icons, seven of which are specifically for geocaching. The new version is at palmgear.com ((RayDar)) Quote Link to comment
+TeamThompson Posted June 12, 2003 Share Posted June 12, 2003 Hi, I've got a Palm Vx hooked up to a Rand McNally StreetFinder GPS. I don't use the StreetFinder app myself, instead I use MarcoSoft's QuoVadis. It doesn't provide route planning, but it does have an extensive set of vector based maps and very shortly GPSBabel will have support for adding waypoints to the Marker database. What I do is use QuoVadis for moving map and navigating to within walking distance of the cache, then use Cetus for getting me the final distance. I also have MobiPocket installed and I have my PocketQueries generate eBooks so I can read up on the cache. The only inconvenient part so far is that there are several steps involved in getting my most recent set of waypoints down to my Vx. Fortunately it should be amenable to a quick and dirty script and then all will be well. Cheers, Bruce. Quote Link to comment
+Shoebox Posted June 12, 2003 Share Posted June 12, 2003 I used to carry my Visor with a belt clip, but no more. I took a tumble and easily cracked the screen. Had to shell out $100 for the repair. The PDAs are not nearly as sturdy as the GPS. Now I keep it in the backpack or at home. One thing you should add to your PDA is a Hint Decoder program http://www.palmgear.com/software/showsoftware.cfm?prodID=29696 . It makes the decoding quite easy. Quote Link to comment
+smithdw Posted June 12, 2003 Share Posted June 12, 2003 I have a Palm m515 with a Magellan GPS Companion. I use GPX Spinner and Plucker for viewing cache pages. It works much better than Mobipocket and several other programs that I have tried. You can sort caches in several different ways and on the cache page it shows the cache info very close to the GC.com format, last 5 logs, hints (tap to decode), and the nearest 5 caches (configurable to whatever you want). GPX Spinner also creates a 'spun' cache file that you can use EasyGPS to send to your standard GPS. With it you can setup ignore lists, change waypoint icons for different types of caches, change wapoint name format and more. You must setup your pocket query to send a GPX file though. For the GPS Companion, I use Cetus GPS. I download the waypoints using GPS Babel to convert from GPX format to Cetus format. I haven't tried the latest version of GeoNiche, but Cetus is free and I'm cheap. Another great program is Watcher for your PC. You can browse cache pages offline from GPX files send through your pocket query. This is much faster (but not real time and won't show info posted since the last GPX file creation) but you can setup filters to hide caches from view in many different ways, sort in different ways, merge GPX files, and search for cache info. I also bought a RhinoSkins aluminum case that the Palm is usually in that fits in my pants pocket. It has saved the Palm a couple times. I normally cache with a Garmin III+ GPS, but I carry the GPS Companion in my shirt pocket in case I want to use it when I'm in the cache area and want a 'second opinion'. Going paperless with GPX Spinner/Plucker is really great. No more old cache pages with outdated info (Cache Archived for instance) and it's much lighter and easier to use. Also I use the Memo Pad to store my cache log and just copy it to the log form when I'm entering a log on GC.com. I have the Palm folding keyboard that the 515 sits on for typing cache logs on the hood of the Jeep when I get back to it from finding a cache. Hope this helps. "The best way to accelerate a Macintosh is at 9.8m/sec/sec." -Marcus Dolengo Quote Link to comment
+vamelungeon Posted July 3, 2003 Share Posted July 3, 2003 I have a Lowrance Globalnav 212 that I have had for a few years. I know nothing at all about PDA's, but since the Globalnav 212 isn't map capable, I have looked around for a used, inexpensive PDA JUST to use with the GPSr for a map view. Would an older Casio or Palm III wourk? Quote Link to comment
+TeamThompson Posted July 4, 2003 Share Posted July 4, 2003 Hi, The biggest issue a Palm III would run into would be the limited memory in the III. 2MB isn't all that much space for maps, etc. My Vx has 8 MB and it feels overcrowded with Quo Vadis+maps+500 Markers and Cetus+waypoints and Plucker+cache descriptions. So much so in fact that I've relegated the Vx to GPSr functions only and pulled out my HandEra 330 (it was, um, handy - pardon the pun) for Plucker. There was a version of the Rand-McNally Streetfinder GPS that clipped onto the Palm III form factor. It's out of production now, but you may be able to find it on eBay or Amazon used. Personally, I'd recommend getting a device with an SD slot. One of the newer Zires or an M130 or M515 would do the trick nicely. I believe the newer Magellon Companions will clip onto these. Cheers, Bruce. [This message was edited by Thompson Family on July 04, 2003 at 11:14 PM.] Quote Link to comment
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