‘Electronics’ Category

An app for the Adirondack High Peaks

Posted on: December 29th, 2011 4 Comments

You and a friend finally reach the summit of Gothics, take in the glorious view, and begin to wonder what the names are of all the peaks around you. So your friend whips out an iPhone and starts tapping the screen.

Is he calling the local forest ranger for answers?

Not if he has installed the ADK46erNow app on his phone. Developed by Keith Kubarek, an enthusiastic Adirondack hiker, the app uses the phone’s GPS system to help people identify peaks in the viewshed of any of the forty-six High Peaks.

Adirondack 46er app for iPhone

46er app for the iPhone.

The app also contains basic facts about each of the High Peaks, including elevation and the feet of ascent and mileage from trailhead to summit; a logbook for keeping track of the peaks you’ve climbed; and links to the current weather at your location or at any of the High Peaks.

The program can be purchased for $4.99 at the App Store on Apple’s website. The hitch is that you must own an iPhone. I don’t, but I was able to download the app onto my iPod Touch to test the features in the office. Without the phone’s GPS capability, however, I was unable to use the app in the field.

The app’s home page has four options: “My Log Book,” “ADK 46er Now,” “High Peaks,” and “Weather.” The coolest feature, the electronic peak-finder, is found under the ADK 46er Now rubric.

If you select this option, your current GPS coordinates appear at the bottom of the screen. Three new options also appear: “Map,” “360° View,” and “Summit Stamp.”

For the peak-finder, select 360° View. The screen turns into a clear window with a red vertical line running down the middle. It’s as if you’re viewing the landscape through the phone’s camera. When the red line bisects one of the High Peaks in the vista, the peak’s name appears at the bottom of the screen. The function can be used not just on summits, but whenever you have a good view.

One shortcoming is that the app can identify only peaks within a five-mile radius. So if you’re on Mount Marcy, for example, it won’t tell you that the big mountain ten miles distant in the southwest is Santanoni Peak. Kubarek tried using a ten-mile radius, but the phone’s screen became too cluttered. He says he may give users the option of adjusting the viewing radius in a future version of the app.

You can get a better sense of how the peak-finder works by clicking this link to the developer’s website.

Other features include:

  • Summit Stamp. When you reach the top of a High Peak, it records the date and time of your ascent, the current weather, and your GPS coordinates.
  • High Peaks Sorter. It allows you to order the peaks by name, height, feet of ascent, or round-trip mileage to the summit. By selecting a summit, you can view it in a satellite image or on a topo or terrain map.
  • Map and Compass. You can pinpont your location on topo or terrain maps. The compass function is activated by tapping the circular logo on the home screen.

For an overview of all the features of ADK46erNow, click here.

Kubarek says he expects to add new features this year, including one that will allow hikers to e-mail trip notes and Summit Stamps to their friends and family. Those who purchase the app now will be able to update it for free when the new version comes out.

 

Garmin Forerunner 405 GPS watch

Posted on: November 3rd, 2011 No Comments

When I wear my outdoors-writer hat, I always want to know the distances of my hikes, paddles, trail runs, ski trips, and what have you. In 2009, I finally broke down and bought a GPS watch, the Garmin Forerunner 405.

Now when I take a hike, I can see precisely how far I traveled and how long it took, and when I get home I can upload data to my computer, via the Garmin Connect website, to view a lot more statistics: average pace, best pace, calories burned, maximum and minimum elevation, and so forth. I also can view a map of my route.

Garmin Forerunner 405

Garmin Forerunner 405

In addition, my version of the Forerunner, the 405 CX, comes with a heart monitor to keep track of my heartbeat. The CX costs more than the standard 405.

The Forerunner works as an ordinary watch, though it’s not the most attractive thing to wear when you’re stepping out on the town. By pressing the touch-sensitive bezel, you can switch from the time/date screen to one of three other main screens: GPS, Menu, and Training.  You scroll through the various options on these screens by dragging a finger along the bezel. When the option you want is highlighted, you select it by pressing a button.

The watch has an amazing (almost bewildering) array of functions. Many seem aimed at serious runners who are in training. For example, you can race against a “Virtual Partner,” tailor workouts so your heart rate stays within a selected zone, or measure your improvement over time on a given course.

I rarely use the fancier functions, but I find the Forerunner works fine for the basic functions: distance, time, pace, heart rate, and calories.

Hikers might also be interested in elevation changes. When I first bought the watch, I found the elevation data ludicrously off base. I frequently run along an old railroad bed that traverses the Bloomingdale Bog near Saranac Lake. This route has virtually no elevation change, but my Forerunner would claim that I ascended more than five hundred feet.

I wasn’t keenly interested in the elevation function, but I called Garmin. I was not satisfied with their customer service. I was told that they had never heard of this problem before and that my watch must be defective. I found this curious since I had seen similar complaints in online forums. In any event, I traded in the watch for another, but the second one had the same problem. Again, I was told that my watch must be defective. I traded it in for a third: same problem. By now it seemed clear that there was a larger problem, but I never got to the bottom of the matter. Garmin stopped answering my calls and/or e-mails. One day I noticed that the Garmin Connect website had been revamped, and ever since then the elevation data have seemed to be on target.

I have a few other complaints:

  • When the GPS function is on, the watch runs for only eight hours or less. This will do most of the time, but not if you’re on an all-day hike or multiday trip.
  • When the watch gets damp from rain, it sometimes malfunctions.
  • For a while, Garmin Connect switched from Google maps to Bing maps. The Google maps showed the boundaries between the Forest Preserve and private land. The Bing maps do not. In fact, Bing provides no useful geographical information about some of my Adirondack hikes other than the outline of my route: all that appears is a red line on a tan background. Fortunately, Garmin now offers the user the choice of using either map program.

Overall, I have been happy with the Forerunner. Indeed, I am astounded by all the things it can do. Keep in mind, however, that I have not had the opportunity to compare the Forerunner with other GPS watches.

 

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