Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
I'm not sure what's your idea, but that LCD display in the goggles is very
small and is only to display few GPS stats...
Be careful with those advertisements, it probably does not even do half of what
they advertise.
Original comment by heldersepu
on 15 Dec 2010 at 11:31
O.k so using a modular approach what i'm saying is take a program like
gmapcatcher. o.k so it displays maps offline right.
Cool so now you take the viewer from gmapcatcher, you get the gps marker
working on it, so it overlays the gps pointer with optional line ontop of the
satellite data. You then have live data from the heavens (to an extent anyways
obviously not completely live in the sense of seeing things move around you,
but live in the sense you move, the pointer moves, which in turn moves the
gmapcatcher pointer, thus 'following' you about.
O.k so once this has been achieved on for example a netbook or laptop and you
can walk around and the pointer moves tracking the movements ontop of google
satellite (or whatever for that fact, satellite imagery).
So thats stage 1. Doing this would i believe enable a third person perspective
in real-time. This can find use in a whole number of operations/applications,
live data would be mega useful on say ships (for plotting routes through
shallow waters e.t.c/map data could be changed to terrain or even specific
sea-scales). But what highlighted the point was how it may be useful in for
example those snowboarding goggles. Imagine white out conditions, it would be
the equivalent of being able to see through the storm.
I reckon their must be small lcd screens that can display a fair amount of
resolution.
You have a small computer unit on the belt perhaps, it transmits via bluetooth
to the goggles. If the small computer on the belt can run gmapcatcher (i.e
wouldn't have to be a massively powerful computer) and then beam it to the
goggles (assuming gps compatibility is fixed in gmapcatcher first of course ;)
then you would be able to store a database of offline maps (including satellite
data) in the computer belt (very easily harddrives are getting small and
smaller these days)beam it to the goggles and have a real-time birds eye view
of exactly where you are as well as the stats that the aforementioned goggles
appear to have.
Hope this helps ;)
Original comment by ObiDanKi...@googlemail.com
on 16 Dec 2010 at 11:08
actually snowboarding uses would be limited due to constantly shifting
pistes.....but other uses would still exist ;)
Original comment by ObiDanKi...@googlemail.com
on 16 Dec 2010 at 11:13
Original comment by heldersepu
on 13 Oct 2011 at 9:02
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
ObiDanKi...@googlemail.com
on 15 Dec 2010 at 11:13