LachlanB wrote:Yep, it sure is handy being able to feed the NSW Topo Maps into Motion X.
Out of curiosity, have you got any idea how to connect Motion X to the equivalent New Zealand topo maps server? I spent ages trying last year before a trip to New Zealand and had absolutely no success.
I tried
http://maps.cera.govt.nz/arcgis/rest/se ... rver/tile/[Z]/[Y]/[X]
and
http://services.arcgisonline.co.nz/ArcG ... /MapServer tile/[Z]/[Y]/[X]
LachlanB wrote:Hmmm... I can imagine that the first is dead, coming from CERA, but the second link provides a complete topo map in ArcGIS Online.
Also, if it was simply a matter of some data being missing, surely the stuff present would still show up? But I'm getting nothing at any zoom level.
I'm wondering if there's a difference in the underlying format of the data. For the NZ Topo maps, the ArcGIS Online tool's URL is [...]html?basemapUrl=http[...], while the NSW topo maps have [...]html?url=http[...] The difference is that in the ArcGIS Online tool, the NSW Topo Map is being displayed over the basic ArcGIS topo map, while the New Zealand map seems to be completely replacing it.
tom_brennan wrote:NZ data is available up to zoom 10 (which is zoom 15 in the standard web maps). For example:
http://services.arcgisonline.co.nz/arcg ... 11911/4713
But you need to reproject the data + remap the zoom to be able to use it in other applications. It's in EPSG 2193 (NZ Transverse Mercator), which is not your standard Web Mercator.
tom_brennan wrote:I've been playing with the LPI data to create a series of web maps of layers and tools that I think would be useful. You can have a look at them here.
http://maps.ozultimate.com/wiki/website_about
You can compare the blurriness of the tiles to Motion X - to be honest, the tiles aren't much use below zoom 14.
polas wrote:How do you know it is EPSG 2193? is it stated somewhere in the API? Or is it just standard for NZ maps? just curious. This would explain why I wasn't able to get any tiles from it.
polas wrote:I noticed that your web maps are much sharper and nicer than anything I was able to get. Do you always pull the higher zoom levels?
polas wrote:it seems that more and more people are doing cool stuff with the available data. This one was one of my favourites recently:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/292 ... topo2.html
tom_brennan wrote:Yes, that one was what started me off. I figured it would be useful to have a simple topo map I could use on my phone, and also a layered one (topo/imagery) for desktop, that you could drag and drop GPX files, edit points and lines, share and more. Both of these are coming along. Works in progress!
outjb wrote:Just out of curiosity, does your server retain a copy of all the gpx files "dragged" onto the maps? If so, a long term side effect of this might be you being the most comprehensive gpx database of NSW walking trails
tom_brennan wrote:I've been playing with the LPI data to create a series of web maps of layers and tools that I think would be useful. You can have a look at them here.
http://maps.ozultimate.com/wiki/website_about
LachlanB wrote:That map's great Tom, being able to draw lines and polygons, as well as mark points is handy.
The other day I was looking at the NZ Routeguides Wiki, and thinking that something like that might be handy for NSW. Not necessarily as a gpx database, but simply as a visual record of tracks and routes. It'd be particularly useful if it could be expanded further away from Sydney into regional parks and used the NSW topo maps as a basemap.
LachlanB wrote:True, I suppose I usually end up on the accessibility side of that debate. Although, I do love exploring as much as the next person.
But I think you're being a bit to harsh there, I think we'd need to mark Wentworth Falls on the map as well!
LachlanB wrote:What set me off was thinking about how the current NSW topo maps are increasingly loosing tracks. I went on a walk up to Mt Currockbilly in the Budawangs last year, and it was mostly all on track, either old firetrails or a footpad through the bush. Yet, according to the LPI, even the old firetrails don't exist. It kinda irks me that a resource like that has just vanished from the maps. It makes planning walks much more difficult than it should be.
LachlanB wrote:What set me off was thinking about how the current NSW topo maps are increasingly loosing tracks.
bushtucker wrote:Hi all,
Good thread here. I tried to use MotionX GPS on the weekend in the Blue Mountains and was unable to get a GPS signal to accurately locate where we were. I'm trying to work out if I wasn't using the app properly or are you saying that our mobile phones are capable of GPS navigation out in the bush even where there is no phone signals?
Thanks,
Daniel
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