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Mapping Sites

April 27, 2020 by VK5AYL

For many years, I’ve been interested in what I could use collected data for.  This was way beyond the days of “big data” and data science which are all the flavour now.  I don’t agree with the way that some multi-conglomerates are using data now.  Mapping data is of great interest to me because of the power of visualising that data on a map where there is a geographic need.  You can look at numbers over and over but you won’t see the big picture until that data is placed on a map.

In the mid 90’s, I bought a Garmin GPS device and started experimenting with connecting the device to a PC, downloading waypoints using the NMEA protocol via a serial port (in the days when there were serial ports included on all PC’s).

I wrote a program to among other things collect waypoints for displaying on a map.  The GPS device only exported Longitude/Latitude.  The client wanted Easting and Northing.  I found out that someone had some code that took the Long/Lat and converted it to Easting/Northing. They were quite happy to share the source code with me.  I took this rather long series of functions that triangulated the earth to achieve this feat and in a language I had never seen before … Fortran.

Never one to shy away from a challenge, I converted the code to Delphi (Pascal).  It took quite awhile to get working.  I took the GPS round our neighbourhood collecting waypoints, excitedly connected it to my PC and downloaded it into a database table.  My download program converted the Long/Lat waypoints into Easting/Northing and both formats were stored side by side.  I hooked the data up to Arcview (the mapping software) and my waypoints didn’t match where I had walked, they were about 1 km out!!!

I contacted the originator of the Fortran code and he said, “oh … you need a fudge factor”!

Absolutely classic!! Can you imagine today’s GPS needing a fudge factor or maybe they do!

How things have changed since then.

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