it’s been a while since i paraded any new toys here. so here’s a couple of new ones i’ve got, since acquiring my iphone 3GS with compass and GPS:
motionX-GPS - GPS software
i did a bit of reserarch into the ‘must-have’ apps which take advantage of the later model iphones’ GPS and magnetic compass and this one kept coming out near the top of the list. as i’ve mentioned before, i’ve got a handheld GPS - a garmin GPSmap76, which i’ve used for years to mark camping spots, places i’ve been to on holiday. etc. etc. [much to the annoyance of the GF who regularly has to stand around waiting for me while i manually add waypoints into the garmin, when we’re out sightseeing :grin: ] so i’m quite into the whole GPS thing anyway.
i wasnae expecting this app to be that great but, in the couple of days i’ve had it, i’ve been completely blown away by it. it makes my garmin look like something out of the stone age. it also goes quite well with my new rugged case for my iphone, as it makes it look like some kind of really modern handheld GPS. unfortunately - even with the otterbox case on - my iphone isnae anywhere near as weatherproof as my garmin [which is waterproof and also floats], but for use in moderately ‘outdoorsy’ conditions, it should be fine.
OK. enough about its outer shell . what about the app itself?
i s’pose the heart of any GPS app is the mapping screen. motionX’s is nice and clean looking and you can pinch’n’zoom and swipe to move around, as you’d expect. by tapping the icon in the top right of the screen, you can choose to work in ‘outdoor GPS’ mode, ‘wifi/triangulation’ mode or ‘manual’ mode [which basically turns of motionX’s attemtps to find out where you are, to conserve battery life]. the icon in the corner changes to reflect which mode you’re in.
wifi mode [left] and GPS mode [right]. the globe spins and is coloured if motionX has a GPS fix or coloured red if it disnae:
for map display you can choose between motionX’s own maps, google maps, or bing maps. the app will cache map tiles as you view them, for ‘offline’ viewing. and you can also choose to download if you’re planning to visit an area away from a wifi signal. for downloading maps, you’re limited to the motionX format ‘for copyright reasons’.
selecting which maps to download is a bit of a palaver which involves either draging out a circle to describe an area within which you want to download maps, or dragging out a kind of sausage shape to describe a route, along which you want to download maps for. you then have to select more options, such as minimum and maximum zoom levels for the maps you want to download, before you actually start downloading. i say it’s a bit of a palaver and it is, when you’re used to just selecting to download a map for a city or country, but i suppose, in its favour, it does offer you a fine degree of control over what you’re filling up your iphone’s precious hard drive with.
clicking the double-arrows at the righthand side toggles ‘fullscreen mode’. clicking on ‘maps’ allows you to switch between different map providers and also gives access to the downloads options:
[left]choosing coverage area for downloading maps - [right] choosing coverage area for downloading maps along a route:
opposite the ‘GPS’ button at bottom left of the screen [which is where the GPS stuff lives], is a ‘menu’ button. tapping this opens up a panel with a whole swathe of other standard GPS functions, which motionX has. all the expected ones are there, such as compass, navigation, waypoints etc. each of these options takes you to a different function, which usually has as many modes and configuration options as the main map screen. if i wanted to cover everything, i’d be here from now ‘til christmas - and this review is already long enough, so i’ll just give you a couple more screenshots to be going on with:
menu: a wealth of other features:
compass screen and navigation menu screen [lookslike they’ve taken a leaf out of tapbots book for that one!
this app uses the GPX format to store waypoints, which is incompatible with google earth’s KML format. this was a bummer for me, as my garmin has no connectibility with my mac at all but, over the years i had transcribed all my waypoints into google earth by manually entering the co-ords stored on my garmin. i was dreading having to do it all again, transcribing them into motionX but then, on a whim i read the help files :eek: and found out that motionX have a nice automated facility whereby you email a GPX waypoints file to GPSimport@motionx.com and straight away you get an email with a link in it. if you open that email on your iphone and click on the link, it fires up motionX which then offers to import those waypoints. the only problem that remained was to convert the waypoints from KML to GPX format in the first place. this i was able to do using file > save > save my places as… in google earth to save KML files and then used this website to convert the KML files to GPX ones, which i emailed to the abovementioned address. the motionX help files say that their email import thingy will only handle 12 waypoints at a time so, for the first few KML files i exported from google earth, i stuck to this number. but, when i miscounted one time and got an email back from GPSimport@motionx.com which, when imported into motionX, contained 15 waypoints, i started being a bit more adventurous and converted the rest of my waypoints in batches of 20-30, which seemed to work fine.
it sounds a bit of a palaver but, once i got a rythm going, it probably took me about half an hour to import at least a couple of hundred waypoints into motionX. [export KML from google earth > convert to KML to GPX > email GPX to motionX > click link in email reply > OK import of waypoints into motionX]. if i’d had to enter all that info by hand, it would have taken me several days and would have been riddled with errors. try manually entering several hundred pairs of co-ords with six decimal places, without making any mistakes!
well, in this review, as in my usage of the app itself, i feel i’ve only scratched the surface here. i think this app is beautifully designed and incredible value for a measley £1,79. i’m so impressed with it that - even tho’ i got a cracked version of it for free - i’m actually going to buy it anyway.
the only slight caveat i have in the midst of all this praise, is that i havenae tested the GPS abilities of the app [and by extension the iphone itself] when i am away from a wifi signal and am thus just relying on the iphone’s GPS capabilities alone. i doubt it’ll be as accurate as my dedicated garmin but, with any luck it’ll be close enough.
COST: £1,79
RATING: 
[EDIT:]
PS - i’ve got to say that, for such a lovely looking app, motionX-GPS has got to have one of the fugliest icons i’ve seen on an iphone. it’s incredible that the same people who came up with the interface in those screenshots above, would hide all that stylish design behind an icon that looks like this [it disnae actually look too bad at this size, but iphone-size, it’s really grotty looking:
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i’ve promoted moitionX-GPS to my homescreen, but that feckin icon is really doing my head in :vomit:

























