Hi Ade.
Using the scroll wheel on a mouse gives you a little more control on zoom than using the + and - buttons.
Not sure I understand what you mean there mate...?!Quote:
can the datum of the gps be set through mapsphere?
Cheers,
Hi Ade.
Using the scroll wheel on a mouse gives you a little more control on zoom than using the + and - buttons.
Not sure I understand what you mean there mate...?!Quote:
can the datum of the gps be set through mapsphere?
Cheers,
[QUOTE=AussieAub;1424724]Hi Ade.
Using the scroll wheel on a mouse gives you a little more control on zoom than using the + and - buttons.
oh well unfortunately my laptop doesnt have a mouse wheel
Not sure I understand what you mean there mate...?!
nor do i really, I have a hema wall map of the area up here and it says to set the gps datum to WGS 84 (world geoditic system 1984) ?
Cheers
Bummer! :p
Ahhh, of course! Short answer then....no!!Quote:
I have a hema wall map of the area up here and it says to set the gps datum to WGS 84 (world geoditic system 1984) ?
Cheers
Hema, Garmin, Ozi units/programmes etc are a little more advanced than MapSphere in that respect. They can read user scanned maps and images. You would then need to match the datum of the map/image to the machine and the GPS receiver. As MapSphere presently only reads from online map sources, the plug-in/in-built data of the program has presets based on which map source it is using.
For example, when using Google images, the datum will automatically be set to whatever Google images uses. If you were to change that datum, you would theoretically be shown your incorrect location on Google images.
Does that make sense?
Cheers,
EDIT: Just checked on the Google Earth site and it does in fact use WGS84 Datum. :D:cool: