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PeteJohn Occasional Visitor

Joined: Oct 21, 2004 Posts: 27 Location: Ilford England
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Posted: Wed Feb 09, 2005 7:51 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Barry
I obtained the co-ordinates by following your instructions for the use of the programme from the wb site, ie goto map view in TomTom, goto co-ordinates and entering these into the relevant boxes. Bearing in mind as I have already said this worked perfectly the first time.
Thanks again
Michael |
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barryd Frequent Visitor

Joined: Mar 27, 2004 Posts: 285 Location: Cheshire, England
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Posted: Wed Feb 09, 2005 11:42 pm Post subject: |
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I'll rephrase the question.
You're inputting these co-ordinates as an OSGB grid reference for Ilford, Essex:
Quote: | East to 005103
North to 513331 |
but they aren't valid (they indicate somewhere else 500 miles away...).
So I was asking where you got them from and what made you think they were an OSGB grid reference. That way I hope we can work out what they are, and from that I may be able to suggest the best way to find them on the TomTom map. _________________ Barry Davies
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PeteJohn Occasional Visitor

Joined: Oct 21, 2004 Posts: 27 Location: Ilford England
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Posted: Thu Feb 10, 2005 12:12 pm Post subject: |
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Hello Barry
I am not sure what to say different. As I said I picked my address off of the TomTom map and took the readings entered in the goto co-ordinates box and entered them into your programme, this then gave me the co-ordinates I gave you. Have I missed something? I thought I had followed the instructions to the letter. I did this the first time with exactly the same readings and it took me to Ilford.
Thanks
Michael |
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barryd Frequent Visitor

Joined: Mar 27, 2004 Posts: 285 Location: Cheshire, England
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Posted: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:51 pm Post subject: |
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Hi again
Sounds like the instructions didn't make complete sense, so at the risk of teaching you to suck eggs, I'll try again below.
The point of my utility is that you can input a position in any of several different formats and convert it to the others, which in itself can be useful. If you have TomTom or (soon) OziExplorer, it can then also show that position on the map for you.
Personally I use it mainly when driving to input OS grid references from paper maps or guidebooks then show them in TomTom; and when walking/geocaching to input WGS84 latitude/longitudes in degrees & minutes and then show them in Ozi. Other permutations are obviously also possible.
When you display the Go to coordinates screen in TomTom, the values in the box are a WGS84 latitude and longitude in degrees, minutes and seconds. They are not an OS grid reference. The position being defined is the current map cursor position (the flashing grey circle that you see when you tap the map or use commands such as Show on Map) or, I assume, the centre of the map if there's no cursor flashing.
You could type those values into my utility, but only if you wanted to see them in another format, e.g. as decimal degrees, or to convert them into an OS grid reference. To do that, in the Format: drop-down list select option 5: WGS84 - D M S.S as your input format and then type the values in the boxes. Include N or S in the first latitude box, and E or W in the first longitude box (or if you don't you'll get N and E by default, which will work anywhere east of Greenwich and north of the Equator). Also be careful as TomTom's boxes are longitude then latitude, whereas everything else I know including my utility does it latitude then longitude.
I hope that lot contains in it somewhere the point you've missed. Please come back again if not.
Best wishes _________________ Barry Davies
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PeteJohn Occasional Visitor

Joined: Oct 21, 2004 Posts: 27 Location: Ilford England
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Posted: Thu Feb 10, 2005 5:36 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Barry
Thanks for sorting that out. I was hoping to use this utility to correct some POI's that were slighly out by converting the co-ordinates I had into the correct ones but obviously I had the wrong end of the stick & I can alwasy be told how to suck eggs!!
Thanks again
Michael |
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barryhunter Occasional Visitor

Joined: Feb 18, 2005 Posts: 6
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Posted: Fri Feb 18, 2005 11:57 pm Post subject: |
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I have a coordinate converter on my website:
http://www.deformedweb.co.uk/trigs/coord.cgi
This will convert between OSGB36 (either Grid Reference or Easting/Northing) and WGS84 in lat long. It also accepts postcodes and will tell you the Grid Reference and Lat/Long of the Postcode. (thanks to the files from this site ;-) )
Another major feature of the page is that it provides direct links to a verity of mapping websites and point of interest searchs that I have found. (including some of my own :D )
Also for OSGB references (or coordinates it can convert to OSGB) it will also tell you the probable county (old and new style) and the exact Landranger and Explorer maps that cover the point.
Hope its of interest, barryhunter |
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dumbledore Occasional Visitor

Joined: Mar 19, 2005 Posts: 8
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Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2005 5:23 pm Post subject: Q. mainly for BarryD |
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I have come here from beginners section - how do you advanced guys get time to help all us newbies?
My need is to use UK NGR grid references. I have looked at your demo BarryD and need to clarify.
If I have TT latest on my PDA and your utility and am driving on the deepest country roads, I need to be able to enter as a "GOTO" a NGR, which may be off road, and "see" where I am in relation to it, so I can drive there.
The scenario is typical when following a hot air balloon. It comes down somewhere within a mile (or less if you are very good) of where you are and the pilot radios (when it works) his landing site as NGR.
Thanks again
any further advice anyone |
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barryd Frequent Visitor

Joined: Mar 27, 2004 Posts: 285 Location: Cheshire, England
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Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2005 11:10 pm Post subject: Re: Q. mainly for BarryD |
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dumbledore wrote: | [...]
I have looked at your demo BarryD and need to clarify.
If I have TT latest on my PDA and your utility and am driving on the deepest country roads, I need to be able to enter as a "GOTO" a NGR, which may be off road, and "see" where I am in relation to it, so I can drive there.
[...] |
If you have a GPS fix, your current position is shown in Map view by the blue arrow.
Use my utility with the balloon's grid ref. The map is now centred on the balloon and a flashing cursor marks its position. Zoom the map in and out using the slider. The map stays centred on the balloon and sooner or later the blue arrow will also be visible. You can now see your position relative to the balloon.
Now tap & hold on the map cursor (the balloon position) and select Navigate to... on the menu that pops up. TomTom plans a route to what it considers to be the nearest point on a road to the balloon.
Sadly, the one downside to all this is that I currently suspect my utility won't work with TomTom 5, as reviews of pre-release software suggest that it no longer provides a "Go to coordinates" screen. Fingers crossed that this feature (re)appears in time for the release version! _________________ Barry Davies
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dumbledore Occasional Visitor

Joined: Mar 19, 2005 Posts: 8
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Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2005 6:37 pm Post subject: |
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Got it - brilliant
thanks |
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Andyd32 Occasional Visitor

Joined: Oct 26, 2004 Posts: 29 Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2005 2:37 pm Post subject: Q for any one with answers! |
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Any news if Barryd's excellent utility will work with TTN5?
New maps will be nice, but these maps will be of no use if I can no longer find where I want to go on the map!
Regards, Andrew |
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barryd Frequent Visitor

Joined: Mar 27, 2004 Posts: 285 Location: Cheshire, England
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Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2005 6:18 pm Post subject: |
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Sorry but it looks like it won't work. And I'm not interested in spending $199 on the SDK to make it work "properly" either, I'm afraid. If the V5 SDK is affordable for hobbyists like me, then I'll think again. But I wouldn't hold your breath on that ... _________________ Barry Davies
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ChrisDev Occasional Visitor

Joined: Oct 30, 2003 Posts: 33
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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2005 4:41 pm Post subject: |
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barryhunter wrote: | I have a coordinate converter on my website:
http://www.deformedweb.co.uk/trigs/coord.cgi
This will convert between OSGB36 (either Grid Reference or Easting/Northing) and WGS84 in lat long. It also accepts postcodes and will tell you the Grid Reference and Lat/Long of the Postcode. (thanks to the files from this site ;-) ) |
Hi Barry,
I'm trying to convert lots (thousands) of postcodes into Long/Lat in order to update my Wireless Hotspot POI. Is there any way to use your website to do a batch conversion? Access to the cgi script or something along those lines....?
Chris |
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mugwump Occasional Visitor

Joined: Sep 11, 2005 Posts: 54
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Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2005 10:05 pm Post subject: Batch postcode to waypoint POI conversion |
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hi,
I've knocked up a site that will do postcode batches but it was never intended to do *thousands* 8O
How many are we talking about?
Can you split them into multiple smaller batch jobs? If not I could manage the batching myself with some modification of the code. |
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mugwump Occasional Visitor

Joined: Sep 11, 2005 Posts: 54
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Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2005 10:07 pm Post subject: |
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BTW its still very *alpha*  |
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tchart Regular Visitor

Joined: Apr 06, 2005 Posts: 121 Location: Wellington, New Zealand
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Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2005 10:41 pm Post subject: |
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GPS Speed Sentry shows OSGB grid reference based on your current GPS location.
Obviously you cant plug in coordinates to see the result but it will show you your current OSGB grid reference which may be useful while you out and about :D
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tchart/
Regards
Trevor |
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