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View Full Version : SeeYou Recoder - an Android app for glider pilots


July 6th 12, 04:00 PM
Folks: Naviter's first Android app is published in the Google Play store. With a similar iOS app to follow immediately after Apple approves it.

It's an IGC flight file recorder and its name is SeeYou Recorder. It's free. And it's actually an IGC flight recorder on steroids.

http://www.naviter.si/content/view/160/1/lang,en/

Enjoy!

Andrej Kolar
--
glider pilots use
http://www.Naviter.com/

July 6th 12, 05:31 PM
I'm looking forward to the release of the iOS version for my iPhone. Please continue to develope a full version of SeeYou or as near as possible for iOS. The displays are great in the sun and most people already own one.

kammeyer
July 6th 12, 06:22 PM
Check out GlidePath:

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/glidepath/id383714417?mt=8

It will record your flight and submit to OLC directly from your phone.

Dave Kammeyer
XLT

On Friday, July 6, 2012 11:31:40 AM UTC-5, (unknown) wrote:
> I'm looking forward to the release of the iOS version for my iPhone. Please continue to develope a full version of SeeYou or as near as possible for iOS. The displays are great in the sun and most people already own one.

July 6th 12, 06:49 PM
I already use Glidepath. It works great as a recorder and for uploading to OLC. I'm looking for a full function Glide computer or as full of functions as possible for the iPhone. I use Glider GPS for the iPhone currently but it doesnt even compare to SeeYou. I'd love to support a company that provides great products already.

WAVEGURU
July 6th 12, 08:50 PM
Many of us have tried glide path here in Oregon, and it is not good at all. It stops in the middle of most recordings, and we can't figure out why it stopped most of the time. And when it stops, none of the flight is saved. I'm really hoping this new app is dependable. I have an Oudie and I like it, but I wish it would color the trace like SeeYou does on the PC. Will this app be able to color the track for vertical speed, or other choices? Now if we could just see the Iphone screen in daylight you might have something?

Boggs

July 6th 12, 09:30 PM
> I'm really hoping this new app is dependable.

We have logged hundreds of hours of tracks during testing (mostly driving, but lots of flying too) and there was never a reliability issue. Even if your phone fails everything is stored and available for sharing after the phone recovers. No problem there. We already know how to handle these things from SeeYou Mobile and Oudie.

> Will this app be able to color the track for vertical speed, or other choices?

No. Not SeeYou Recorder. It is and it will remain just a friendly free recorder.

See the Roadmap here:
http://www.naviter.si/content/view/160/1/lang,en/

Cheers,
Andrej Kolar
--
glider pilots use
http://www.Naviter.com

On Friday, July 6, 2012 9:50:51 PM UTC+2, Waveguru wrote:
> Many of us have tried glide path here in Oregon, and it is not good at all. It stops in the middle of most recordings, and we can't figure out why it stopped most of the time. And when it stops, none of the flight is saved.. I'm really hoping this new app is dependable. I have an Oudie and I like it, but I wish it would color the trace like SeeYou does on the PC. Will this app be able to color the track for vertical speed, or other choices? Now if we could just see the Iphone screen in daylight you might have something?
>
> Boggs

Ernst
July 10th 12, 03:59 PM
Same experience than Waveguru, Glide Path is not reliable. Look forward to see the Naviter apps.

Ernst

JohnDeRosa
July 11th 12, 07:16 PM
I was speaking to a fellow glider pilot on Saturday about GlidePath.
He reported that it fails "above 3,000 feet".

I found a couple of sites that talk about the issue.

http://ipadpilotnews.com/2012/01/top-12-ipad-tips/
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/archive/t-1027596.html
http://www.tuaw.com/2009/09/12/unhappy-customers-flaming-apple-and-each-other/

Other comments;

1) Iphone uses "assisted" GPS that uses cell towers to get a quick fix
while the regular GPS is busy finding satellites. Then after regular
GPS has its satellites you will get more accurate results.
Ultimately, GPS should work fine without cellular, you just have to
wait longer.
2) That GPS is turned off when in airplane mode. I assume that you
had your phone not in airplane mode and that it worked fine initially,
and then failed after getting higher than the cellular signal. If you
waited long enough, wouldn't the GPS take over? Maybe it is the
cellular service going in/out of range that is causing the iPhone to
bounce back/forth between cellular tiangulation and
3) Cell towers have their antennas pointed slightly downward to
provide optimum terrestrial coverage - so cellular coverage in the air
is always dicey. I always wondered how the 9-1-1 passengers were able
to make their last desperate calls while in the air.
4) Sportys says "But the on-board iPad GPS was made for ground use,
and it’s not very reliable in the air. It has a tendency to drop
offline, especially when switching between apps. For this reason, most
iPad pilots—even those with a 3G iPad—opt for an external GPS. They
are extremely accurate (WAAS-enabled) and very reliable." Sportys has
both plug in and bluetooth add on GPS receivers for $100.
5) http://www.aviationconsumer.com/ has more comments but you have to
subscribe for $36/year.

Google