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#1
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On Apr 11, 7:57*am, Victor Newman wrote:
On Apr 8, 4:58*am, nimbus wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete |
#2
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On Apr 11, 9:55*am, vontresc wrote:
On Apr 11, 7:57*am, Victor Newman wrote: On Apr 8, 4:58*am, nimbus wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Good for IFR pilot (I guess) - if visibility in bright light isn't an issue. Your comment about See You supports my arguement that gadget happy people buy iPads, then look for (or hope for) Aps which may actually be useful. |
#3
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On Apr 11, 6:55*am, vontresc wrote:
On Apr 11, 7:57*am, Victor Newman wrote: On Apr 8, 4:58*am, nimbus wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete And ~$20 per year for SkyCharts Pro gets you current sections, enroute high and low, TAF, Airport diagrams/directory, approach plates etc. either streaming online or you can download with live METAR/TAF (if you have connectivity). A handy reference also runs on the iPhone. I know several glider pilots including myself who use SkyCharts or SkyCharts Pro as handy sectional and airport references even if they fly with paper charts. Darryl |
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On Apr 11, 10:54*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Apr 11, 6:55*am, vontresc wrote: On Apr 11, 7:57*am, Victor Newman wrote: On Apr 8, 4:58*am, nimbus wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having.. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete And ~$20 per year for SkyCharts Pro gets you current sections, enroute high and low, TAF, Airport diagrams/directory, approach plates etc. either streaming online or you can download with live METAR/TAF (if you have connectivity). A handy reference also runs on the iPhone. I know several glider pilots including myself who use SkyCharts or SkyCharts Pro as handy sectional and airport references even if they fly with paper charts. Darryl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - +1 on SkyCharts. A lot cheaper than the 3-5 sectionals I need every year, and actually utilizing a sectional in the very small confines of the Glob cockpit is very interesting, and less than ideal. Skycharts is the REASON I got an iphone, and I don't regret it. Oops! Topic creep. I have no iPad experience or interest. |
#5
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On 4/11/2011 1:54 PM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Apr 11, 6:55 am, wrote: On Apr 11, 7:57 am, Victor wrote: On Apr 8, 4:58 am, wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete And ~$20 per year for SkyCharts Pro gets you current sections, enroute high and low, TAF, Airport diagrams/directory, approach plates etc. either streaming online or you can download with live METAR/TAF (if you have connectivity). A handy reference also runs on the iPhone. I know several glider pilots including myself who use SkyCharts or SkyCharts Pro as handy sectional and airport references even if they fly with paper charts. Darryl You can download sectionals from the FAA web site for free. -- Mike Schumann |
#6
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On Apr 11, 4:25*pm, Mike Schumann
wrote: On 4/11/2011 1:54 PM, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Apr 11, 6:55 am, *wrote: On Apr 11, 7:57 am, Victor *wrote: On Apr 8, 4:58 am, *wrote: Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Sorry, but I have to laugh at the iPAD fanboys (please forgive me if you're not one of them). I recently attended a FIRC at which over 20 attendees were playing with their iPADs. During that two days, I wanted to understand what kind of Aps made these devices worth having.. One guy showed me sectionals that cost him only $80 for an annual subscription. How much do those old paper sections cost? Another showed me real time weather maps (which is great if you didn't think about checking the weather before heading out to the glider port). All in all, the impression I got was that these "suckers" bought the iPAD, then tried to justify owning them afterwards. Now we have a fellow here who first bought an iPAD, and is now looking for gliding software. Let the war begin. Actually if you do fly IFR foreflight for the iPad gets you all sectionals, low alt enroutes, and approach charts for the entire US for a year, and that's a pretty decent deal. Granted, once the battery dies you're SOL, but I've flown with a friends iPad with foreflight, and it was a pretty good app to have in a power plane. If Andrej at Naviter made a port of see you along with a serial cable to interface with our ancient PDAs and FRs, I think he'd sell quite a few copies. Pete And ~$20 per year for SkyCharts Pro gets you current sections, enroute high and low, TAF, Airport diagrams/directory, approach plates etc. either streaming online or you can download with live METAR/TAF (if you have connectivity). A handy reference also runs on the iPhone. I know several glider pilots including myself who use SkyCharts or SkyCharts Pro as handy sectional and airport references even if they fly with paper charts. Darryl You can download sectionals from the FAA web site for free. -- Mike Schumann And that is very handy for technical folks but on a mobile device you need a way to view them, manage them, compress them decompress them, update them. Stream them dynamically or cache them. Geo reference them etc. I could not for a second think about a $20 annual cost that gives me all what SkyCharts Pro does. (and that $20 gives me a license that works on both my iPhone and iPad. You can get a $10 version that does a bit less. Darryl |
#7
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It’s also saving my back.
Before the Ipad, I carried volumes of company manuals, aircraft manuals, books, magazines, and other things made of dead trees, my bag weighed a ton. Sometimes I even play Angry Birds. Jim |
#8
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On Apr 11, 6:18*pm, Jim wrote:
It’s also saving my back. Before the Ipad, I carried volumes of company manuals, aircraft manuals, books, magazines, and other things made of dead trees, my bag weighed a ton. Sometimes I even play Angry Birds. Jim And airline pilots can take notes them at company meetings where they discuss equipping everybody EFBs :-) Darryl |
#9
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Jim wrote:
Its also saving my back. Before the Ipad, I carried volumes of company manuals, aircraft manuals, books, magazines, and other things made of dead trees, my bag weighed a ton. Sometimes I even play Angry Birds. Jim BTW, NewsTap is a good usenet reader... I am using it now... it will do offline reading so to can read and reply even when you dont have a connection.. just like the old days. |
#10
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Hi guys
Can anyone share some pix on how to attach a tab to the cockpit? Do you make use of a normal cover and just velcro the back to the cockpit or would you suggest making a pocket for it to fit into to keep it safe? I've recently bought a 7" tab that I wish to use with XCSoar.. don't want it to fall off the cockpit now.. ![]() Regards, Bruce |
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