New version of Gaia GPS released

Scoutn79

Adventurer
Android is a focus for us, and this increased big-time this year.
  1. One of the new folks listed here, Andy, is an amazing Android developer: https://blog.gaiagps.com/gaia-gps-welcomes-5-new-team-members/. He left Facebook, where he worked on massive Android projects for billions of people, to come work on Gaia GPS. He's a longtime Gaia GPS Android user who personally wants to see Gaia GPS Android be the best it can be, for his adventures and yours.
  2. Andy has done some bug fixing on Android so far, but his main feature product has been the new search tech. Here it is on the website, soon in Android: https://www.gaiagps.com/hike/united-states/washington/mount-baker-snoqualmie-national-forest/. We're launching this search feature simultaneously on iOS and Android, and we plan to launch in December. It works really well already, and if you are a beta tester on either iOS or Android, you can be using it now as we finish polishing it.
  3. The next big Android project is maps and map downloads - bringing that up to par with iOS, including vector maps! You're going to see map download sizes cut by more than an order of magnitude, impacting time to download and size on disk. Plus the maps look awesome, and you can do stuff like effect the text size by changing your device settings. I hoped to this this this year, but it's looking like 2019Q1 now. This project involves my partner Jesse, my partner/wife Anna, and Andy, so you might say we have our top guns are going to be pointed at Android maps. Some work has already been done, but this is mostly queued behind the search project.
  4. The Android vector maps project is similar to a project happening on the website too. You folks might like to give the new "map2" for a spin, we have a live alpha going as we develop it: https://www.gaiagps.com/map2/ - notice how the zooming and text works when you use the vector-based sources like GaiaTopo. Android will be like that. The web version of this product is captained by another person mentioned in that blog post (Lucas). And there literally couldn't be a better person for it, since Lucas is one of the authors of the vector mapping technology/framework that he is implementing for the web map (i.e. he last worked at Mapbox on creating mapboxgl, and now he's implementing mapboxgl for /map2).
I'm not sure if Android can be 100% as good as iOS, especially on the universe of all Android devices. But we're certainly going to close the gap a metric ton over the next 6-12 months, so bear with us. We do share some values spoken here, that Android/iOS should be more at par, and that Android/iOS should get new features at mostly the same pace (except when we want to stagger releases so we can test/iterate before building on iOS+Android+web).

p.s. We're still hiring engineers. If you are a sick programmer (or have a friend who is), send them our way: https://www.gaiagps.com/company/jobs/

Our most recent customer support hire (blog post imminent) is a guy named Erik, who stood out to us because he's in the process of publishing an Android app (plus he's a good writer and did the PCT thruhike). We hope to see Erik eventually transition from support to engineering (as did the person he was brought on to replace, who transitioned from support to GIS/maps engineering). We're also likely to make one of the new engineering hires in 2019 Android focused, assuming we can find the right background.

Your Gaia GPS team now includes 14 people (and some contractors), and if I have my way, it will be 20+ full-timers by the summer. We've been working on Gaia GPS for 10 years now, but we somehow had overnight success in 2018, and now the company is growing and the product is evolving faster than I've ever seen it go, not just marginally so either, it's warp speed now. We're still boot-strapped, and we have neither debt nor investors, so what you can expect is another decade of earnest work with the company focused on the community.

I look forward to the new updated Android version(s) rolling out in the future.
I have done a lot of complaining about the app (mostly bug related) and there are still quite a few aggravating bugs.
That being said, and after all of my complaining, I have stuck with GAIA because I believe it has a lot of potential.

Darrell
 

bglenden

Member
Sorry if this is off-topic for the thread, but am curious about:

1. What map layers do people load for Forest Service Land;
2. BLM land?

(I have a premium subscription).
 
I cruised over to the help forums on the Gaia website and was disappointed to see that it is basically a wasteland of unanswered posts. I'm not saying the staff needs to be involved, but normally with a product like this I would expect to see some user engagement. There is essentially none.
 

MountainBiker

Experience Seeker
Sorry if this is off-topic for the thread, but am curious about:

1. What map layers do people load for Forest Service Land;
2. BLM land?

(I have a premium subscription).

This is all for Android, not sure of the differences with IOS, probably none for this discussion.

In the western states, I use both "Gaia Topo" and "USGS Topo" for BLM. For NFS I'll add "USFS MVUM". I've rarely found a use for "USFS Classic" or "USFS 2016", but there are occasional nuggets of info in those that aren't in the maps listed above. My "trick" is to turn on all the available maps (one or two at a time) in areas that I know very well. I then look to see if they show items of interest (mines, creeks, etc) and accurately show legal roads, without showing too many roads that I know aren't legal. For example, before GaiaGPS, I would use the Gazeteer or Delorme atlases. There is decent detail in those for planning, but they show a ridiculous number of roads that are not legal, and I find out by getting to a locked gate and no trespassing signs, and then I have to backtrack.

On first glance, Gaia Topo seems to have everything that is on USGS Topo. But I find many historic points of interest on the latter but not on the former. As you zoom in on the USGS, you can often find things like old railbeds, mines, cable cars, and many other cool things.

These are the typical maps that are sometimes worth downloading in addition to my main maps, "Gaia Topo", "USGS Topo" "USFS MVUM":
- "NeoTreks Land Use" (It actually shows roads I know to be legal, that aren't shown as well on other maps. In particular, I use this for the military ranges in So. AZ that are legal with a permit. USGS shows too many roads that are no longer legal for use). This map is useful for route planning (the land use part), even if you don't need to download it for offline use.
- "NatGeo Trails Illustrated", great for NPS areas, as well as some recreation areas. I wish they had this style of map for all regions, as it is very easy to read at different zoom levels, shows hiking trails, and clearly shows potential locked gates and other road closures. Super easy to read even at a glance when your tablet is mounted on your dash. If the text scaled to zoom level, and it included all areas, this map would be near perfect!

With my storage capability, I typically use a zoom level of 14. Which often is just good enough for the USGS map. I can sometimes get by with a zoom of 13 on the "NatGeo Trails Illustrated" and "USFS MVUM". I think the zoom level is very particular to your device, your eyes, and your mount location, so you'll have to experiment.
 

Superduty

Adventurer
Is there a way to make the map as track up when it shows you moving on the map? I hate when I’m doing an out and back route and coming back and looking at the map my brain thinks I need to turn right when it’s actually left. Seems like the orientation is always North up. Can you do track up somehow? I can’t figure it out.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Cycle through this button and it will switch to track up. However, the moment you touch the screen it seems to default back to North up.
baaba09d6852e0005d3ad21cf80c2062.jpg


Sent from my SM-T713 using Tapatalk
 

ventura911

Adventurer
Apple CarPlay and Gaia coming soon(-ish). From Gaia yesterday...

92714573a07f77ecdb410d06c66d9ef1

Ashli Baldwin
  • 1 day ago

Hey Folks, just wanted to pop in to say this is on our product roadmap for early 2019!
 

concretejungle

Adventurer
If I've been using Motion X gps on my iPad for years and have a lot of saved tracks and waypoints, can I transfer that information over to work in this app?
 

e60ral

2016 4Runner Trail w/KDSS
If I've been using Motion X gps on my iPad for years and have a lot of saved tracks and waypoints, can I transfer that information over to work in this app?
Can motionX output them as .gpx or similar files?

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 
Is there a way, on the web or on the device, to create routes from waypoint to waypoint? To me, the whole idea of waypoints is that they are endpoints of a route, but it seems that when creating a route you need to pick somewhere next to a WP because clicking the WP just shows its name. I'd LOVE to just be able to type in a WP name or select it as a routing point, rather than zoom way in on it just to be able to select a thing that isn't actually the WP.
 

MountainBiker

Experience Seeker
Is there a way, on the web or on the device, to create routes from waypoint to waypoint? To me, the whole idea of waypoints is that they are endpoints of a route, but it seems that when creating a route you need to pick somewhere next to a WP because clicking the WP just shows its name. I'd LOVE to just be able to type in a WP name or select it as a routing point, rather than zoom way in on it just to be able to select a thing that isn't actually the WP.
What I do is select a point near the waypoint. If it doesn't look close enough for route accuracy, grab it and move it. When you grab an existing route point, it doesn't "select" an existing waypoint.
 

outback97

Adventurer
I have been using the app on my iphone and it works well for offline navigation when hiking and offroading. I just realized that I could install Gaia GPS on an older android tablet, and it seems to work loading the waypoints I've created. One limitation though seems to be that I cannot download any maps on the android tablet.

With my iphone and android tablet using the same account, should I be able to save offline maps on the android tablet? Or would I be required to set up two separate accounts to use it this way? If one can share waypoints and routes between these two devices, but the tablet doesn't have any maps on it to display, I'm not sure how useful that'd be.

What I'd like is to have my iphone and android tablet sharing any waypoints and routes I've created, and for both devices to be able to operate offline with maps I download. Can I do that?
 

LandCruiserPhil

Expedition Leader
I have been using the app on my iphone and it works well for offline navigation when hiking and offroading. I just realized that I could install Gaia GPS on an older android tablet, and it seems to work loading the waypoints I've created. One limitation though seems to be that I cannot download any maps on the android tablet.

With my iphone and android tablet using the same account, should I be able to save offline maps on the android tablet? Or would I be required to set up two separate accounts to use it this way? If one can share waypoints and routes between these two devices, but the tablet doesn't have any maps on it to display, I'm not sure how useful that'd be.

What I'd like is to have my iphone and android tablet sharing any waypoints and routes I've created, and for both devices to be able to operate offline with maps I download. Can I do that?

I used both apple and android and needed 2 accounts. That was a couple years back dont know if it has changed.
 

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