Using a Mac G5 running "Parallels" an emulation software package, with the Vista operating system loaded, I have been able to successfully transfer maps, routes, and waypoints from National Geographic TOPO! to my Magellan Triton 300! While this is not the ideal solution for Magellan users that run TOPO! on mac, this is promising.
I'd expect Boot Camp (Mac OS X 10.5 / Leopard) or the new VMWare product will work as well.
I will post some video of the transaction shortly.
11.30.2007
Magellan Triton 300 Works with Macintosh!
Contributed By: Woodford at 11:36 AM 6 comments
Labels: Mac OSX, Magellan Triton, National Geographic, TOPO
11.29.2007
BREAKING NEWS: Confirmed Reports of Magellan Tritons Shipping to Retail
In from our very own "agent x" ... Triton 300's have shipped and are on the way to retailers! That's right you heard it here first, the long awaited Magellan Triton, the first GPS receiver in the market which can load the maps from National Geographic TOPO!, is starting to head towards stores... Get yours while you can! Stay tuned to TOPO! Hacker for further developments.
Contributed By: Woodford at 5:08 PM 1 comments
Labels: GPS, Magellan Triton, National Geographic, TOPO
11.14.2007
The Work Around:
Step One: Create an account with a web based file service. There are a variety of free sites now promoting the feature to post PDFs and other files and images for you to later access from your mobile device – the least of which is Google. My personal favorite due to its simplicity is Readdle.com. Readdle provides you up to 100mb of free online file storage and supports a variety of formats including PDF. Plus if you’re into books – they have a free library of public domain classics like Shakespeare and Conan Doyle.
Step Two: Launch TOPO! and navigate to the map you wish to view on your IPhone/Itouch. In my example I clipped all of Rocky Mountain National Park in the most detailed TOPO! layer.
Step Five: Save the map to disk. Using the Macintosh you can save the map directly as a PDF which is my preferred image. On a PC save the map as a high resolution JPEG or GIFF. If you have a PDF file converter I’d recommend the extra step of converting the graphic file to PDF, but you can post JPEGs and GIFs to Readdle too.
· I’ve had periods of time when Safari has cached my uploaded TOPO! map, allowing me to access it while not on a WiFi network. I’m not certain what the parameters are yet – or how to force it to cache – but I’d recommend experimenting with map size. Obviously keeping the map visible when not online is preferred.
· Experiment with loading different types of maps. Remember that TOPO! covers metro areas too! I created a file in TOPO! highlighting my favorite watering holes, then uploaded that to my ITouch. As more and more coffee shops and bars have free WiFi it came in handy to quickly check the location of the next stop in an evening’s pub crawl.
Contributed By: Woodford at 7:24 AM 2 comments
11.06.2007
TOPO! Works on Mac OSX Leopard
After loading Mac OS X Leopard on my both my Imac and my Intel Powered G5 I can report that TOPO! V 4.2.7 appears to be working without any issue. I've tested GPS interoperability, printing, searching, and all the core tools.
11.05.2007
View TOPO! Maps on IPhone and IPOD Touch!
You read this headline right. For the past two weeks the team of professionals here in the TOPOHacker lab have been working on simple guide to viewing maps from TOPO on your Apple Iphone or IPod Touch. We're delighted to say today that we've made it happen, easily, and will be posting a step by step guide in the next 48 hours. Stay tuned for details ...
Contributed By: Woodford at 10:36 AM 2 comments
Labels: Apple, Iphone, Ipod touch, Itouch, TOPO
11.01.2007
Import and Export Tracks via Conversion Utility
Originally Posted on GPS Tracklog July 8, 2006:
Convert National Geographic TOPO (.tpo) files
GPS Babel, Robert Lipe's conversion utility, has recently been updated to version 1.3.0. This newest version, I am extremely happy to say, converts National Geographic TOPO (.tpo) files. Yes TOPO users, you can now extract track data, converting it to .gpx or the format of your choice. It will work with TOPO versions 2 and 3, but not 4.x.
For those of us with a mass (mess?) of data in TOPO, this is welcome news indeed. I tried it out this morning and it works flawlessly! Congratulations to Robert and the entire team of Babel-heads, especially Alex Mottram, who appears to be their NG TOPO expert. (CORRECTION: Apparently Curt Mills deserves the credit here.)
National Geographic TOPO (Amazon) is a wonderful product, and remains my favorite in terms of CD/DVD-based mapping software. As I noted in my book, GPS Mapping - Make Your Own Maps, the difficulty in exporting tracks is one of the few disadvantages of this program (and the only major one). Finally, we have an elegant solution that allows you to extract your data."