trophymaster
FNG
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2021
- Messages
- 10
Does Gaia have a unit boundry layer and or wildfire layer?
Hit the + and select create route. You can do a single line or create as many point to point to point, etc...lines as you want along a route. If you tap "Mode" down in the lower left corner there are other selections to modify the route type, you can select straight line here if you want. You can do a straight line in any mode though. Gaia also has snap to functions that will ID a road or trail and follow the road or trail instead of straight lines. Basically you can get very specific (more complicated) or a simple line.Does GAIA have a line-draw feature to find distance?
OnX has this but I can't figure out how to do it on GAIA besides drawing a shape with the area calculator.
Thanks!Hit the + and select create route. You can do a single line or create as many point to point to point, etc...lines as you want along a route. If you tap "Mode" down in the lower left corner there are other selections to modify the route type, you can select straight line here if you want. You can do a straight line in any mode though. Gaia also has snap to functions that will ID a road or trail and follow the road or trail instead of straight lines. Basically you can get very specific (more complicated) or a simple line.
Thanks finding old burn maps is incredibly helpful. I've been using FATMAPS for a few years now. Lots of great imaging and offline downloads. But no boundary markings or private land indication.@MortJ many of the maps are worldwide (Satellite, etc) and some Canada-specific maps are here: https://www.gaiagps.com/canada/
Man- I didn't know this and was just about to start using it (i've played with it a bit, but don't know it well). What a buzz kill. I can only imagine a bunch of Outside Mag socal crap getting ported into the interface. Not sure I want to put the effort into learning it well now...So, I love GaiaGPS and have used it for many years. Some of us are concerned that it has recently been purchased by Outside Magazine, and what that means for the future. Hopefully it's good stuff, more dev team resources, etc. Hopefully it's not just to buy up userbase data and then let it die on the vine.
I write some letters and words in cursive and others I don't. No real rhyme or reason, other than because.I still write in cursive.
So I bitched about the map downloads months ago when I first started using Gaia and it seems they have at least corrected the "wont download in background" issue.
However their downloads are still slow as all hell. I just had a couple map updates to their topo map layer and public land layer. Total of around 4400 MB. It's been going for several hours now and is just over 3/4 of the way done.
When I run a speed test I get over 100 MB/s on my wifi here so this could have taken 44 seconds.
Just curious if you are using a satellite layer? The reason I ask is that I was using the satellite layer called "satellite with labels" which is a mapbox layer source. These took forever to download and frequently failed to save. I found out that mapbox only allows 160k tiles across all saved maps. So if you've hit that limit in any mapbox source it will never download.So I take it back. Long downloads still get shut down in the background when I use the phone and don't just set it down and let it do its thing. Trying to download the 2021 BMA layer for MT it is taking a ridiculously long time and has stopped on me once so far.
ETA: it stopped on me multiple times so far, it's a 1100MB download. The best part is that it doesn't show up under downloads and you have to look in your maps to find it and restart it. It will not restart on it's own, even though "Auto resume incomplete downloads on launch" is turned on.
I brought this up with the gaia when I first had issues. There was no follow up from their initial response and it hasn't been fixed. So I'm kinda done with this app when my subscription expires. I really just use it for public land boundaries.
Why can't locus pro just offer a Land Management layer.