March 10, 2009 02:52
Hi
yesterday I did show at our sailing club a larger Keynote (Powerpoint) presentation concerning electronic navigation with computers and Macs in general.
After the theoretical part I did demonstrate GPSNavX and MacENC with all their flavors.
Then a friend showed MaxSea 12 and MaxSea Time Zero.
Though MaxSea is very impressive I have to say that MacEnc is only missing 3-4 parts which were already very often discussed in these forii (or is that forums?):
* a very powerful logbook which includes only data for a setup time interval
* optimal routing using GRIB, tidal data and tidal streams
* split windows, which do show the same map with routes / boat position on different maps (ENC, Raster and photographic charts)
But MaxSea and MacENC compared all together, I have to say that MacENC is very powerful, especially if one looks at the price.
MaxSea with Tidal Streams, GRIB, AIS module costs about 1800€ (1500 USD) without charts!
For that price one gets MacENC, charts, a GPS, the new mac mini with SSD HD, waterproof keyboard and 12 V 10" TFT touchscreen in one package.
People were impressed by the Mac Mini as small fast reliable computer as it doesn't draw so much power! (idle 15,8 Watt, load 28,3 Watt, 3-5 times less than a comparable PC).
more on that here http://reviews.cnet.com/desktops/apple-m...g=txt;page
What I liked about MaxSea Time Zero (less expensive, but still a lot of money is the scrolling and zooming of charts, very much like Google Earth. Very very fast.
(check this video for more info http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=FR&hl=fr&v=pxi-SFiUCRc)
MaxSea Time Zero is very easy to use, only the chart and needed infos are displayed, all other menus fade away after some seconds.
Though many of our club members do use PC, I think some will buy MacENC soon. Had a long discussion with a dozen of people after the demo.
MaxSea is really very impressive, but being the leader in marine navigation, they do invent many new features.
MacENC works very reliable and one isn't catched with the failures of Windows or its virii.
But I still would like to see some improvements in MacENC:
+ the ability to save trackdata not every minute, but being able to set up another time like 20 minutes or 30 minutes so that one does have a logbook. I think an Applescript should do that.
+ in MaxSea one can click the Barbs in the GRIB data and one does get Meteo data for that specific arrow. (Aparently it's inside the GRIB data)
+ instead of colored arrows in overlayed GRIB data I would like to see color gradients between isobars
see here: http://www.maxsea.fr/TimeZero/DesktopMod...149&id=703
+ a feature I really would like to see, is the ability to setup the draught (draft?) of the boat. this way all regions below this draught could be overlayed as light red, so the one notices at once where one can't sail.
+ MaxSea shows at the tide station positions little yellow vertical animated bars, showing the actual tide height. clicking on these bars pops up a tide curve much like Mr. Tides
and I did notice that bridges or towers heights are shown in feet in MacENC. Is this information inside the charts or is it possible to have this set up in units so that they do show in meters?
BTW is there any update/upgrade of MacENC at the horizon soon ? What features will it include?
Thx.
regards,
Manou
yesterday I did show at our sailing club a larger Keynote (Powerpoint) presentation concerning electronic navigation with computers and Macs in general.
After the theoretical part I did demonstrate GPSNavX and MacENC with all their flavors.
Then a friend showed MaxSea 12 and MaxSea Time Zero.
Though MaxSea is very impressive I have to say that MacEnc is only missing 3-4 parts which were already very often discussed in these forii (or is that forums?):
* a very powerful logbook which includes only data for a setup time interval
* optimal routing using GRIB, tidal data and tidal streams
* split windows, which do show the same map with routes / boat position on different maps (ENC, Raster and photographic charts)
But MaxSea and MacENC compared all together, I have to say that MacENC is very powerful, especially if one looks at the price.
MaxSea with Tidal Streams, GRIB, AIS module costs about 1800€ (1500 USD) without charts!
For that price one gets MacENC, charts, a GPS, the new mac mini with SSD HD, waterproof keyboard and 12 V 10" TFT touchscreen in one package.
People were impressed by the Mac Mini as small fast reliable computer as it doesn't draw so much power! (idle 15,8 Watt, load 28,3 Watt, 3-5 times less than a comparable PC).
more on that here http://reviews.cnet.com/desktops/apple-m...g=txt;page
What I liked about MaxSea Time Zero (less expensive, but still a lot of money is the scrolling and zooming of charts, very much like Google Earth. Very very fast.
(check this video for more info http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=FR&hl=fr&v=pxi-SFiUCRc)
MaxSea Time Zero is very easy to use, only the chart and needed infos are displayed, all other menus fade away after some seconds.
Though many of our club members do use PC, I think some will buy MacENC soon. Had a long discussion with a dozen of people after the demo.
MaxSea is really very impressive, but being the leader in marine navigation, they do invent many new features.
MacENC works very reliable and one isn't catched with the failures of Windows or its virii.
But I still would like to see some improvements in MacENC:
+ the ability to save trackdata not every minute, but being able to set up another time like 20 minutes or 30 minutes so that one does have a logbook. I think an Applescript should do that.
+ in MaxSea one can click the Barbs in the GRIB data and one does get Meteo data for that specific arrow. (Aparently it's inside the GRIB data)
+ instead of colored arrows in overlayed GRIB data I would like to see color gradients between isobars
see here: http://www.maxsea.fr/TimeZero/DesktopMod...149&id=703
+ a feature I really would like to see, is the ability to setup the draught (draft?) of the boat. this way all regions below this draught could be overlayed as light red, so the one notices at once where one can't sail.
+ MaxSea shows at the tide station positions little yellow vertical animated bars, showing the actual tide height. clicking on these bars pops up a tide curve much like Mr. Tides
and I did notice that bridges or towers heights are shown in feet in MacENC. Is this information inside the charts or is it possible to have this set up in units so that they do show in meters?
BTW is there any update/upgrade of MacENC at the horizon soon ? What features will it include?
Thx.
regards,
Manou