- AFTER the visit (20)
- BEFORE the visit (58)
- Blog Mission (1)
- Blogs/Podcast/eInfo (11)
- BPL/WiFi (2)
- DURING the visit (51)
- Gadget/Idea/Webtool (42)
- GPS (11)
- Maps (25)
- mobile phone (8)
- Multimedia (10)
- Pink Foot Awards (3)
- Report/Book (6)
- RFID (1)
- Uncategorized (3)
- Webcam (4)
- Website/Event (24)
- Thursday 12 October 2006: Canadian coffee map for the thirsty tourist.
- Wednesday 11 October 2006: Running map for the fit tourist
- Tuesday 10 October 2006: geoNames is one great global map index mashup webtool
- Monday 9 October 2006: Click gChart for global links to local travel, time and more
- Sunday 8 October 2006: Many avenues for online tourism content
- Saturday 7 October 2006: Train eTickets to be sold at ATMs and Post Offices
- Friday 6 October 2006: Tech 2.0 advice for tourism industry
- Friday 6 October 2006: Biometric check-in at Scandinavia Airlines
- Thursday 5 October 2006: Website for Women Travelling Solo
- Wednesday 4 October 2006: Media-rich touchscreen tables boost pub experience
Visualize the great outdoors with ViewRanger on smartphones

Pull out your smartphone and take a picture of that secret wilderness waterfall you just discovered and automatically record its location.
ViewRanger from Augmentra (a location-based mapping company from Cambridge UK) is an “immersive” mapping tool for GPS-enabled, mass market smartphones. It is designed for the countryside and displays a 3D panoramic view of your surroundings. This is a great tool for the “occasional” tourist and outdoor traveller.
Maps are available for Great Britain and their national parks.
Richard Bloor of SymbianOne recently interviewed Augmentra’s founders, Craig Wareham and Mike Brocklehurst. ViewRanger, he reports, is available on the Symbian Operating System and the S60 mobile phone platform, used on phones such as Nokia 6630, 6680, and N90. They are in discussion with overseas partners to export their technology. The founders’ goal is “to ensure Viewranger is the off-road satellite navigation system of choice of consumers and outdoor professionals.”
In my correspondence with founder Craig Wareham, he indicates that Canada and North America are attractive (markets) for several reasons — the large ‘non-urban’ spaces in those countries, the potential number of consumers, and simplicity in (business) dealings. A current European mapping project, he adds, is expected to consolidate ViewRanger support for mapping, points of interest, etc. worldwide.
Roger A. Brooks Rule 6 “The Rule of Wayfinding” suggests that ‘Real men don’t ask for directions.’ Sometimes a landmark will have no sign. It may have meaning only to you. Mark your map. Post your smartphone GPS point and photo. Create signage.
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