toyman":5roni9y0 said:
Maybe he's saying everything except charts (maps)?
Geez, just ask! I've been a member of this forum for what, 3 years now? :lol:
I've been using the iPhone/iPad app on my boat for the last few days. We've been moving up the ICW through Florida. We're in Fernandina now - about to head over to Cumberland Island for a few days.
First, ALL of the data resides locally on the iPhone or iPad. All of the NOAA chart data, all of the ActiveCaptain data, all of the tide calculation...everything. NDBC buoy reports are integrated in the app and they are obviously accessed over the internet because the only thing that makes sense it to get the latest data.
This is all so incredibly nice - and I'm obviously biased but it doesn't take much imagination to realize how nice it is. No internet connection is needed at all to get the NOAA map data. Since the ActiveCaptain data is local, every marker instantly comes into view as you zoom and pan around. And it rotates with your course over ground so you are always seeing what's up ahead/left/right in its proper orientation. It was very nice to have the info for each bridge right there before we got to the bridge. Yesterday we traveled between St. Augustine and Fernandina and there are 5 hazard markers along the ICW. We watched each one pop up and followed the information about which side of the channel to stay on, etc.
The data is compressed and takes less space than you'd imagine. The charts for Maine around the Keys to Pensacola along with all of the AC data takes about 300 MB. In all honesty, that's nothing today. Even on my 16 GB iPhone with lots of videos, pictures, every charting app and charts, I've only used 6 GB so far.
When you have an internet connection, the app will allow you to update the AC data. This downloads the changed marker details and reviews that have been incorporated on the web site since the last time you updated it. I find this takes about 20 seconds per day between updates over cellular. So if you update daily while underway, it takes about 20 seconds. If you update weekly at home, figure on a couple of minutes (probably less if you're on a quick WiFi connection).
For the iPad, it doesn't pixel magnify/replicate. It uses the full resolution. I don't have one myself - waiting for the 3G version - but I did see it live on real hardware and it was pretty nice. It's the size of a large chartplotter - the pixel density is very high on the iPad and the resulting image looks very nice.
Note that we're doing the same offline AC data storage with Coastal Explorer right now too - available as a free beta from Rose Point. There's a whole API for the data and synchronization that we've made available to developers. Three products are announced with support - MaxSea Time Zero, Coastal Explorer, and Nobeltec v11. There are a few others coming as well.
Even though the AC data is being included now in commercial applications, the web site and everything about ActiveCaptain is completely free. It costs nothing to use the web site now or in the future. There will also never be an extra charge to use the ActiveCaptain data within the commercial apps - it's just a standard part of the feature set.
There's lots more interesting things coming on the horizon - native Mac app, other platforms, and possibly even inclusion of AC's data on charting "chips" from the standard chart providers. And don't get me started about the route sharing capability that I'm designing for the web site right now...