El and Bill
New member
Good grief! Even Charley Brown would cringe at the thought!
OK - to start with, as many of you know I'm not a 'gizmo' guy. Never paid my saved shekels for a phone with a camera - Why? when my ancient cell phone got better coverage than the expensive new ones (mine had an antenna - fancy that. And I had a fine camera - so saw no need for the new gizmo.
And Apple stuff - a fad. My old Windows on an ancient Dell worked fine (and ran programs Apple couldn't touch).
Alright - now the confession. A kid (who happens to cyber program for the Defense Department and knows something about computers) orders me an iPhone. "you'll find it useful, Dad.".
Well, this post is written on my phone. Some great photos by this phone. BUT - here's the nautical part.
1. An app called latitude we use when cruising to send a GPS location to family every day. We don't file a float plan anymore.
2. Tides - another app gives daily tides just about anywhere.
3. Weather radar - this saved our patooties here on Lake Superior. We 'watched' a severe storm approaching, and tracking it's course relative to our location (accurately known by the phone), got off the lake ahead if the 70 mph winds.
4. Navigation - for about $10 you have all nav charts for the east coast. Kick another 10 and all the Great Lakes or the west coast. They are great backup to chartplotter (should it go out). Shows your location on the chart and is a real navionics chart. Confession - on a lake at Voyageur we used only the phone to navigate (and this is on some of the toughest nav water going - Canadian Shield rocks jutting up vertically, glacial gravel shoals straight up from the bottom, narrow channels between islands, huge glacial boulders in your anchoring cove, etc. The phone took us through this so accurately we never referred to the paper chart except for planning.
There - now I feel better - do I recommend an iPhone or iPad as a boating 'instrument' - you bet! At least consider it as a power source- independent backup and for other mentioned uses. Of course, it's also a phone, connection to Internet (for cruise planning), instant messages (and pictures with family), and link to email and the Brat site. Etc.
OK - to start with, as many of you know I'm not a 'gizmo' guy. Never paid my saved shekels for a phone with a camera - Why? when my ancient cell phone got better coverage than the expensive new ones (mine had an antenna - fancy that. And I had a fine camera - so saw no need for the new gizmo.
And Apple stuff - a fad. My old Windows on an ancient Dell worked fine (and ran programs Apple couldn't touch).
Alright - now the confession. A kid (who happens to cyber program for the Defense Department and knows something about computers) orders me an iPhone. "you'll find it useful, Dad.".
Well, this post is written on my phone. Some great photos by this phone. BUT - here's the nautical part.
1. An app called latitude we use when cruising to send a GPS location to family every day. We don't file a float plan anymore.
2. Tides - another app gives daily tides just about anywhere.
3. Weather radar - this saved our patooties here on Lake Superior. We 'watched' a severe storm approaching, and tracking it's course relative to our location (accurately known by the phone), got off the lake ahead if the 70 mph winds.
4. Navigation - for about $10 you have all nav charts for the east coast. Kick another 10 and all the Great Lakes or the west coast. They are great backup to chartplotter (should it go out). Shows your location on the chart and is a real navionics chart. Confession - on a lake at Voyageur we used only the phone to navigate (and this is on some of the toughest nav water going - Canadian Shield rocks jutting up vertically, glacial gravel shoals straight up from the bottom, narrow channels between islands, huge glacial boulders in your anchoring cove, etc. The phone took us through this so accurately we never referred to the paper chart except for planning.
There - now I feel better - do I recommend an iPhone or iPad as a boating 'instrument' - you bet! At least consider it as a power source- independent backup and for other mentioned uses. Of course, it's also a phone, connection to Internet (for cruise planning), instant messages (and pictures with family), and link to email and the Brat site. Etc.