Trimble is known for its outdoor adventure gear including GPS devices to help campers, hunters, and hikers plan their routes. The Trimble Outdoors application is now available for the Android-powered G1 smartphone from T-Mobile.

The application provides complete outdoor trip planning, navigation, and geotagging. Users can review and plan trips online, send routes, waypoints, and maps wirelessly to the G1, and use the phone as a full-featured GPS navigator for outdoor adventures.
The application also allows geotagging of images and pictures along with the ability to append text and audio notes to the photos that can be shared on Facebook or Google Earth. A breadcrumb trail is offered to allow easy return trips. The app is available on the Android Market now for $19.99.
[via Trimble]







So far if I was to rate this app from my download to putting info on the phone I'd rate it a 4 out of 10.
Its not super user friendly
I suggested iPhone but am more comfortable with Android. We'd need about 20 of them but my point is that it's better to have 1 device that acts as a data collection tool and communication tool. Plus field staff would be away from the office for months so the ability to use 3/2G would be pretty big.
Waypoints are a big issue when expanding mapping tools in this capacity.
I suggested iPhone but am more comfortable with Android. We'd need about 20 of them but my point is that it's better to have 1 device that acts as a data collection tool and communication tool. Plus field staff would be away from the office for months so the ability to use 3/2G would be pretty big.
Waypoints are a big issue when expanding mapping tools in this capacity.
I have a $4,000 trimble at work that we use out in the feild now and then so I'm rather hip on the hand held trimbles, but honestly I had hi hopes for this app and I might try it again later when I have more time to really field test it.
I also have a Trimble submeter XT but it doesn't allow all the functionality that the G1 may offer. I'm not worried about battery life since field work is done out of the car and we can supply chargers. I'm not concerned as much about the camera as we don't need hi-res images. We're only counting cigarette billboards and other bigger window dressing ads.
Sure a handheld GPS would be more accurate and there are plenty of GPS cameras but they all cost $400+. So then we'd need to give field staff a cell phone, a GPS, a camera (or post process images to georeferencing), and a laptop.
I'm hoping we can give them a smart phone that can do all this to keep costs down. Data entry forms will be sized to fit the touchscreen. All airline and travel will be completed at the back office but we'd want them to check flight status, rental car reservations, and of course email.
Plus we'd be able to use Latitude to track their progress. If we can download tracks and waypoints from them remotely then we'll have immediate data access from the waypoint locations and we might be able to use tracks to validate their work.
I have a $4,000 trimble at work that we use out in the feild now and then so I'm rather hip on the hand held trimbles, but honestly I had hi hopes for this app and I might try it again later when I have more time to really field test it.