trailjon 1 Posted December 5, 2015 Posted December 5, 2015 I'm in charge of 120 miles of trails in North Central Washington and am searching for an app that allows me to record notes associated with a snapshot and keeps these GPS tagged. I need to be able to take notes from other trail users and incorporate them into this data base and ideally I would be able to organize these notes based on these GPS tags. How accurate could I get with the GPS tags? Does this tool exist in Evernote? Another app? Thanks for any suggestions. Jon Trails ManagerMethow Trails
Level 5* gazumped 12,224 Posted December 5, 2015 Level 5* Posted December 5, 2015 Hi. Not a possibility with Evernote. There may be other applications that would help, but no special knowledge here, and your Google search is as good as mine... sorry!
eric99 1,090 Posted December 6, 2015 Posted December 6, 2015 Here a little bit more info about location tagged notes : https://blog.evernote.com/blog/2015/01/18/search-notes-location/
eric99 1,090 Posted December 6, 2015 Posted December 6, 2015 Since my location service is always on, all my notes are tagged with the location info. It stores the full GPS coordinates, so the accuracy is determined by your GPS and other location info.The atlas visualizes all my notes on a clickable map, great to pre-filter my notes when not enough tags were provided...
trailjon 1 Posted December 7, 2015 Author Posted December 7, 2015 Thanks for the advice, I'll start with the free basic version and see what Evernote can do for me.
eric99 1,090 Posted December 7, 2015 Posted December 7, 2015 Besides the Atlas, you can also query as follows: latitude:[double] - matches notes with a latitude that is greater than or equal to the argument. E.g.:latitude:37 -latitude:38Matches notes with a latitude that is greater than or equal to 37, but do not have a latitude greater than or equal to 38. (I.e. 37 <= latitude < 38)longitude:[double] - matches notes with a longitude that is greater than or equal to the argument.altitude:[double] - matches notes with an altitude that is greater than or equal to the argument. see https://dev.evernote.com/doc/articles/search_grammar.php Eric
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.