Suunto 9 Picasso Edition
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another sad story, the same day, same exercise, left is recorded with suunto app on my phone and right is recorded with suunto9baro.
the distance is 3.3km vs 2.6km…
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@zhang965
looks like you have a nice phone! -
@zhang965 what says the gps information in the JSON file?
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@surfboomerang said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
@zhang965 what says the gps information in the JSON file?
Wa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pow!
Wa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pow!
Wa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pow!"
What the JSON say? -
@zhang965 Well, it is clear that the S/N and satellite numbers are poor, that explains the poor tracks. Not sure what you can do about that but no watch would be any better with the satellite number and S/N you have.
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@Brad_Olwin
but why is the phone’s track so much better? Cell location does not do it so much better, does it? -
@TELE-HO power and location in device I think
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From what I see you start with very little satelites the bare minimum and due to the location I assume it wont improve.
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@TELE-HO
Basically … antenna -
@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
From what I see you start with very little satelites the bare minimum and due to the location I assume it wont improve.
It would be nice if the GPS icon on the activity pre-start screen changed its color (yellow/green) according to the GPS signal quality to let the user decide to wait a bit longer or just start.
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@TELE-HO usually your phone not only takes GPS but also uses cell tower triangulation and wifi signals to improve its location tracking. By using these multiple sources it can get an even better fix.
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@TELE-HO said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
@Brad_Olwin
but why is the phone’s track so much better? Cell location does not do it so much better, does it?Yes, the cell phone can use towers and any WiFi networks for aiding in location data. The phone likely had a much better fix at start.
My tracks are almost always very good. I am in a fairly rural area, run mostly on trails and I am often above tree line. My GPS conditions are ideal for the watches and I don’t see these issues. Tall buildings, dense forest and deep canyons are much more challenging.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
Tall buildings, dense forest and deep canyons are much more challenging.
Yes, indeed. Simultaneous tracks:
Google Earth measured distance: 3.71km
A3P (light blue): 5.48
SSU (yellow): 4.42
A20 (dark blue): 3.99
i5+Vr (green): 2.96 [Phone + Wireless Data ON]
i7+Vr (red): 3.64(5.17*) [GPS only, Airplane mode, SIM removed]*1.53km of weird westward freakout (5 trkpts) between initial fix and common start.
Both watches on top of pack. Clearly neither happy about it. -
Another test, s9b vs my phone
3.29km vs 3.7km -
@zhang965 said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
another sad story, the same day, same exercise, left is recorded with suunto app on my phone and right is recorded with suunto9baro.
the distance is 3.3km vs 2.6km…
Huh, this one’s really embarrassing. Makes me wonder if smaller phone models if they improve battery life could make sport watches completely obsolete in the future… They already have better tracks in some situations, have larger (in some cases better) screen, can be easily customized, can be used for many other things and they do all this with prices comparable to watch prices. Why shouldn’t one just strap the phone to wrist and have a “sport watch” with huge screen?
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@Prenj
because Suunto does not make money with phones? And because I want a sapphire glass and an ultradurable device …unless you have a caterpillar phone it is not ultradurable -
@TELE-HO also, while at times phones do get better tracks, at times they do not. I have been hiking (as recently as this summer) with friends using phones, and actually before my first Garmin Fenix 2 I was also using my phone to record hikes.
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A bit OT perhaps. Wouldnt it be good if the S9 watches could use the phones gps like the S3? When i do open-water swims and my phone is with me in my buoy, it probably has better gps reception than my watch.
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@TELE-HO said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
@Prenj
because Suunto does not make money with phones? And because I want a sapphire glass and an ultradurable device …unless you have a caterpillar phone it is not ultradurableSapphire glass is nice, but I own a Suunto without it for 2 years and have zero scratches on it. It’s true that phones, with their larger screens are much more fragile and would really benefit with more durable glass, but still I think it’s just not worth it. These days we replace our phones very often. And sport watches industry is heading in this direction as it seems. So having ultra durable watches is no longer a thing when you will most likely, whether you like it or not, have to get another watch before you destroy it, because manufacturer is going to do it for you if you don’t.
I have been using phone with OruxMaps for shorter hikes and I got to say that experience is not that bad at all. Having a decent web platform in addition to the app would be a killer combination. Smaller phone model that could be easily strapped to the wrist, with battery life of at least 20 hours always on display and GPS would be acceptable to me for hiking. For some usage cases it probably wouldn’t, but still, the gap is shrinking.
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@Prenj said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
@TELE-HO said in Suunto 9 Picasso Edition:
@Prenj
because Suunto does not make money with phones? And because I want a sapphire glass and an ultradurable device …unless you have a caterpillar phone it is not ultradurableSapphire glass is nice, but I own a Suunto without it for 2 years and have zero scratches on it. It’s true that phones, with their larger screens are much more fragile and would really benefit with more durable glass, but still I think it’s just not worth it. These days we replace our phones very often. And sport watches industry is heading in this direction as it seems. So having ultra durable watches is no longer a thing when you will most likely, whether you like it or not, have to get another watch before you destroy it, because manufacturer is going to do it for you if you don’t.
I have been using phone with OruxMaps for shorter hikes and I got to say that experience is not that bad at all. Having a decent web platform in addition to the app would be a killer combination. Smaller phone model that could be easily strapped to the wrist, with battery life of at least 20 hours always on display and GPS would be acceptable to me for hiking. For some usage cases it probably wouldn’t, but still, the gap is shrinking.
Sorry for the off topic
20h?on which phone? I am curious. I find oruxmaps a real Swiss army knife app.
Currently regarding gps I think the Etrex series (non touch) are among the long lasting devices in terms of battery life (about 15-20h).