Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Great Device, No Mac Support Yet, August 26, 2008
The hardware side of this device works great. Long battery life, easy to use, fast satellite acquisitions. The documentation could use an overview of the buttons and lights and how the hardware controls work. This info can be found on the GiSTEQ support forums, but not in detail in the included documentation. The major hit is that this is advertised as having support for the Mac platform. The only part that works on the Mac is the bluetooth serial device connection. As of 8/26/08 the Mac Phototrakr software cannot communicate with the device to download the tracks and way points or to configure the device. The is no Mac firmware flashing utility either. The hardware doesn't work under Parallels running Win XP either. The only way of accessing the hardware to get the tracks/waypoints or to change settings or clear the memory is to use Boot Camp and run Win XP on your Mac. This is not "Mac Supported" hardware.
If you are a Windows user, I'd give this hardware/software package 3.5 stars, the software has quirks that are annoying so it wouldn't get a perfect 5 star. You can't delete out track points that are irrelevant or have bad fixes. Sometimes things seem to lock up and you have to kill the app via taskmanager. The software isn't the most user friendly thing out there, but it is functional, and the hardware is great. The documentation being lacking applies to both the Mac and Win side, and that ticks off at least 1/2 a star.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great little device for geotagging or just a GPS receiver, October 13, 2008
I bought this item to have GPS data to match up to my photos so my friends and family could view them on Picasa. The GiSTEQ met my expectations providing a fairly simply process to add the location data to the JPG files.
My previous GPS experience is with a Garmin Nuvi navigation unit. With that in mind, here are my specific opinions about the device:
1) The GiSTEQ finds the satellites faster than the Garmin and holds them better as well. It of course loses the satellite fix in tunnels or in buildings, but compared to the Garmin it does a better job of receiving the signals, holding them, and reacquiring them.
2) The battery life is great. I used it each day for 10-12 hours, but have no doubt it would go much longer. I recharged it every night just to be safe.
3) It has Bluetooth which I use to connect it to my Blackberry Pearl. Many newer phones have GPS built in, but if you have a laptop or cell phone with Bluetooth and no built in GPS, you can connect the GiSTEQ to add GPS functionality to your mapping programs.
4) The time on the device is set according to your PC's clock and it does not change when you travel meaning the GiSTEQ will not adjust to the local time zone. I found this convenient because I only had to synchronize the clocks on the cameras once. Some people may not like that the photos have a timestamp matching your home timezone, but there are ways around that. The important piece is that the time on the device and the cameras match. My photo timestamps were 6 hours off from the time zone where I was photographing, but because the device and camera times matched so did the GPS data which is all I cared about. You can check it to the minute at anytime by pressing a couple of the buttons. The device will speak the time using the external speaker. Using the software and time display on the PC screen, you can match the camera clock to the device to the second.
5) The GiSTEQ holds 250,000 GPS data entries. You can adjust the logging interval to ensure you don't fill up the internal memory before you have a chance to save it to the computer. I set mine for 6 seconds and used the device for two weeks. At 6 seconds, I figure I could have used it 24 hours a day for 17 days before needing to save the data to the computer.
6) The accuracy is acceptable. I found it to be accurate within several feet (probably less than 10).
7) The software is user friendly, but maybe a little less stable than you would hope. I have only used it on one PC; a Pentium 4 running Windows XP sp3. It sometimes freezes on me, but it processed 2,845 photos adding GPS data to them with no problems. I like the software and got a kick out of the novelty of being able to play back my trip seeing a little dot move on the map tracing my path showing direction and speed.
8) The GiSTEQ has a setting which will turn itself off when it has sit undisturbed for a configurable amount of time. Or you can just have it stay on until you turn it off. The speaker volume is adjustable from silent to fairly loud. The LEDs flash red, green, and blue indicating various status. I don't recall if the LEDs can be disabled.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
multifunctional: geotagging and mapping, March 3, 2008
Length:: 0:23 Mins
Works for standalone photo geotagging, plus interfaces with my Nokia N800 tablet for map navigation. 5 stars with the caveat that it is a bleeding-edge device. Bundled software has a nice feature set and interfaces with the major photo-sharing sites, but is a little unstable.
Has a small built-in speaker that says, "Satellites positioning", "Satellites locked", "Bluetooth on" and "Bluetooth off". The volume of the speaker can be adjusted or turned off. Green LED indicates power, red LED indicates satellite lock, blue LED indicates Bluetooth on.
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