14
3

Hello,

Let me first present my situation: I usually go out biking with my girlfriend - during which time I create track logs with the help of a Garmin GPSMAP 60CSx which is affixed to my bike's handlebar. However, sometimes there are forks in the road and these forks eventually join again and I was wondering if during these times she could record the alternate track as well.

She owns a Samsung Galaxy S Android phone so I'm looking for an Android app which would ideally have minimal battery consumption but could be relied upon as a track recorder. I don't have any requirement to upload the track logs from the app, I can easily connect the phone after we get home and get the file from the SD card.

Any recommendations?

Thank you, Janos

asked 18 May '11, 13:40

kitsched's gravatar image

kitsched
216235
accept rate: 0%

edited 10 Jun '11, 13:07


7 Answers:
22

There's a quite a few apps out there and most are listed on the osm wiki.

I would personally recommend osmtracker for android . It's free and the interface is relatively easier to use than other ones that I've used (locus and oruxmaps).

You can also set the frequency of how often (by time, in seconds) you want the points to be recorded and you can also see the OSM map layer on it.

Regardless of what program that you use, the battery will be used extensively because of gps logging.

Almost 7 years later after first answering this question, I still recommend OSMtracker :)

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answered 18 May '11, 14:02

skorasaurus's gravatar image

skorasaurus
1.3k152736
accept rate: 12%

edited 13 Jan '18, 20:22

2

I tried the app, it yielded surprisingly accurate results in urban areas. The battery consumption wasn't on the dramatic side either. Thank you.

(19 May '11, 10:20) kitsched
2

Conclusions one month later: I tracked shorter "workouts" (1h30m - 2h) on the bike with Endomondo and sometimes when reaching unmapped areas I started up OSMTracker concomitantly. The battery consumption remained reasonable and the tracks were very nice. I repeat: surprisingly good results for a phone. Thanks for the recommendation.

(10 Jun '11, 13:04) kitsched
8

Probably, the two best apps have been listed already. I'd like to give a quick reference for new users, to simplify choice.

GPSLogger has a very limited functionality: it records the track of your movement and can put it online. No POIs, limited comments. However what it does it does really well. It's one of the best Android apps I've seen in general. It has a beautiful and very clean interface. It is very simple to use. The settings are exactly the ones you are likely to want. There is a distance filter, so that you don't get too many useless points. You can set the time interval between successive points. And importantly there is an accuracy filter to get rid of outliers. While recording a track, you get a quick summary with the number of points, distance, time, speed, average direction and your current position. Once the track is ready, uploading it to your OSM account is a matter of one button click. GPSLogger works very well with OSM, but it is not OSM-only and supports also logging to KML and text files, uploading to Dropbox, Google Docs, and FTP. The app is designed with battery saving in mind. Basically, this program can only save tracks—but it does it perfectly.

OSMTracker takes a different approach. Once you start logging, you get a screen with 12 (!) buttons in front of you. From here, you can make voice records, take pictures, add text notes as well as add OSM POIs. I would say it should be a good app for advanced OSMing. However personally I found it too complicated for simple tracking.

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answered 12 Aug '14, 15:02

Kotya's gravatar image

Kotya
571202536
accept rate: 0%

edited 12 Aug '14, 15:03

1

Note that you can customize the buttons in OSMTracker. I've got a set of 59 buttons in four groups to describe hiking trails and the things you encounter along them.

At the other end of the complexity scale, I've got a button "set" that consists of a single button: voice record. Great for when you don't have time to navigate your way through a menu tree.

(18 Jun '16, 08:32) Carnildo

@Carnildo, this is what I was looking for, and was entering speed limits by hand instead. I must have overlooked it. Thanks for pointing out to the existence of this feature.

(19 Jun '16, 09:13) Kotya
6

I'd recommend GPSLogger. One simple button to start/stop recording. It runs in background, so no interfaces and does not interferes with other apps. Tracks are recorded to memory card as .gpx and alternatively as .kml, so they can be directly imported into OSM.

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answered 18 May '11, 14:38

temporalista's gravatar image

temporalista
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accept rate: 0%

(18 May '11, 14:40) kitsched
1

I figure it might be this GPSLogger app https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mendhak.gpslogger as of the description of the app.

(10 Jun '12, 23:10) Björn L
3

You can try BasicAirData GPS Logger.
It's a simple and lightweight logger for Android, it works offline (it has no integrated maps) and in background.

Accurate and battery friendly, 100% free and Opensource software. No ads.

alt text

It's installable from the Google Store, or you can directly download the APK in Github.
Here You can find some documentation: a getting started guide, some application notes, and an article that deepens some technical aspects of the app.

Compatible with Android 4 and newer.

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answered 13 Aug '14, 18:22

Graziano%20Capelli's gravatar image

Graziano Cap...
7115
accept rate: 0%

edited 09 Oct '19, 11:32

3

I was looking for the same thing and realized that OsmAnd application has a plugin that enables recording GPS traces. I must also admit that I haven't started using that yet.

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answered 03 Sep '15, 09:29

Jeenu's gravatar image

Jeenu
101127
accept rate: 0%

This is my favorate way of doing it, because I often have OsmAnd open for other reasons, and it's nice to see what POIs and other stuff is already mapped. OSM notes can also be added via the app, and either left on the phone for later reference or uploaded for everyone to see.

(05 Aug '17, 11:06) keithonearth
2

Like Temporalista I like GPSLogger, you can set the frequency to work well when hiking or when driving so you don't have too much or too little points defined.

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answered 22 Jul '11, 23:46

Sundance's gravatar image

Sundance
467511
accept rate: 3%

0

i would like an app that records gps and voice at the same time , and offers playback of the track accompanied by recorded comment .

also facilitates modification ( overrule voice information or add )

and this without touching the android, just a few key commands should suffice like START : start full functionality record and playback PAUSE : simple playback STOP : complete stop

additional short quick keywords to help in modifiying : like MOD ?

this could be used as some sorte of copilot giving instructions , maybe for example on a racetrack

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answered 14 Feb, 04:05

ronny's gravatar image

ronny
1112
accept rate: 0%

is there ?

(14 Feb, 04:06) ronny

@ronny, please do not ask new questions under existing ones, but create new ones.

(14 Feb, 04:22) escada

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