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Added a story to the front page explaining the Premium Status for the GeoArt.
Please read and share feedback.
Here is the link to the front page story:
Following the signals from space.
Will check. Thanks.
Following the signals from space.
Who needs some help with the puzzles?
If you want to answer someone’s post, on theirnpost, hit the Quote button and then post your response.
Makes it easier to follow along.The BOD puzzle creators and all others are here to help.
Following the signals from space.
Thanks T&B. Just read your logs. Enjoyed everyone one. You hit my section yesterday.
Following the signals from space.
Check sum added. We will work on those that are missing them
Following the signals from space.
Iâm on #23, F. It ask for the number of attended logs minus 71. There are 81 attended logs on the event cache page, with no number on the history page. I didnât know 10 was a single digit number. I was told to look at hints on each puzzle page, but thereâs no hint on this one.
Fixed yr in History document to equal event page
Following the signals from space.
Puzzle #142 is kind of a mess and cannot be solved as is. There is only A,B,C,D to solve
There ISNâT an E & F.I redid the puzzle and missed updating the check sum. Done!
Following the signals from space.
In no particular order:
WGA profile on the geocaching website:
https://www.geocaching.com/profile/?guid=e31bf9cf-4c4e-4d5b-a93e-4038babc494e
Much info comes from the Info Center on the website:
WGA History and the Birth of Geocaching
WGA Timeline
Following the signals from space.
By John Sudar aka Hack1of2
Garmin Oregon 650 review
Awesome features, some buggy issues
I mainly use this unit for hiking and geocaching, and this is the 7th trail GPS I’ve owned (all by Garmin, which I love). I’ve owned it for about two years, and unlike the other GPSrâs Iâve owned (Garmin GPSmap62s, GPSmap64s, two Oregon 450âs, and two Oregon Dakota 20âs), itâs just not as accurate for geocaching compared to the others and is still buggy. Rather than mentioning the features that are in common with the older Oregon 450 series, here are the good & bad NEW features of the Oregon 600/650.
THE GOOD:
1. The Oregon 600 & 650 have two buttons on the side (instead of one like the 450). One is the power button/lock screen like the 450, but the other one is one of its BEST FEATURES: It is a programmable one-touch shortcut user button that scrolls through your favorite screens. With each press, mine is set up to scroll through Compass, then Map, then Trip Computer, then Geocache Description (with logs, hints, etc.), then Main Menu. You can scroll through these shortcuts with the side user button even while the screen is locked.2. The side buttons can be customized for additional functions when you double click on them or hold for 5 seconds. I set mine up for flashlight when I hold for 5 sec and camera when I double click. Another good possibility for this feature is to use it to mark waypoints.
3. It has a hard, chemically-strengthened glass touchscreen surface, like many smartphones, instead of a soft touchscreen. Kind of works with *light* gloves on.
4. Has the feel of a modern smartphone in a good way – it has possibly the best display available with an excellent bright sunlight-readable touchscreen. You can pinch and expand to zoom in and out, and twist two fingers to rotate, in the Map view.
5. The Oregon 650 takes 8MP geotagged pictures (autofocus with digital zoom) that have the coordinates embedded in them so you can scroll through your pictures (like where you parked) and it will navigate to the one you select (the 600 is missing this feature). It’s even a waterproof camera!
6. The 650 has a built in flashlight (which is also used for the flash for the camera). I’ve used this a lot.
7. There’s room to store an unlimited number of geocaches in the GGZ format. Millions. No more deleting GPX files to make room for more.8. It seems absolutely everything is customizable on it to get it just the way you want it.
9. You donât need any additional batteries for it. It has a rechargeable battery that charges when the GPS unit is connected to external power at home or even in the car (standard on the 650 and is an option with the 600). You can use AA batteries however if the battery pack is used up.
10. It uses the American satellites and WAAS like the previous models, but also uses the 24 additional Russian GLONASS satellites for much faster start times (and potentially better accuracy in valleys or other areas partially blocked).
11. It can be viewed in portrait or landscape mode and also has a new Nuvi mode for street navigation.
12. Geocaches can be sorted by name, distance, difficulty, or several other filters right on the unit.
13. The trip computer now offers multiple pages of data fields, each customizable to 1 of 4 layouts: 2 large, 1 large and 4 small, 6 small or 8 small
14. I like the size of this unit. Garmin has three relatively new state-of-the-art touchscreen GPS units: Oregon, Monterra, & Montana. The Oregon is the lightest and most comfortable of the three.
15. It has a NUVI mode for street navigation when paired with the optional CityNavigator street maps.
THE BAD:
1. It seems to be the most inaccurate of all of the GPS units that Garmin has to offer, based on both my own use and talking with others. OK for hiking perhaps, but not so much for geocaching, with the unit sending you as much as 50 feet in the wrong direction. I’ll often go geocaching with others (almost weekly with different groups) and this GPSr is always the one that is off the most of everyone in the group, even though I calibrate the compass each outing. If you’re not a geocacher then this is not a dealbreaker because the accuracy is only off typically by 20 to 40 feet. I know of 5 other geocachers who have the Oregon 600 or 650 and they have all had the same issues with accuracy compared to others. I have discovered a partial solution: It âeventuallyâ gets you close to the correct location, IF youâre patient enough. After several minutes of searching around, it eventually will settle on the âcorrectâ coordinates, but if youâre caching with others the cache has very often been found by others while youâre still wandering around 30 feet elsewhere. I noticed one personâs review on youtube suggested stopping 50 feet short of GZ and waiting several minutes for the unit to correct itself before proceeding. That shouldnât be necessary.2. Will not operate properly if it’s too cold (stated temperature range is 5 degrees or warmer).
3. The touchscreen can be annoying in the certain types of weather – raindrops can launch apps but winter gloves can’t. They have issued a fix for the over-sensitive touchscreen and you can now adjust the sensitivity, but it does take some getting used to. When I first got it, light raindrops were changing the screen every several seconds! By default it comes out of the box pretty sensitive, but you can adjust it down.
4. The claimed 16 hour battery life with the included NiMH battery pack (rechargeable in-unit) has only been about 6 to 8 hours for me, and that’s even with the screen dimming after 2 minutes of nonuse. There is a power saving mode where the screen turns completely off but I prefer it to be dimmed after 2 minutes of nonuse. Also turning off WAAS & GLONASS satellite reception will save on battery power, but potentially will decrease its accuracy.
5. The compass arrow sometimes (not always) locks up while moving and I have to stand still for it to correct itself. Not a dealbreaker when you get used to it; just stop moving for 3 or 4 seconds. This is a bug that will hopefully get fixed in future firmware updates.
6. Other bugs include the unit locking up at times (you have to take the batteries out to reset), or the unit ignoring the addition of new waypoints until you abort and then re-enter the coordinates.
7. It is a bit difficult to setup if you’re not tech savvy. There are a LOT of menus and sub menus and a lot of them are not intuitive and the instructions provided do not cover them well. I am tech savvy and have it set up just the way I like it!
8. With so many options, profiles, and customizing available, it’s not as user friendly as the Oregon 450/550 touchscreen series. But that’s part of what makes this unit great â it can do so much when you get it configured to your liking!
Overall I give the Oregon 600/650 a “cautious” recommendation for non-geocachers. It’s a state of the art high-end GPSr that does so much. And for the most part does it well. If the accuracy issue gets fixed and a few minor bugs taken care of this would be the perfect GPSr for me. My favorite new features are the programmable side shortcut button that scrolls through the four screens that are most important to me, the in-unit battery pack that’s rechargeable (even while in the car), and the waterproof camera/flashlight. I’d recommend the Oregon 600/650 only to advanced users because it offers so much, but be prepared to spend a good bit of time going through the not too intuitive menus to get the unit to work right for you. Once it’s set up and you get used to it, it’s smooth sailing. For those that are a bit tech-challenged I’d probably recommend the Oregon 450/550 (if you can get it, now discontinued), an Etrex 30, Etrex touch 35, the touchscreen high-end Montana, or the GPSmap64S. As for me, my favorite is the Garmin GPSmap64s, which like the GPSmap 60 & 62 series before it has a superior antenna but is pushbutton instead of touchscreen. The GPSmap series is arguably the most accurate because of the antenna design, and they seem to last longer because theyâre pushbutton instead of touchscreen.
nana817 onFollowing the signals from space.
Remember that the WGA site here has historical document listed in the Info Center and a Search function on the website but with 15 years of data, you may pull in quite a few results.
Following the signals from space.
I posted the link and forgot to sign up until late in the day. d’oh! No TB yet.
Following the signals from space.
Back in January last year:
From Team Black Cat:
It would take GC to fix their recent logs page for it to work. They show the most recent 200 logs every two minutes. There are frequently more than 200 logs submitted every two minutes. It just canât work as intended unless they change it.
This must be why at times it seems to be working and then stop working.
Thank you Brian.
Following the signals from space.
Following the signals from space.
Part of the discussion:
It did break right when Groundspeak updated the guidelines for challenge caches
Following the signals from space.
Yes there are defunct. A little more than a month ago TBC posted the Recent Logs no longer exist on geocaching.com so we can no longer get them here. I’d have to dig on the posts but they were related to Mr GT asking about them. That original post goes back several months.
If I can find it I will reference it here.Following the signals from space.
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