@Team Black-Cat wrote:
Wow! Cool! Thanks Yamar!
I’m having fun playing with your program. The results turn out much better than my previous attempts.
Glad to hear it. Next up on my immediate todo list is to actually add the overlay on the current in-program mapping using the open street maps data. That means you won’t have to open up google earth and the open street maps output is copyright free, so you can reproduce them at will (I’m not a lawyer though, so don’t take this as legal advice about what you can and can’t do with open streetmaps data).
@Team Black-Cat wrote:
No, there isn’t a key because it’s all a bit arbitrairy.
Hi everyone 🙂
I’m the primary author of GeoQO (though some friendly other folks have contributed their time in a number of ways). The color coding is fairly simple: whatever area it analyses it sets the lowest density spot to 1, and the highest (whatever that is) to be purple. So, in other words the color coding doesn’t give you a specific indication of the number of caches in an area. It merely indicates “more here than other places on this map”. If you plot the density over a really heavy area or a really sparse area, you’ll still get bright purple spots for the densest sub-area.
I’ve wanted to add a fixed scale option, but haven’t gotten to it yet.