XPost: alt.comp.freeware
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 22:08:08 +0000 (UTC), Bob J Jones wrote:
In <news:[email protected]>, "B. R. 'BeAr' Ederson" <[email protected]d> wrote:
OziExplorer is "just" a GUI wrapper (like the free QGIS I recommended)
around the functionality of the GIS tools and libraries from the free
open source OSGEO project (and several others). These libraries and
tools are - of course - also available for Linux. Actually, most of
them have been initially developed there; and were just ported to Win
later on.
So for example: Instead of having OziExplorer call up gdal_translate,
you could run it all by yourself.
Wow. Thanks for that useful information.
I don't have anywhere near the skillset required to make use of that information to create a Linux tool that geocalibrates the USGS PDF topographic maps and then edits and displays tracks on those geocalibrated maps, but that's great to know that the underlying capability exists for a good Linux coder to follow up on.
You really don't get it: The programs /are/ all available. QGIS (available
for Windows as well as Linux, Mac, BSD) is currently just the best solution
as a GUI. Suitable for beginners as well as GIS Pro's. But there are other GUI's as well. *And* countless GIS command line tools and libraries.
QGIS also supports geopdf files directly. (No need for conversation.) But
those huge files load (very) slowly. Therefore I did recommend using WMS services. These load nearly instantaneously. No need to load, convert and
store huge amounts of raster data (which soon will be outdated), just to
adjust a couple of track points to elevation contour lines..
BeAr
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