Neil
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2004
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It seems that any thread that mentions a gps gets morphed/'jacked into a gps vs. compass thread.
I have reflected on this thorny and contentious issue and am now prepared to share my results with the community.
No doubt about it, the GPS is today's "killer app" of all things navigational, bar none.
I am often intrigued as to why this little beast raises the hackles of many an outdoorsman and generates such a plethora of commentary.
After all, nobody, but nobody has an issue with newfangled snowshoes, gore-tex, or any other of the new high-tech goods that have found their way into the back-country. How come all the fuss over GPS technology?
Well, here's why.
It takes years to master the skills of map and compass, terrain association, observation navigation and all the rest of it. On the other hand, figuring out how to run a GPS requires nothing more than a casual afternoon in the comfort of one's living room (or ensconced in a plush leather arm-chair with a snifter of brandy in one’s private gentleman's club). Notions such as compass declination can be cast aside like yesteryear’s fishnet underwear.
Nowadays, newcomers to the art of off-trail navigation may blithely rely on a series of satellites that orbit miles above the earth and which beams down a never-ending series of mysterious code. An outside force guides the modern, high-tech way-farer over hill and across vale. This outside force, this technological helping hand, is a quantum leap beyond interpreting the cryptic squiggles on a topo map and relating them to the hilltop above.
The playing field has been mercilessly leveled.
I have reflected on this thorny and contentious issue and am now prepared to share my results with the community.
No doubt about it, the GPS is today's "killer app" of all things navigational, bar none.
I am often intrigued as to why this little beast raises the hackles of many an outdoorsman and generates such a plethora of commentary.
After all, nobody, but nobody has an issue with newfangled snowshoes, gore-tex, or any other of the new high-tech goods that have found their way into the back-country. How come all the fuss over GPS technology?
Well, here's why.
It takes years to master the skills of map and compass, terrain association, observation navigation and all the rest of it. On the other hand, figuring out how to run a GPS requires nothing more than a casual afternoon in the comfort of one's living room (or ensconced in a plush leather arm-chair with a snifter of brandy in one’s private gentleman's club). Notions such as compass declination can be cast aside like yesteryear’s fishnet underwear.
Nowadays, newcomers to the art of off-trail navigation may blithely rely on a series of satellites that orbit miles above the earth and which beams down a never-ending series of mysterious code. An outside force guides the modern, high-tech way-farer over hill and across vale. This outside force, this technological helping hand, is a quantum leap beyond interpreting the cryptic squiggles on a topo map and relating them to the hilltop above.
The playing field has been mercilessly leveled.