Tuesday, October 30, 2012

MotionX-GPS Track: Fall hike,on/off trail

Hello,

Connie O'Dell uses MotionX-GPS on the iPhone and is sharing with you the following track:

Name:Fall hike,on/off trail
Date:Oct 30, 2012 2:47 pm
Map:
(valid until Apr 28, 2013)
View on Map
Distance:2.98 miles
Elapsed Time:1:07:40
Avg Speed:2.6 mph
Max Speed:8.6 mph
Avg Pace:22' 43" per mile
Min Altitude:5,424 ft
Max Altitude:6,204 ft
Start Time:2012-10-30T20:47:31Z
Start Location: 
 Latitude:39º 58' 15" N
 Longitude:105º 15' 56" W
End Location: 
 Latitude:39º 58' 11" N
 Longitude:105º 15' 57" W

 

MotionX-GPS Commonly Asked Questions

  1. What is MotionX-GPS?
    MotionX-GPS is the essential GPS application for outdoor enthusiasts. It puts an easy-to-use, state-of-the-art handheld GPS on your iPhone.

  2. Can I use MotionX-GPS?
    Sure! MotionX-GPS can be downloaded from the iTunes App Store.

  3. How can I display tracks in Google Earth?
    Follow the directions on the Google Earth web site to download and install the Google Earth program. Save the attached "Fall hikeonoff trail.kmz" file to your computer. Launch Google Earth, select File, Open, and open the saved "Fall hikeonoff trail.kmz" file.

  4. This email was forwarded to me. Where are the attachments?
    Some e-mail programs do not include the original attachments by default when forwarding an e-mail. In this case, the sender must reattach the original files for them to be included.

 

Please contact MotionX customer support with any comments or questions.

All the best,

The MotionX Team

US and Foreign Patents Granted and Pending. Fullpower® is a registered trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. MotionX™ is a trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. © Copyright 2003 - 2012 Fullpower Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Boulder snow sunrise

CIMG3145.JPG by odellconnie
CIMG3145.JPG, a photo by odellconnie on Flickr.

Online degrees: Separating the solid from the flimsy - Ask Annie

Online degrees: Separating the solid from the flimsy
October 26, 2012. 9:37 AM ET

Online degrees can be just as effective on the job market as the traditional kind, but not all programs are created equal. Here's what to look for before you enroll.

FORTUNE -- Dear Annie: I quit school a few years ago before finishing a bachelor's degree in business, because of financial pressures, but so far I've managed to work my way up through several promotions at my current company. However, my boss just told me she wants to recommend me for another step up the ladder, but positions at that level require a college degree. So I'm considering going back to school, which I always meant to do anyway.
The thing is, with my work schedule, I'm going to need a lot of flexibility, so I'd like to earn my bachelor's online. But do employers generally view online degrees as on par with the in-person kind? Also, do you (or your readers) have any advice on how to choose the right program? — Joe College
Dear J.C.: You don't mention whether you've already tried Googling, say, "online degree programs," but, if so, you've no doubt been bombarded with advertising from for-profit schools. The University of Phoenix alone spends over $200 million a year on television and Internet pitches, according to an estimate from Madison Avenue trade paper Ad Age. Nothing wrong with advertising, of course, but in some respects it does make the process of choosing the right online school more difficult.
Here's why: more than 7,000 U.S. colleges and universities now offer long-distance degree programs -- and about 85% of those are traditional brick-and-mortar schools that have expanded into cyberspace over the past few years. Yet traditional colleges don't have the marketing budgets that the huge for-profit schools have. So unless you actively seek out brick-and-mortar schools' online offerings, you may never know they exist.
"Prospective students should be wary of Internet 'guides' to online education that get paid to promote for-profit schools," says Vicky Phillips. "It's called pay-per-lead advertising, and it means the 'guide' gets X dollars for each person it steers to a for-profit university." Traditional colleges don't have such deep pockets, so thousands of them are unlikely to turn up in such directories at all.
"Not only that, but the for-profit schools have tens of thousands of students, while the online bachelor's-in-business program at a traditional university can only accept, say, 30 at a time," she adds. "So even if traditional colleges could afford to pay for online leads, it wouldn't make sense for them to do so. They're operating on an entirely different scale."
Phillips has been researching and comparing online degree programs for 20 years, which is about as long as they've existed. She runs a consumer-information web site called GetEducated.com that you might want to check out. The site includes a comparison tool that lets you evaluate and rank schools using 12 different filters. These include type of specialization in your major (business with a minor in finance, for instance); non-profit versus for-profit; secular versus religious (many Christian colleges now offer long-distance learning); and whether the school's programs are 100% online or "hybrids," meaning you'll have to show up in person several times per semester.
Another filter is price. "An online bachelor's degree can cost anywhere from $16,000 to $122,000," Phillips notes. "They are definitely not all alike." GetEducated.com also offers reputation scores based on reviews by current and past students.
In general, Phillips believes online education has gained wide acceptance among employers. "People do worry that companies won't recognize an online degree as equal to the in-person kind," she says. "But our research shows that job interviewers have no problem with it -- as long as they see two things."
First is accreditation by a legitimate accrediting agency -- which can be tricky, since some for-profit schools claim to be accredited by phony agencies they've invented themselves. To make sure any program you're considering is genuinely accredited, check with theCouncil on Higher Education Accreditation or the U.S. Department of Education.
Second, Phillips recommends you concentrate your search on long-distance degree programs offered by state universities or private brick-and-mortar schools that are likely to be familiar to employers in your state or region, or that have a particularly solid reputation in your industry. "Whatever reputation a school has will carry over to its online-degree programs," she notes. "So a 'brand name' an employer recognizes and respects will matter a lot more than whether you earned the degree online or in person."
Talkback: If you've earned a college degree online, how did you choose which program? If you're an employer, would you look askance at a job candidate's online sheepskin? Leave a comment below.

Filed under: Ask Annie


Online degrees: Separating the solid from the flimsy - Ask Annie - Fortune Management

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Compiler Architect & Technical Lead Engineer at Paneve in Boulder Area - Job | LinkedIn


Job Description

Panève is looking for a Compiler team manager/leader with strong technical and leadership skills.  Panève has developed a threaded architecture in conjunction with an innovative memory architecture to solve the big data problem in a very unique way.  We have been told that we have cracked the big data and parallel code.

Desired Skills & Experience

Responsible for parallel compilation, parallel runtime and other compilation tools.
Academic and/or professional experience in the design/porting/internals of GCC, LLVM, Clang, parallel computing is highly desirable.  


Company Description


Panève has developed our Direct-Cache Data-flow memory technology to offer a high performance Big Data platform, scalable enough to hold, process and manage the largest data sets and to support data solutions that cannot be done today. In-memory, scalable to petabytes, processing + storage at cache speeds.

Our proprietary Direct-Cache memory system allows us to access all memory, whether on or off chip, as if it were cache resulting in a 10,000/1 data access advantage. For Big Data, Panève has designed an innovative module called the ZettaTree. ZettaTree merges intense amounts of memory with intense amounts of compute power into one flexible, scalable, easy to manage processing+storage device.

For consumer electronics, Panève uses the same architectural design to deliver a processor called the RhinoCore™. RhinoCore delivers breakthrough performance and software programmability (think flexible).

Additional Information

Posted:
October 11, 2012
Type:
Full-time
Experience:
Mid-Senior level
Functions:
Engineering 
Industries:
Computer Hardware 
Job ID:
3937350

Search More Jobs


Compiler Architect & Technical Lead at Paneve in Boulder Area - Job | LinkedIn

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GCC Optimize Options - Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)


3.10 Options That Control Optimization

These options control various sorts of optimizations.
Without any optimization option, the compiler's goal is to reduce the cost of compilation and to make debugging produce the expected results. Statements are independent: if you stop the program with a breakpoint between statements, you can then assign a new value to any variable or change the program counter to any other statement in the function and get exactly the results you expect from the source code.
Turning on optimization flags makes the compiler attempt to improve the performance and/or code size at the expense of compilation time and possibly the ability to debug the program.
The compiler performs optimization based on the knowledge it has of the program. Compiling multiple files at once to a single output file mode allows the compiler to use information gained from all of the files when compiling each of them.
Not all optimizations are controlled directly by a flag. Only optimizations that have a flag are listed in this section.
Most optimizations are only enabled if an -O level is set on the command line. Otherwise they are disabled, even if individual optimization flags are specified.
Depending on the target and how GCC was configured, a slightly different set of optimizations may be enabled at each -O level than those listed here. You can invoke GCC with -Q --help=optimizers to find out the exact set of optimizations that are enabled at each level. See Overall Options, for examples.
-O
-O1
Optimize. Optimizing compilation takes somewhat more time, and a lot more memory for a large function.With -O, the compiler tries to reduce code size and execution time, without performing any optimizations that take a great deal of compilation time. -O turns on the following optimization flags:
-fauto-inc-dec 
          -fcompare-elim 
          -fcprop-registers 
          -fdce 
          -fdefer-pop 
          -fdelayed-branch 
          -fdse 
          -fguess-branch-probability 
          -fif-conversion2 
          -fif-conversion 
          -fipa-pure-const 
          -fipa-profile 
          -fipa-reference 
          -fmerge-constants
          -fsplit-wide-types 
          -ftree-bit-ccp 
          -ftree-builtin-call-dce 
          -ftree-ccp 
          -ftree-ch 
          -ftree-copyrename 
          -ftree-dce 
          -ftree-dominator-opts 
          -ftree-dse 
          -ftree-forwprop 
          -ftree-fre 
          -ftree-phiprop 
          -ftree-slsr 
          -ftree-sra 
          -ftree-pta 
          -ftree-ter 
          -funit-at-a-time
     
-O also turns on -fomit-frame-pointer on machines where doing so does not interfere with debugging. 
-O2
Optimize even more. GCC performs nearly all supported optimizations that do not involve a space-speed tradeoff. As compared to -O, this option increases both compilation time and the performance of the generated code.-O2 turns on all optimization flags specified by -O. It also turns on the following optimization flags:
-fthread-jumps 
          -falign-functions  -falign-jumps 
          -falign-loops  -falign-labels 
          -fcaller-saves 
          -fcrossjumping 
          -fcse-follow-jumps  -fcse-skip-blocks 
          -fdelete-null-pointer-checks 
          -fdevirtualize 
          -fexpensive-optimizations 
          -fgcse  -fgcse-lm  
          -fhoist-adjacent-loads 
          -finline-small-functions 
          -findirect-inlining 
          -fipa-sra 
          -foptimize-sibling-calls 
          -fpartial-inlining 
          -fpeephole2 
          -fregmove 
          -freorder-blocks  -freorder-functions 
          -frerun-cse-after-loop  
          -fsched-interblock  -fsched-spec 
          -fschedule-insns  -fschedule-insns2 
          -fstrict-aliasing -fstrict-overflow 
          -ftree-switch-conversion -ftree-tail-merge 
          -ftree-pre 
          -ftree-vrp
     
Please note the warning under -fgcse about invoking -O2 on programs that use computed gotos. 
-O3
Optimize yet more. -O3 turns on all optimizations specified by -O2 and also turns on the -finline-functions-funswitch-loops-fpredictive-commoning-fgcse-after-reload-ftree-vectorize-fvect-cost-model-ftree-partial-pre and -fipa-cp-clone options. 
-O0
Reduce compilation time and make debugging produce the expected results. This is the default. 
-Os
Optimize for size. -Os enables all -O2 optimizations that do not typically increase code size. It also performs further optimizations designed to reduce code size.-Os disables the following optimization flags:
-falign-functions  -falign-jumps  -falign-loops 
          -falign-labels  -freorder-blocks  -freorder-blocks-and-partition 
          -fprefetch-loop-arrays  -ftree-vect-loop-version
     
-Ofast
Disregard strict standards compliance. -Ofast enables all -O3 optimizations. It also enables optimizations that are not valid for all standard-compliant programs. It turns on -ffast-math and the Fortran-specific -fno-protect-parens and -fstack-arrays
-Og
Optimize debugging experience. -Og enables optimizations that do not interfere with debugging. It should be the optimization level of choice for the standard edit-compile-debug cycle, offering a reasonable level of optimization while maintaining fast compilation and a good debugging experience.If you use multiple -O options, with or without level numbers, the last such option is the one that is effective.
Options of the form -fflag specify machine-independent flags. Most flags have both positive and negative forms; the negative form of -ffoo is -fno-foo. In the table below, only one of the forms is listed—the one you typically use. You can figure out the other form by either removing `no-' or adding it.
The following options control specific optimizations.
...
More at:
Optimize Options - Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Programmer shortage, engineering for change, smart grid conference, &c: IEEE: The Institute Online Alert - 23 October 2012


OPINIONS

The demand for computer programmers is on the rise, but last year fewer than 14 000 U.S. students received undergraduate degrees in computer science. Concerned about a shortage, some tech companies like Microsoft are taking matters into their own hands by sending engineers to high schools to teach computer science courses. In this IEEE Roundup, Editor Kathy Pretz points out that IEEE has been fostering computer engineering education programs for years. Do you think putting engineers in classrooms is the right approach for getting students excited about computer programming? Find out more and share your thoughts in the comments section.

What does it take to sell your new wireless gadget internationally? One thing is certain: You must make sure it complies with a host of regulations, because each country's RF spectrum authority makes its own rules. In this IEEE Roundup, guest blogger Michael Cassidy, founder of MC Global Access, which provides product certifications for telecommunications, IT, and household equipment, shares tips on how to navigate wireless regulations and avoid surprises while planning your global launch.

BRIEFINGS
The Engineering for Change (E4C) initiative has had a busy year. The global community of organizations and individuals promotes sustainable and accessible tech-based solutions to problems facing poor and underserved communities. More sponsors with financial support have come aboard for the initiative, and its membership rolls have grown around the world. Read more about what E4C members have done so far and what's in store for the future.

A new type of electronic journal, launching in the second quarter of next year, will get articles published faster than traditional journals. Covering topics from all of IEEE's fields of interest, this open-access and free journal follows the movement in scholarly publishing to make content available via the Internet. Like other open-access journals, this one will be supported with fees charged to authors. Find out more

BENEFITS
For decades, power engineers, electrical inspectors, and utility contractors have used IEEE Color Books to zero in on recommended practices related to power systems. But with the advent of the smart grid and new utility regulations, better guides are needed that reflect the latest technologies and are easier to use. That's why the IEEE Standards Association recently launched its IEEE 3000 Standards Collection, which offers the most up-to-date best practices for virtually any power system installation or application. Learn more

IEEE student and graduate student members renewing or joining for the 2013 membership year will have to start checking e-mail—not postal mail—for their monthly issues of IEEE Spectrum and quarterly issues of The Institute. That's because starting next year students are being switched from print to digital delivery. Find out more

PEOPLE
The IEEE-USA Student Professional Activities Committee recently reached a milestone in its 32-year history: It held its 1000th Student Professional Awareness Conference. During the event at Cleveland State University, professional engineers offered career advice and discussed the soft skills so necessary on the job. Read on

THE INSTITUTE ONLINE IS UPDATED WEEKLY.

SPONSORED NOTICE
25 October Webinar:Automotive PCBs: Efficient Signal and Power Integrity Analysis
30 October Webinar:Strategic Reuse: A Way to Bring Fundamental Efficiencies in Automotive Electrical Engineering
6-7 December: Smart Grid World Forum
People
Tech Focus
Benefits
Briefings
Opinions
Region News
Career & Education
Smarter Planet Challenge
IBM and IEEE are looking for creative team-oriented projects that can help students at any level learn to apply engineering, science, and other tech disciplines to solve real-world problems. Submissions are due 1 November. For more information, check out the contest's promotional video.

The Institute Online Alert - 23 October 2012

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

My program invokes undefined behaviour but...

If I think these people are a hoot, have I been working too long?   :-)

From GCC FAQ:
"

My program invokes undefined behaviour but...


Permalink ]
Sorry, if your program invokes undefined behaviour, then anything can happen. Please:
  • do not ask or propose a defined (or an unspecified, but consistent) behaviour for undefined behaviour;
  • do not report that something bad happened as a result of undefined behaviour;
  • do not argue whether or why some behaviour should be undefined or not.
Neither GCC bugzilla, nor GCC mailing lists are a forum appropriate to debate the above issues. Quoting Steve Summit (maintainer of the C FAQ): "Perhaps we could, but not under the current Standard. [...] But the C Standard is under revision: perhaps, if this is important enough to you, you can convince the committee [...]. Good luck."
"

FAQ - GCC Wiki

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Bait & Switch: Games staffing firms play [thanks to Nick Corcodilos and ATH]

Forewarned is forearmed.  From Nick Corcodilos's excellent column.
There are helpful and reputable people to subcontract for, that do work for you that justifies their "cut", but there are definitely companies to watch out for as well...


Bait & Switch: Games staffing firms play

Filed under: Heads upHow to Say ItJob scamsJob SearchQ&AReaders' ForumRecruiting
In the October 23, 2012 Ask The Headhunter Newsletter, a job hunter asks about bait-and-switch contracts used by “staffing” firms.
A recruiter at an IT staffing firm did something that I think is very unethical. I signed a contract with the firm to perform IT duties at a company where I successfully interviewed just days before. It specified the hourly pay and overtime.
I verbally negotiated the rate prior to signing the contract. Unfortunately, I did not ask for a copy of the contract. Yesterday, the recruiter asked me to sign more forms. There was a new contract, and a significant reduction in pay! The overtime was deleted and the pay was stated weekly instead of hourly.
When I pointed this out, the recruiter e-mailed that, “We lost the original contract.” I called the next morning, and the recruiter insisted I sign the new forms and said she would take care of my concerns. When I balked and declined to sign, she said they would redo the forms but it might be a day or two. Meanwhile, I’m supposed to start work tomorrow!
I find this utterly distasteful and unethical. I’m going to wait and see if the recruiter comes up with the correct terms before I contact the staffing account manager or the company I’m supposed to work for.
My question is, why are they stalling with the new contract? Why couldn’t it be immediately corrected? Maybe they are waiting to find something in my background check so they can report to the company that I am “unsuitable” for hire. Then, they can go out and find someone cheaper. What do you suggest?

Nick’s Reply

What you’re describing is, unfortunately, not uncommon in the IT “staffing” or “consulting” biz. (It’s not just the IT field that uses staffing firms.) These companies recruit and hire people, then “rent” them to their client companies at a profit. Things like this happen because overly-eager recruiters get excited when they find a candidate like you. They want to sign you up and assign you to a client, so they promise you a contract that’s to your liking. Later, the sales rep handling the account you’d be assigned to can’t get the rate the recruiter promised you — so the deal changes. It’s a classic bait-and-switch game.
It is crucial that you read everything before you sign, and make sure everything you negotiated is in the written contract.
No matter what you negotiated and they agreed to orally, what matters is what’s in the written contract. Make sure you get the counterpart of the contract — the copy they signed — and tell them you will not report to work until you receive it. Often, a firm will demand that you sign the contract, then they will “forget” to give you the copy they signed.
(For an insider’s look at staffing firms, see the Consulting Jobs Primer.)
The games some of these companies play are unethical — but they do it anyway. Your protection is to insist it’s in writing, and to politely but firmly decline to show up for work until the written contract is to your satisfaction.
But be careful. If you sign something without reading it carefully, and then you decide you want different terms, too late — you’re already committed. Be very, very careful. Good contracts make good working relationships.
One tactic they may use is to ignore your requests right up until the last minute, maybe the day you’re supposed to show up for work. This puts you on edge and makes you very nervous. You want the job, but you don’t want the terms. They figure you will cave to get the work, so they will push the envelope hard and far. Unless you have a history of good experiences with them, don’t believe anything until it’s in writing in your hands.
You may really need the job, but you must decide in advance whether you will accept lesser terms or such behavior. Then stay calm, don’t complain, don’t get angry. Just state your terms. Your overriding strategy must be to make yourself highly desirable or indispensable to the consulting firm. Make them need you. Then make your reasonable demands calmly and firmly. Then let them decide, and let them reveal whether they are honest and have integrity.
You’re doing the right thing. This can be risky, but you must decide your tolerance for such risk: If they want to play the last-minute game, you can play, too. Just know what you’re doing in advance, and let this play itself out. If they don’t give you the contract you agreed to, then stop working with them. They’re not honest.
Be careful if you go to the actual employer to discuss this. Do not say nasty things about the firm. Be businesslike. It can be as simple as this:

How to Say It

“I enjoyed meeting with you, and I’d like to work on your team. However, I’m not happy with the way the consulting firm has handled the facts of the project. Is there another consulting firm you use that you respect? Can you recommend someone there that I can talk to?”
Not all companies will answer you — they get nervous. They may even have a contract with the staffing firm that prohibits them from discussing this with you. But you must decide whether integrity is important enough to kill a deal. In the end, you may need to meet a new staffing firm, and a good way to do that is to talk with a company where you’d like to work, and inquire which staffing firm they use. There are some very good staffing firms out there: Get a personal introduction to them, and learn to igore the rest. Get a personal introduction.
As more companies try to avoid the fixed overhead of staff, they’re going to look to hire “on contract.” Do you see this trend in your own business? Have your experiences with staffing firms been good or bad? What would you do in a situation like this? What methods do you use to avoid problems and to get a good deal from staffing firms?
: :
 

PBS NewsHour: The new Ask The Headhunter feature

Filed under: EventsJob SearchPBS NewsHourQ&A
When PBS NewsHour broadcast a TV segment I that I appeared in on September 25, viewers flooded us with questions about online job application forms — and about all kinds of daunting obstacles they face in the job search.
I answered many of their questions in a special column on the NewsHour website. And the questions kept coming.
The host of NewsHour’s Making Sen$e program, Paul Solman, asked me to do a regular Ask The Heahdunter Q&A column — and the feature keeps growing!


Ask The Headhunter® | Nick Corcodilos – Bait & Switch: Games staffing firms play

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Monday, October 22, 2012

MotionX-GPS Track: Hike,SoBo,on/off trail

Hello,

Connie O'Dell uses MotionX-GPS on the iPhone and is sharing with you the following track:

Name:Hike,SoBo,on/off trail
Date:Oct 22, 2012 5:20 pm
Map:
(valid until Apr 20, 2013)
View on Map
Distance:2.17 miles
Elapsed Time:44:18.7
Avg Speed:2.9 mph
Max Speed:6.3 mph
Avg Pace:20' 25" per mile
Min Altitude:5,685 ft
Max Altitude:5,928 ft
Start Time:2012-10-22T23:20:04Z
Start Location: 
 Latitude:39º 57' 49" N
 Longitude:105º 15' 52" W
End Location: 
 Latitude:39º 58' 16" N
 Longitude:105º 15' 55" W

 

MotionX-GPS Commonly Asked Questions

  1. What is MotionX-GPS?
    MotionX-GPS is the essential GPS application for outdoor enthusiasts. It puts an easy-to-use, state-of-the-art handheld GPS on your iPhone.

  2. Can I use MotionX-GPS?
    Sure! MotionX-GPS can be downloaded from the iTunes App Store.

  3. How can I display tracks in Google Earth?
    Follow the directions on the Google Earth web site to download and install the Google Earth program. Save the attached "HikeSoBoonoff trail .kmz" file to your computer. Launch Google Earth, select File, Open, and open the saved "HikeSoBoonoff trail .kmz" file.

  4. This email was forwarded to me. Where are the attachments?
    Some e-mail programs do not include the original attachments by default when forwarding an e-mail. In this case, the sender must reattach the original files for them to be included.

 

Please contact MotionX customer support with any comments or questions.

All the best,

The MotionX Team

US and Foreign Patents Granted and Pending. Fullpower® is a registered trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. MotionX™ is a trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. © Copyright 2003 - 2012 Fullpower Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

MotionX-GPS Track: Fall hike,shanahan&cross-country

Hello,

Connie O'Dell uses MotionX-GPS on the iPhone and is sharing with you the following track:

Name:Fall hike,shanahan&cross-country
Date:Oct 19, 2012 9:48 am
Map:
(valid until Apr 18, 2013)
View on Map
Distance:2.62 miles
Elapsed Time:48:46.7
Avg Speed:3.2 mph
Max Speed:11.8 mph
Avg Pace:18' 39" per mile
Min Altitude:5,820 ft
Max Altitude:6,219 ft
Start Time:2012-10-19T15:48:57Z
Start Location: 
 Latitude:39º 58' 08" N
 Longitude:105º 16' 07" W
End Location: 
 Latitude:39º 58' 16" N
 Longitude:105º 15' 59" W

 

MotionX-GPS Commonly Asked Questions

  1. What is MotionX-GPS?
    MotionX-GPS is the essential GPS application for outdoor enthusiasts. It puts an easy-to-use, state-of-the-art handheld GPS on your iPhone.

  2. Can I use MotionX-GPS?
    Sure! MotionX-GPS can be downloaded from the iTunes App Store.

  3. How can I display tracks in Google Earth?
    Follow the directions on the Google Earth web site to download and install the Google Earth program. Save the attached "Fall hikeshanahancrosscountry.kmz" file to your computer. Launch Google Earth, select File, Open, and open the saved "Fall hikeshanahancrosscountry.kmz" file.

  4. This email was forwarded to me. Where are the attachments?
    Some e-mail programs do not include the original attachments by default when forwarding an e-mail. In this case, the sender must reattach the original files for them to be included.

 

Please contact MotionX customer support with any comments or questions.

All the best,

The MotionX Team

US and Foreign Patents Granted and Pending. Fullpower® is a registered trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. MotionX™ is a trademark of Fullpower Technologies, Inc. © Copyright 2003 - 2012 Fullpower Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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