Lògo d'OpenStreetMap OpenStreetMap

I recently [re]discovered the years and years of accumulated GPS logs that I had from dragging my GPS with me on every hike or drive and decided to do something with them. After some Perl scripting and ImageMagick processing, I got this:




Click on the picture above for a full size view of this and other images.


BTW, this is my first diary entry - I hope the HTML works... If not, the URL is this: http://avtanski.net/projects/gps. The track visualization video is here: http://www.vimeo.com/23697355

Luòc : Blossom Oaks Apartments, San Jose, Santa Clara County, California, United States
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Discussion

Comentari de olejorgenb lo 26 de mai 2011 a 03:26

Nice! I really should clean up and organize my tracks, and this gives me some much needed motivation :) (I have not even close to that many track points though)

Comentari de durian lo 26 de mai 2011 a 05:48

Yes, nice! I did something similar with my tracks last year, plotted all my logs with Mapnik. I didn't filter them enough though so I got big clumps where I live and work.

Comentari de SB79 lo 26 de mai 2011 a 06:51

Nice! How did you produce the video? Did you use imagemagick in order to produce the video by concatenating the pictures? :-)

Comentari de maximeguillaud lo 26 de mai 2011 a 07:43

Very nice ! Note that the -INPUT parameter doesn't work properly, it seems to always fall back to the "input" directory.

Comentari de SB79 lo 26 de mai 2011 a 12:50

I can confirm this problem. The "INPUT" parameter doesn't work for me either.

Comentari de Alexander Avtanski lo 26 de mai 2011 a 15:21

Hello. Yes, I used ImageMagick - to produce the fuzzy glow effect. I merged the video from the images using VirtualDub.

Regarding the INPUT parameter not working - oops, my bad. The parameter is actually "SRCDIR". I'll update the README.TXT. Thanks for the tip.

Comentari de Alexander Avtanski lo 26 de mai 2011 a 15:45

UPDATE: Thanks for the feedback. I updated the README.TXT to list the correct parameter (SRCDIR instead of INPUT) and included in the zip file on the site a sample script that uses ImageMagick to produce the halo effect.

Comentari de Hawkeye lo 26 de mai 2011 a 17:21

I assure you, that was no waste of time or computing power! :-)

Comentari de Anna_AG lo 27 de mai 2011 a 12:54

Love it - agreed - no waste of time - what are computers for?

Comentari de Windsurfer62 lo 28 de mai 2011 a 07:10

Great - It deserves to be used everywhere.

Comentari de Claudomiro lo 29 de mai 2011 a 01:26

This is so coool, pure art! Congratulations

Comentari de qaysedcftgb lo 2 de junh 2011 a 22:42

GREAT!
I enjoyed the show. Grats!

Comentari de gecho111 lo 3 de març 2015 a 00:25

Are the RUNNER parameters used generate a sequential series of images for a track? I can’t quite figure out how to use them.

Comentari de Alexander Avtanski lo 4 de març 2015 a 20:27

Hi,

Sorry for the late reply - I’ve been down with the flu.

The runners parameter just specifies a bunch of points where the trail should end - they correspond to the bright doors on the video. They do not generate a sequence of images. If you want a sequence, you need to run the script multiple times, each time with the runners moved a few points ahead.

It’s a bit tricky. However, I have written another tool that can be help generate any kind of movie - you can check it here:

http://avtanski.net/projects/gpsmash/

The easiest way to make an animation is to project the GPS data, export it to X3D format, load it in any 3D animation tool (like Blender, free) then animate any way you want:

http://avtanski.net/projects/gpsmash/example_outx3d.html

Comentari de gecho111 lo 7 de març 2015 a 18:01

Thanks. Last year over the course of 73 bike rides totaling about 4000 km I covered every road and alley in my city. I thought it would be neat if I could create video drawing the path I took.

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