May 22nd 2013
Chris Breeden, Service Manager and Yamaha Master Tech at Norfolk ...
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1985 240' Passenger Ferry C...
US$ 650,000 Fort Pierce,FL United States |
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1995 Experimental Shipyard ...
US$ 644,300 RUSSIAN FEDERATION |
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2013 The Skipper In Seafoam...
US$ 19,995 Fort Lauderdale,FL United States |
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2010 Linssen Gs 45.9 Ac Twin
US$ 512,863 Sneek, Netherlands |
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View BoaterMouth ArchiveIt's so sad: Nowadays when I contemplate my amazing portfolio of iPhone marine apps (discussed here, here, here, and elsewhere) in iTunes, featured right across the top of my PC screen are the ones now also optimized for the iPad. But I don't have an iPad (though I did touch one). And behold the difference. The size of what you see when you click on the image above will depend on your particular screen's pixels per inch, but the proportions are right regardless. iNavX on a 9.7-inch, 1024 x 748 pixel iPad is obviously quite different from iNavX on a 3.5-inch, 320 x 480 pixel iPhone. There's room for more chart and bigger touch buttons, not to mention nav data and a compass ribbon across the top. Damn...
In fact, the iNavX web site now boasts "The power of a color chartplotter for a fraction of the cost" and, while I'll stay out of that argument for the time being, developer Rich Ray does make a good case for how far he's taken the software, and how able it looks on the bigger iPad. Note, for instance, the series of screen shots comparing iNavX iPhone and iPad versions. Ray has also gotten his program to play nicely with a Digi Connect WI-SP WiFi serial server, which means you can get AIS and other NMEA 0183 data flowing to your iThing without any other computer involved (and he even added a Digi Connect guide to his extensive help files).
