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135 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1123
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Title: HPR1123: Move! Bike Computer
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1123/hpr1123.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:23:06
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---
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Hello, this is Frank Bell, and today I would like to talk about the MOVE VIP computer application
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for Android. This was inspired by the suggestion on the HDR webpage to talk about your favorite
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Android app. And I must say, I think that the MOVE VIP computer is indeed my favorite Android
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app. It's a little application that is designed to track time, speed, and right of a
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bicycleist and then to display the statistics and to display the root against the background
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of Google Maps. As a preface, I guess I would say an average bicycleist, most of my life,
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I put you much grew up on a bicycle, I grew up in the country, the nearest house was almost
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a quarter mile away, and the bicycle was my ticket to the mobility until I got to be 15 years
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old and get my driver's license. And the fact that I was able to get my driver's license at a
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15 probably gives you a hint that I am an old gadget. I've written a bicycle off and on to most
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of my life, the primary determinant of whether or not I'm bicycling at a particular time is
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the amount of traffic that surrounds me and how flat the terrain is. When I lived in
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northern Pennsylvania, I bicyled quite a bit, it was flat, the particular spot that I lived in
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was away from the traffic, and it was beautiful, broad, flat suburban streets where you could
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safely bicycle without being in fear of your life. When I moved to northern Delaware, not
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so much, you don't really notice it when you're driving a car, but upper Delaware,
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between Wilmington and Pennsylvania, is quite killer, you notice it when you're on a bicycle.
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There are low hills until you try to pedal up them on a bicycle. And now I'm back in the flat
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lands of Virginia Beach, Virginia, tucked away in the corner of the development around the
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golf course where the bicycle is safe, and the scenery is a traffic, and the traffic is low.
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The bicycle I currently have is a Fuji Sports 10 that dates from the mid-70s. I got it
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from an outfit called the Urban Bike Project in Wilmington, Delaware. The Urban Bike Project
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among its other endeavors will take donated bicycles and being located in not the worst
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area, but certainly not the best area of Wilmington, teaches the local children how to
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care for and maintain bicycles. And with a child reprobeses, I'm using that term very
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loosely. They don't go out and buy new parts and stuff like that, but basically spruce
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up and maintain. If a child reprobeses a bicycle himself or herself, they can get to keep
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it. That's part of their goal is to put bicycles into the hand of people who appreciate
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and who need them. My son actually was volunteering there. I think because he liked a couple
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of the girls who were volunteering there and got me interested in it, and both of us bought
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used bicycles from them at a point reasonable price. I think I paid $75 for mine, and he
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paid about the same for the one that he got. When I finished getting it up to speed after
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I moved here and decided that this was a great area for bicycle. It occurred to me that
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it would be fun to keep track of where I went and how fast I got there. Not that I'm racing
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for speed, but more just for curiosity. So I had seen cases for sale and bike shops, cases
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for holding eye junk, eye phones. So it occurred to me that perhaps if people were
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using eye phones on their bicycles, perhaps it would be something in the Android market.
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So I searched for free apps, and I found two. One was something called map my ride. It seemed
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to have more downloads, so I figured I did that a try first. I went to install it, and then
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when it displayed the permissions that it wanted, and I always read that permissions display
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when I'm installing a new application, it said it wanted access to my contacts. I stopped
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right there. I didn't read any further. I could think of no legitimate reason for bicycle tracking
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software to want to know who I was emailing, telephoning, or texting. So then I tried this
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other one, moved by computer, and I've been happily using it now for over a year.
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The way it works is that it accesses GPS satellites, and on the screen it will display how many
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satellites it's connected with, and using the GPS data compute your route and your speed.
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And then when you're done, you can look at your speed, your route, the time you spent, and
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have that information plotted on Google Maps. When you first started up, if you do not have
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your GPS turned on, it will prompt you to turn on GPS tracking in the phone. I normally do not
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keep GPS turned on on my phone. I maybe I've watched too many episodes of NCIS. I don't
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have a use for it, so why use it? I turn it on and off when I need it. Once it starts
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and the GPS is on, it takes between 30 seconds and a minute, sometimes a little longer to
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establish a connection with the GPS satellites. You know that it's connected when the
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GPS is on the screen for displaying time and speed, and what not, pull in with numerals.
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Then press the menu button on the phone, and select record track. At this point, it will
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ask you if you want to continue your previous track. If you're out on a long ride with friends,
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or where you might stop for lunch or something like that, I can see a use for continuing the
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GPS track. What I do is I normally set out, I ride around for a while, and I stop, so
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I almost always select no, and start the track on you. Then I put the phone in its case,
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put the case in the bag on the bicycle, and I take off. When I'm done, I take the
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case out of the bag, I take the phone out of the case, unlock the screen, and press the
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menu button, then press stop, and the track will be saved. The next thing I normally do is
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press the menu button, and I press tracks. Then I see a list of my tracks, you can use
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the top of the list, and I can touch the one that I want to look at, it will just slide.
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While you're viewing the track, you can press the menu and get several different options.
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The two most significant would be to show the stats, which displays them in a box,
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superimposed on the map, or send the stats. I will normally press send the stats,
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the application will present me with a list of applications I have on my phone for sending
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stuff, such as Facebook, Google Plus, and my nail client, K9Mail, Gmail, and so on.
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I normally just email through them to myself, where later on, I pick up the email on my
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laptop, and enter the data into the spreadsheet, just for curiosity.
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I do want to mention, when it records your speed, it then will present that information in
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three figures, your average speed when you're moving, your top speed, and what the application
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calls the gross average speed, which is the speed calculated, including any time you spent
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standing still. And when it presents your time, it presents the time, again, in three categories.
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The total time, from the time you started recording to the time you stopped recording,
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you're either time, the amount of time you spent standing still, whether you were sitting
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at a stop sign, or a stop for a drink of water, or whatever reason, stop to chat with a neighbor,
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or take a picture of that kitty over there, and your active time, which is the time you
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actually spent in motion. I sometimes also will take pictures of the various maps.
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I don't use a screenshot to do that. I look at this, getting some kind of screenshot capability
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on the phone, and decide that it was more trouble, or more money, or both, that I wanted to
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devote to it. I have no desire to root my phone, if I had two of them, maybe I might want
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to root one. I got it to be a phone, and to use it, not to be a laboratory, and to that
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second. So I usually get out my camera, I set it on shutter, priority, which is the only
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way to get a good picture set the phone against a dark background, usually the screen of
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my girlfriend's laptop, which is gone to sleep by then, take the picture, and then I'll
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pipe the picture into the gap and manipulate it to get a nice little map. There's a link
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in the show notes where you can see some of these screens, the regular screen, the tracking
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screen, a picture of a track, stats, and so on, so you'll get a sense of what this application
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looks like. When you're in the normal application mode, and you press the menu button, one of
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the options is settings. I do want to point out the most important settings, one is measurements.
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By default, it's set to metric, which makes sense to the developer as a European. You can
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also set select US, or notical. There's a rotation set where you can set whether when you
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rotate the phone, the application rotates on the screen. The developer recommends locking
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it to portrait, and I think that's assigned recommendation. When the application is in portrait
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mode, more information feels appear on the screen than when it's rotated to landscape mode.
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You can also change your display color in the settings menu. Selecting the color item,
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display a color wheel, and you have for all practical purposes an infinite choice of colors
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for the text on the screen. By default, when I got it, it was set to blue when the developer
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added the color choice to the menu, I experimented with it, and I find for my purposes, at least
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the optimal color seems to be green, that seems to provide the best contrast for me against
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the dark screen. There are a number of other settings on the settings menu. They are very
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concisely, but also very thoroughly described in the user's guide and the frequently asked questions,
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and there'll be links to both of those documents in the show notes. The application has a small
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footprint. The application itself takes up 640k of my phone's memory. The data, of course,
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will depend on how many trips you have, but the data footprint is actually very, very small.
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Also, since the maps are provided by Google, the data is simply the information for plotting
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the maps. I do want to mention, although it is called mood by computer, the developer says you
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can use it for any activity that involves motion, running, skiing, hiking, probably
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not swimming. I don't think I suggested swimming. I have even tested it in my vehicle as I was
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driving around the area last week doing errands and thinking about doing this podcast. I figured
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I'd turn it on. It did quite a nice job of tracking my route and my steam as I ran my errands.
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Frankly, it was quite a revelation to discover how much of my 13 mile track I spent sitting
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stop at Red Lives. This was a very nice old application as well behave. It doesn't nag.
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It does exactly what it promises and does it very, very well. If you want to email me, you can
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email me at Frank at PineViewFarm.net. PineViewFarm is all one word. No spaces, no punctuation.
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And my website is www.pineviewfarm.net. Thank you very much.
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You have been listening to HackerPublic Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. We are a community
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all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener by yourself. If you ever consider recording
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