 Just for fun I had my Geko 201 on for yesterday's walk, and it would be even more fun to upload it to my computer - I have Memory Map - and see precisely where I walked. Inevitably I've lost the destructions that came with the Geko. Does anyone know if it's possible to do this, and if so how (bearing in mind that I'm not a techno-wizard). Cheers
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 Hi Kate... Your Geko 201 manual is downloadable from here Hope it helps byeeeee
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 Have you a connecting cable, Kate? For example, this one? I'd tried using a connertor cable between my old serial cable and a USB cable, but no joy, so ended up paying full whack for it. It is a lot for a cable but it did the job  Once connected, you can import marks, routes and tracks from the GPS unit. And you can export them from the mapping software too. If you export your "overlay" files regularly, that acts as your backup in case of problems.
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 I've not got mine in front of me, but it's not difficult. At the Geko end, you may need to set Setup, System, Interface (or something like that) to Garmin, but otherwise just switch it on and plug it in. At the MemoryMap end I'm not sure if it'll auto-detect the gps or whether you'll need to tell it which COM Port the gps is attached through. After that it's just wherever the MM Upload/ Download menu is.....
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 Thanks chaps, got the route imported. Now, is there any way to edit it? For some bizarre reason I've got a couple of kms of rogue tracklog at the start of the walk and I'd like to get rid of it if possible.
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 Well, if you can get the .gpx file, you can just open it up with a text editor (e.g. WordPad) and delete the unwanted points... A memory-map .gpx file is just an XML file, and starts like this: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <gpx version="1.1" creator="Memory-Map 5.1.3.716 http://www.memory-map.com" xmlns:xsi=http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance xmlns=http://www.topografix.com/GPX/1/1 xsi chemaLocation="http://www.topografix.com/GPX/1/1 http://www.topografix.com/GPX/1/1/gpx.xsd"> <trk> <name><![CDATA[Track]]></name> <type><![CDATA[GPS:Tracks]]></type> <trkseg> <trkpt lat="54.6003333333" lon="-3.1904833333"><ele>215</ele><time>2007-09-08T09:58:45Z</time></trkpt> <trkpt lat="54.6006166667" lon="-3.1908500000"><ele>215</ele><time>2007-09-08T09:59:19Z</time></trkpt> <trkpt lat="54.6005833333" lon="-3.1912833333"><ele>215</ele><time>2007-09-08T09:59:37Z</time></trkpt> Just delete the 'trkpt' you don't want.
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 The 'trkpt' lines have wrapped...
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 Can't you just select the necessary trackpoints one at a time and delete them in MM? If a track doesn't have visible points then you could convert it to a route, and then delete the waypoint s from that. I think  Have a play - if you've not deleted the track from the Geko yet then you've always got a backup. Btw, with the Geko track page, you'll see the %used figure displayed against the track memory - I always make a point of clearing this to 0% immediately before starting any walk I want to record.
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 Er... actually it was terribly easy  But I wouldn't have got there without the suggestions above. If you highlight the 'track' that appears on MM, you have an option to 'convert to Route' through 'Operations', and then it was a doddle to delete the offending rogue waypoints. Interestingly, the 21km walk I actually went on has now been reduced to 19.2km
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 You may also find it useful to 'right click' on the track and select 'remove velocity spike' especially if you've lost the signal at any point during your walk. This usually happens in wooded areas. It amazing how many miles you can lose this way!
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 The tracklog interval is also a factor. Long interval leads to your winding path being straightened out a little. Not sure what the default is on the 201 though. I've also found that coverting Tracks to Routes in MM can cause some straightening too.
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 You can set that yourself, either a time or distance interval and you can vary either. I use time and my mate uses distance. We end up with more or less the same results!
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