Happy that you got it working. What exactly does not work with the photos? Fell free to open a GitHub issue, if that’s easier.
Happy that you got it working. What exactly does not work with the photos? Fell free to open a GitHub issue, if that’s easier.
I really love working with PocketBase. It gives you such a headstart, but also is highly customizable. It’s really the best of both worlds.
I don’t know the app. But on the linked page it says it supports GPX and KML. Both of which wanderer supports.
Exactly! As long as you have the track in a GPX, TCX or KML file, you are good to go.
You can also plan your route directly on wanderer (so you don’t fall off another cliff ;))
Thanks! No this is an extremely low spec server: 2GB RAM and 2 virtual cores.
Or use the demo ;)
Cool! I always recommend OsmAnd.
With docker you can simply change the port mapping in the compose file
That’s strange, I never had that happen. If you have the time could you please open an issue on GitHub?
Absolutely all help is welcome. Please check out the roadmap for my current plans. I’d be delighted if you could add your Dutch translation here: https://translate.codeberg.org/projects/wanderer/wanderer/nl/
Dank je wel!
Speed statistics were added in v0.2.0. Hopefully also with some bugfixes.
Offering print support for trails is high on the priority list.
Logging trips offline requires background location services. This does not work for a simple website. You would need to program an app for that. While this is a plan somewhere down the line, it’s still far away. So currently I would recommend relying on an external app to log your trip and import afterwards.
I think you might misunderstand what wanderer does. It is not a maps service like Open Street Maps. It’s simply a database in which you can store your GPS tracks. So the workflow would look like this: you are in the woods and record your track (e.g. with osmand) -> you store your track in GPX format -> you upload your track (and any additional info like a description or photos) to wanderer -> before your next adventure you check wanderer to decide what you want to do
Happy to help. If you can get a dump of the database it should be quite easy to import it into wanderer via the API 👍
Absolutely. I have it running on a Pi 5 and that’s more than enough. You only need 1GB of RAM when first starting wanderer. After that it sits at around 100Mb.
Currently wanderer supports visualising duration, distance, elevation gain and speed. Support for heart rate is planned. It can display a graph (the one you see in the screenshot) and also calculates an average.
wanderer currently parses distance, elevation gain, duration and speed. Parsing heart rate would be an easy addition, though.
You can also install it directly on your machine: https://github.com/Flomp/wanderer/wiki/Installation#from-source
It’s just much more tedious imo.
Ah yes, sorry, the upload is currently capped at 5MB. You can change that limit in the PocketBase backend. I will add a guide to the docs.