What do you expect from the next update?
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Maybe the suunto developers could just make the detail levels configurable. Then users can choose whether they want slower, information-dense maps or faster less-informative maps. In fact, the same user might wish to change the setting depending on where they are - up a
creak without a paddlemountain without a paper map or somewhere more inhabited with other landmarks and recognisable trails / road. -
@Stefan-Kersting You know, maybe I’ll refrain from commenting on your idiotic argument. (If I wrote what I think about it, I would have to be banned )
One photo is enough to show that you (and a few others) have no idea what you are talking about.
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@maszop Don’t know your age but I was navigating with a map and compass when no consumer GPS existed or personal computers. I know what contour lines are and how to read a map. Would I like contour lines at all zoom levels? Sure, but it won’t prevent me from going into the mountains. I’d rather have contour lines as they are now than none at all, and I hope it will happen. I don’t set priorities at Suunto.
You however, need to tone your rhetoric down. Please do not insult individuals on the forum. -
@maszop just for the quote. I’m not a walker, my sports are limited to trail running (most), marathons and long distance triathlons. I have never needed those lines because of my use cases and I also understand that you can need them because your use cases are different than mine. And that is fine, of course.
But here people are explaining the reasons of removing the lines.If there’s a feature, and that’s for everything in computer science, that affects the usability of an application (maps) for the vast majority of people, and there’s no apparent easy fix, that feature is more a problem than a good thing. Suunto’s decision is the good one. Personally I don’t want those lines if the usability of the maps is going to be affected for those of us that uses the watch for trail running.
Btw, you know better than me that navigation is more than those lines. And Suunto has the best ABC sensors of the market, so it is not true at all what you say about the navigation with that “poorly” thing. Have a look here please: https://youtu.be/6JUS43kXgx4?si=3zWC9HT_as_IINlS
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@dreamer_ said in What do you expect from the next update?:
The Step Counter seems fixed fixed for me. I need to test it better but, for now, it is not counting steps all time like it was before. Fantastic.It seems broken. It is impossible to have more than 1400 steps at this moment in the morning (in one hour and half since I woke up)
Just to confirm that the soft reset worked. Today, waking up at the same time and walking the same distance I have a lot more realiable result at the same hour:
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@maszop said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@Stefan-Kersting You know, maybe I’ll refrain from commenting on your idiotic argument. (If I wrote what I think about it, I would have to be banned )
One photo is enough to show that you (and a few others) have no idea what you are talking about.
I don’t know how big an impact it would have on performance, but having contour lines at 500 m zoom would really make maps much much more useable in the mountains. I’d be fine with a bit slower interface to get this view.
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@maszop said in What do you expect from the next update?:
I just don’t understand how you can write such nonsense over and over again.
Sure, I should have explained it better to have you understand it, but it is difficult when talking with a toddler
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@maszop My map looks like this when using the 500 m scale. Isn’t that good enough?
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@Stefan-Kersting mine look like this
And here are the same 200 m
During summer MTB riders use it for downhill, and winter it’s skiing.
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@Iggge for sure, it is depending of the topography and how steep it is. Using the watch for hiking, backcountry and MTB
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@Stefan-Kersting “for sure, it is depending of the topography and how steep it is”.
True, 'nuff. That doesn’t seem too cluttered to be returned to other maps. What is the contour separation shown in that 500m zoom pic?
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@Stefan-Kersting This is not a 500m view because there are no contour lines in that view in Suunto anymore. The current maps in this case are just a gray background, like the breadcrumb from 9PP and earlier models.
Turn off this useless ruler in this case and on the left you will have a number that symbolizes the zoom level. In my example, there is 500m from the older version of the maps, before the removal of these contours. -
@maszop I like this ruler very much and don’t want to miss it so, I did as you said. I’m excited to hear what you’re saying now.
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@Stefan-Kersting These are the old maps, these contour lines no longer exist.
I like ruler too, but a ruler is not needed now when talking about contour lines.
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@maszop apparently they exist. No photoshop, I promise
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sometimes there are contour lines in the 500m zoom level.
Had them myself when playing around with zoom levels for some time.
maybe sometimes a 200m cached view is used when switching to 500m or so. -
@Egika It looks like it was actually 200m. The view from 500m is a bit different.
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whatever it looks like - there is a possibility to see contour lines at 500m zoom level.
And yes - this is not the standard.
and yes again: I’d be happy to see them back again for 500m zoom too -
@maszop all right, I did an effort and took a screenshot of the topo map for this area. See also the same area in 200 m scale.
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@Stefan-Kersting Well, as you can see in this picture, 200 m is sometimes not enough in the mountains to properly see the terrain.
With a view of 500m-1km do contour lines give a more clear image of the slope.