Grafnav Torrent

  воскресенье 21 октября
      21

I received the following today from Sean Walsh, the western regional sales manager for Novatel, in response to my inquiry regarding the sudden demise of TGO: We have decided to drop the price of GRAFNAV/GRAFNET to $3000 per license over the next 30 days. Let me know if you would be interested in acquiring a license. We can also provide a demo of the software if you would like. This puts GRAFNAV/GRAFNET pricing on an equal footing with TBC, at least as far as GPS processing and adjustment go.

Decisions, decisions. > This puts GRAFNAV/GRAFNET pricing on an equal footing with TBC, at least as far as GPS processing and adjustment go. Decisions, decisions.

The Grafnav/Grafnet package looks (at least from the specs and product description) actually better than the behemoth Trimble TBC bloatware that attempts to do everything but generate invoices. Ghost win7 final lite x86. (active) - download free apps For the user who just wants to process GPS vectors using data in the native binary formats of various survey-grade receivers, the Grafnav product would seem to have a natural advantage. Tough decision. I bought the (cheap) L1-only standard version of TBC but am dreading loading and trying to use it. How about a 'FREE' processor? As a minimum, if there decision is final to let TGO go, it would have been a good promotion by the manufacturer to give free of charge the standard version (that somewhere around $500 that Kent is talking about, I believe) of TBC to the users of TGO.

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I get to learn a new software from another manufacturer that I enjoy more and more (and does not cost a thing) as well as receiving on a plate a topic of interest for my 2011 continuing professional development exercise. > > This puts GRAFNAV/GRAFNET pricing on an equal footing with TBC, at least as far as GPS processing and adjustment go. Decisions, decisions. > > The Grafnav/Grafnet package looks (at least from the specs and product description) actually better than the behemoth Trimble TBC bloatware that attempts to do everything but generate invoices. For the user who just wants to process GPS vectors using data in the native binary formats of various survey-grade receivers, the Grafnav product would seem to have a natural advantage. Tough decision. I bought the (cheap) L1-only standard version of TBC but am dreading loading and trying to use it.

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Grafnav

What's the price for L1 only on TBC? I own the full package, used almost exclusively for post processing kinematic for airborne flights, rarely use the static portion.

I bought because they have a very robust PPK engine and the software was really tuned for moving platform work, far outperforms Leica LGO and I have heard Trimble TGO for large kinematic data sets. These guys build good software and have even better support, 2nd to none.

Best software support of any software I own!!! I would guess TBC is going to have a bunch of stuff this doesn't, however if you just want to process GNSS data it is a good software. Has a LSQ adjustment for static data.

A bit of a clarification on how it processes all the various data. You first convert your native receiver file to their format and then import that datafile into the software. Convertors for almost everything out there, the one exception I have found is the Trimble boards in the Applanix IMU systems. For a user that does the bulk of its work in RTK mode and only need to process baselines data from times to times, the return on investment on TBC may be weak. TBC has many survey/civil features beyond GPS processing and I like the fresh feel of the software. But the software is very limited on the presentation aspect. I understand that it was not its intent.