Using POI Factory POIs With CoPilot Live For Android Update

 

I copy this from a older post from kusuriurikun THANKS

CoPilot Live is an increasingly popular "real roadtrip GPS" tool for iPhone and Android--and, aside from programs preinstalled, is the cheapest alternative other than Google Maps. CoPilot Live USA is Fre or 3.99, and premium is 9.99

One of the niftier features that would definitely put CoPilot Live on the radar for folks here at POI-Factory--at least for Android users--is (ironically) an undocumented feature--it turns out that CoPilot Live can use TomTom .ov2 files naively as custom POI files. (Which is just gravy for us POI-Factory regulars--the default format here are CSV postings--which include TomTom .ov2 files.)

In fact, out of all of the options for Android for "real GPS" tools--with the possible exception of the OEM-only Garmin for Android. CoPilot Live is by far the easiest GPS tool for Android to load custom POIs on--no conversion necessary!

To get the files into CoPilot Live is surprisingly easy:

a) Connect your phone as an external hard drive to your computer. (With Android phones, hook up the USB cable, it should automatically ask if you want to turn on USB storage. It will then show up as an additional drive.)

b)I have the premium version Go to the \com.alk.copilot.namarket.premiumusa\save folder

c) Copy up to three .ov2 (and if you have an icon file, the icon) to this directory and disconnect your phone by pressing "Turn Off USB Storage".)

d) Start up CoPilot Live. It will immediately pop up stating that a new POI set has been found. Click the next arrow (to the right), and you can either select a preexisting category or select "New Category" for really custom POIs and click next.

e) Select "No" for "are you importing safety camera data?", then click "next".

It should then gracefully import all your POIs. These will show up in a custom category under Settings -> Manage POIs--so you can turn them on and off at your leisure.

To add safety cameras and redlight cameras (if you are windmill-endowed as an active user) is just a bit different:

a) As these are in plain CSV format, you need to convert them to a TomTom .ov2 file using your favourite application. (I like ITN Converter or Extra_POI_Editor, but others like POIEdit or online conversion tools. Your mileage may vary--use what works best for you.)

b) Copy the newly minted .ov2 file EXACTLY the same as in steps a)-d) in the first section. Click "New Category", enter "Cameras", and click next; pick the image that looks like the camera and click next.

c) Answer "YES" to "Are you importing safety camera data?" and click "next".

That will nicely import the safety camera data.

If you decide you need to edit or delete sets of data, you can go into Settings -> Manage POIs (in the main menu) and edit or delete POI sets.

...and that's it! Very simple--as easy as doing it with a "real" GPS.

Please comment for other ways and issue. THANKS

OV2 files

willdrad wrote:

I copy this from a older post from kusuriurikun THANKS

kusuriurikun wrote:

As these [camera files] are in plain CSV format, you need to convert them to a TomTom .ov2 file using your favourite application. (I like ITN Converter or Extra_POI_Editor, but others like POIEdit or online conversion tools. Your mileage may vary--use what works best for you.)

If you plan on creating OV2 files, especially rather large ones like the Red Light Cameras file, then you may be interested in my free "ov2optimizer" utility. It can convert the CSV file directly into a properly-indexed OV2 file. Details here.

Thanks for the info but my

Thanks for the info but my cpu says it is not safe and deletes it.

.

willdrad wrote:

Thanks for the info but my cpu says it is not safe and deletes it.

If your computer is blocking ov2optimizer then I'd appreciate it if you could post the details to the ov2optimizer thread. Specifically:

- which application is doing the blocking (Internet Explorer? Your anti-virus? Windows itself?)

- the exact error message you receive

Maybe it's this

VersatileGuy wrote:
willdrad wrote:

Thanks for the info but my cpu says it is not safe and deletes it.

If your computer is blocking ov2optimizer then I'd appreciate it if you could post the details to the ov2optimizer thread. Specifically:

- which application is doing the blocking (Internet Explorer? Your anti-virus? Windows itself?)

- the exact error message you receive

I'm not willdrad but this may help.

For folks running Norton Internet Security (NIS), downloaded exe files are checked by NIS before running. One check NIS uses is the file's "reputation" based on others' experiences with it. Since this "ov" program is not commonly used by the average computer user, its reputation is low. When I try to dowload and run the setup file from:

http://versatileguy.dyndns.org/utilities/ov2optimizer/

I receive a popup error message like willdrad does and further information can be found at:

http://www.symantec.com/security_response/writeup.jsp?docid=...

I expect that temporarily disabling NIS will allow the program to run.

Software developers can contact Symantec to have their programs white-listed:

WHITE-LISTING
Software developers who want to accelerate the reputation building process for their new software applications should submit new applications to the Symantec white-listing program. Details of that program can be found here.

https://submit.symantec.com/whitelist/isv/

https://submit.symantec.com/false_positive/

@CraigW

Thanks very much for the information!

Sure no problem

Sure no problem

Sure no problem

Sure no problem

Just post a comment to thre

Just post a comment to thre thread.
Just downloaded the file and installed it. Thanks

thanks for the tips about

thanks for the tips about importing. That's my big beef with Google navigation and the reason I still have a dedicated GPS unit.