This application forwards NMEA data from your phone's GPS to a
specified host. It's goal is to easily plug and feed data into a
GPS server service (e.g. GPSd) using your cellphone as a GPS
device. This way your cellphone can be used as a GPS in navigation
or robotics applications running in a host computer.
Data is forwarded using UDP. First make sure the computer's IP is reachable from your cellphone; this is the case in most default access points so it should work if both are connected to the same WiFi network.
On the host machine execute gpsd -N udp://: (e.g. gpsd -N
udp://*:29998). In the Android app enter your host's IP and port
and hit Start. Your host is now receiving GPS data forwarded from
your phone. You can test it with gpsmon or other GPSd
utilities.
This open source software is available under The MIT Licence at https://github.com/tiagoshibata/Android-GPSd-Client. Please report bugs through email ([email protected]) or GitHub.
Data is forwarded using UDP. First make sure the computer's IP is reachable from your cellphone; this is the case in most default access points so it should work if both are connected to the same WiFi network.
On the host machine execute gpsd -N udp://
This open source software is available under The MIT Licence at https://github.com/tiagoshibata/Android-GPSd-Client. Please report bugs through email ([email protected]) or GitHub.
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