* Exploring maps on my PC?
@ Linux for blind general discussion
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From: Linux for blind general discussion @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Linux for blind general discussion, emacspeak
I just found an app which will supposedly allow me to do this for the
reasonable price of just $498/year! Is there a way to do this for free
the way sighted people are able to? (Not GPS, just using commands to
virtually explore a map like in a computer game.) Is emapspeak still a
thing?
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* Re: Exploring maps on my PC?
Exploring maps on my PC? Linux for blind general discussion
@ ` Linux for blind general discussion
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Linux for blind general discussion @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Amanda Lacy; +Cc: Linux for blind general discussion, emacspeak
Amanda Lacy <lacy925@gmail.com> writes:
> I just found an app which will supposedly allow me to do this for the
> reasonable price of just $498/year! Is there a way to do this for free
> the way sighted people are able to? (Not GPS, just using commands to
> virtually explore a map like in a computer game.) Is emapspeak still a
> thing?
Yeah emapspeak is still a thing. Start it with M-x gmaps. You'll need
to look at the mode help with C-h m to get a list of the keyboard
commands. But this is just for getting directions and finding nearby
places, not textually exploring a map. The nearby places feature
requires one of those annoying API keys. I'm going to try to get mine
after I send this. The directions don't require the key.
A good friend of mine has been saying for years that it would be great
if we could explore the map for an unknown physical area using MUD-style
interaction. It would especially help those of us who really struggle
with orientation. I know people who can navigate in a MUD just fine, but
they have difficulty with orientation to real streets. As far as I know,
there's no free software on Linux which does this.
If you have an Android device, there's a free app called Intersection
Explorer that does let you explore a map. The paid navigation app
Nearby Explorer also has that feature. It only costs a $79 one-time
fee rather than a yearly $498.
The free Intersection Explorer came out of the eyes-free project at
Google. At one time, it was part of Google Maps, but it seems to have
been split off into a separate application once more.
-- Chris
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