DS Maps

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Revision as of 02:51, 6 December 2012 by HydeWing (talk | contribs)
DSmaps
File:Dsmaps2a.PNG
General
Author(s)DMC
TypeOther
Version0.2.1a
LicenceMixed
Links
[Media:DSmaps021a.zip Download]
Website
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DSmaps is a map viewer for the Nintendo DS game console. It obtains images on-the-fly from the Google Maps ‘keyhole server’ using the Wi-Fi hardware that’s built into every DS. DSmaps came about when I was trying to think of a good project to learn DS programming and was inspired by the truly sublime mapping application on the iPod Touch. At its current stage of development, DSmaps is a very long way from even approaching that sort of standard, but it is definitely the benchmark.

Installation

  1. Download and extract file
  2. DLDI patch .nds file and copy it to the root directory of the card

User guide

DSmaps does not yet provide a capability to configure whatever Wi-Fi access point(s) you use, so you must do this outside of DSmaps using another Wi-Fi aware application. You can use either a homebrew or commercial app to do this(such as Mario Kart, DSOrganize).

A guide is provided here.

Control

arrow keys - pan (move) the map

Hold L + arrow keys - ‘small pan’ of just 1/16 the screen width

Hold R + arrow keys - ‘large pan’ of an entire screenful at a time

A - zoom in

B - zoom out

SELECT - set as home location

START - return to your home location

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: I’m getting file errors when using DSmaps, and on popping the microSD card into a PC, folder and file names appear corrupted. What’s going on?

  • One of the libraries used by DSmaps has a bug which causes corruption on cards formatted with the FAT32 file system. This bug was fixed in the first service release of DSmaps, so please ensure that you are using the latest release.

Q: I used DSmaps 0.2a and my microSD card is formatted with FAT32. But I haven’t seen any evidence of file system corruption. Does this mean I am OK?

  • Unfortunately not. Pop your microSD card into a PC and use the Windows ‘chkdsk’ utility on the command line. This will advise of any file system corruption (and will attempt to fix the corruption if the ‘/F’ switch is used).

Q: Should I use FAT or FAT32 on my microSD card?

  • In choosing which file system variant to use, numerous factors come into play that vary from one user to another, and make it almost impossible to recommend a one-size-fits-all best choice. However, considering only DSmaps running with a typical 2 GB microSD card, FAT32 would seem like a better choice. The DSmaps tile cache comprises of a very large number of relatively small files, and applications such as this achieve much higher storage efficiency with the smaller cluster sizes afforded by FAT32.

Media

Changelog

v0.2.1a

  • Fixed a bug in the library that DSmaps uses to interact with the file system on the microSD card.
  • Changed the naming scheme for files in the tile cache. The upside for DSmaps users is better performance, less space used on your microSD card, and far less complexity to go wrong. The downside is that any files already in your tile cache will be silently ignored once you install this service release. It might be better to completely blow away your DSMAPS folder and start again.

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