First, sorry for the late response. Life took one of those turns…

http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Android is an amazing page! So many options. Kudos to all the people that must have worked together to build such a resource. Thanks for pointing that out, though it will take a bit of research on my part. More than I expected actually.

Also, thanks for the ‘Splitter’ reference. As I had found the planet and region extracts but couldn’t figure out how to get JOSM to use them, that looks like the part I was missing.

I had actually looked at that but dismissed it… paid and I didn’t see any vector at the time. Thanks for pointing that out. Now I’ll have to figure out if I can use it, or something like it, to either work with my old maps or go vector with the OSM maps. I can easily get my old stuff into MP format and convert from there. Still thinking… so much to learn. Seems making maps for OsmAnd from data in MP format is possible… might be worth paying. Then again, if I can get MP into OSM (and the OsmAnd site aludes to this) then I might have a whole new set of workflow possibilities.

I should explain one thing. Along with switching to an Android device (mostly because my Dakota 20 died and I’m mad at Garmin), I’ve also converted to the Linux ecosystem, including a Nokia N810 tablet that has GPS functionality (sort of). I’ve had the N810 for years. Now, none of the N810 apps really did what I wanted to do with a GPS on the bike (inc Navit and Gosmore) but they may be more mature on Android. Also, I’ll admit that I’ve not quite entirely got over the “Linux convert Snob” stage. Thus, the first thing I did with that wiki page on Android is sort by license :slight_smile: I’ll work my way through the GPL stuff first, and preferentially. I mean, there’s nothing in the list I can’t afford (the most expensive seems to be around 20 euros) but there are principles at stake :wink:

Of course, throwing my principles out, cGPSmapper seems to handle large datasets a lot better than JOSM… though I expect there’s a lot of OSM specific stuff it doesn’t do. Still, if I could work in that, then convert to OSM, then dump into Maperitive, then tiles for Orux… after dealing with tile-based maps via the N810, I’m not opposed to them - they do have advantages. I just have that vector data to start with. I might even try that Androzic app. I remember converting some old topo maps to ozf2 format and being amazed at how well they turned out. I wonder if they’re render as well on the tablet in that app (yup - way better than Orux).

So much to learn.

Thanks to all for the pointers. I still don’t know what I’m going to do, but at least I have some better options,

David...