I’m not a golfer. When I grew up, golf was a rich person’s game. Average Joes like me couldn’t afford to play golf. Things have changed. My boys are golfers. I’m just their geek dad, a Free Software nerd and OpenStreetMap obsessive who takes them places. Golf can still be a rich person’s game, but it doesn’t have to be. The rich kids just have more equipment.
One such piece of equipment is GPS assistance. A little custom-made gadget that knows about golf courses and the features and layout of each hole and assists with things like choosing your club and your line based on where you are and where you need to get to. This, to someone like me, sounds like a challenge. We have this data (or where we don’t, we can create it). So, ahead of the first round of the 2015 Derbyshire Futures Tour, I set about mapping the course.
Actually mapping the course, the holes and their features from the Bing imagery was a breeze. But when I got to thinking about how the software would work, I came up short. My idea was something like this: