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Ensign
![]() Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 226
Downloads: 346
Uploads: 0
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Fellow subsimmers,
(Please bear with this rambling thread...) I’ve been thinking quite a bit recently, which is always dangerous, about what we as a community can do to continue improving SH5 and, indeed, all subsims. You see, I’m one of those wretched sim enthusiasts who has not an ounce of modding ability, but who nevertheless wants to contribute something to this awesome community, rather than just living off the virtual sweat of our more talented modding colleagues. I first realized there might be an opportunity to participate in a small way when reading through TDW’s sh5.exe thread a few months ago. At one point in that thread, gap raised an excellent idea: what if TDW’s wolfpack hardfix used historical U-boat positions to determine which boats (if any) responded to your contact reports? “Awesome idea!” I thought. That would be a perfect way to tie TDW’s brilliant wolfpack function to the historical availability of U-boats. Plus, how cool would it be to report a contact to BdU, and then to receive a message from Günther Prien in U47 or Kretchsmer in U99 as they come racing to your aid? Now, the data for U-boat positions is readily available, but the task of compiling all that information is simply insurmountable for a single person. The solution—the one proposed by gap in the aforementioned thread—is for the community to participate in gathering the data. Anyone can go to uboat.net, read about a particular U-boat’s patrol, and enter its coordinates in a community grid. As they say, many hands make light work. By opening a project like this up to the entire community, it provides an outlet for those who want to lend a hand but who, like me, can’t tell a .dat file from a .gr2. I don’t mean to suggest that compiling U-boat positions is the only community project we can or should undertake, although I think it’s a great idea. The possibilities are really endless: any project that requires a bit of collaborative legwork could benefit from this approach. Things like scanning schematics and pictures for modelers, gathering historical BdU operational orders from actual radio messages issued to U-boats, researching Allied and U-boat OOBs for inclusion in historical scenarios are just a few of the possibilities that spring to mind. Moreover, as I’ve found while researching special operations, reading patrol logs can be a lot of fun, not to mention tremendously immersive. It strikes me that others might be interested in the same kinds of projects. Of course, this sort of thing would be entirely voluntary. People could participate as little or as much as they wanted. Whether you want to commit to a long-term project or just want to spend an hour on a lazy Sunday afternoon reading about U-boats, your work could benefit the Subsim community. Here are a few advantages of “community” projects:
This is a long-winded way of asking a few simple questions:
----------------------------------------------------------------------- Step-by-Step Instructions for U-boat Positions Project: 1. Access our google drive folder and download gap's generator a. Link2. Copy and paste information into gap's generator (do this offline) [INDENT]a. Sources: i. uboat.net: This is our primary source. Copy and paste daily U-boat coordinates by clicking on each day of the patrol, and then clicking on the blue icon on the map. iv. To find your commander's rank, simply click on his name and check the date of your patrol with the dates of his promotions. Be sure to check to see if he was promoted between patrols.c. Copy and paste U-boat's lat/long for each day of the patrol in the corresponding cell of the generator. Be sure to delete the comma between the latitude and longitude d. Select one of the drop-down options from the "current activity" tab. Most are self explanatory, but refer to this link for an in-depth description: e. After you have entered positions and current activity for every day, simply highlight the yellow (output) cells and copy them3. Paste the output from gap's generator into the google docs spreadsheet a. Find the appropriate month/year tab in the lower lefthand corner of the spreadsheet b. Find the correct type for your U-boat (VIIA, B, etc.) c. If your U-boat is not yet listed for that month, add three rows, each labeled with your U-boat's number (these correspond to the output data you have already copied) d. Highlight the first day of your U-boat's patrol e. Paste the output data into that cell by pressing ctrl + v4. For now, please keep a copy of the filled-in generator for each patrol so we can check each other's work and easily add variables later a. Please use the following file naming format (without quotes): e.g. "U-33,2". This is shorthand for "U-33, 2nd patrol."5. Final considerations a. If your U-boat's patrol spans multiple months, you will need to copy and paste information separately for each month, since the master spreadsheet is divided by month.At first glance, this probably seems very complicated. But it is incredibly intuitive. Play around with it for ten minutes, and I guarantee that most of your questions will be answered . Last edited by keysersoze; 04-06-13 at 02:06 PM. |
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