Queen Victoria Webcam now online

I’ve added the webcam for Cunard’s latest ship, Queen Victoria.

If you can’t see it on the main page, just click on the [Preferences] button, select “Queen Victoria” from the “Cunard” section, and press SAVE.

I don’t have her callsign at the moment. If anyone knows this, please let me know, because I can use this to get a location for the ship, give you tracking info, and take more meaningful photos.

Till then, please feel free to click away on the camera icon under QV so we can get some pictures of her.

Google Maps problem fixed

I’ve changed the way maps are displayed in ShipWatcher, to get around the recent problems that have been occurring with the Google Maps web site.

Rather than going to the Google Maps website, it now pops up a smaller window which shows the map.

If you’ve got any suggestions about how to make it better, please let me know.

Pacific Dawn Location

Pacific Dawn does not broadcast its position like most of the other ships, so it’s difficult to figure out where it is.

But P&O does publish its last and next ports.

I’ve built in some intelligence into the system so that it will look at other ships who have travelled the same route, and work out an estimated location for Pacific Dawn.

It’s only a rough guess, but I think it should be accurate to within about 100km.

Which means ShipWatcher should be able to take automatic photos of the Pacific Dawn webcam.

New Powerful Search Option

Shipwatcher now lets you search for ships that are close to either Sunrise, Sunset, Noon or Midnight.

It also lets you show the most popular, and least popular ships.

The info is based on the latest position report of the ship. Some ships don’t give position reports very frequently, so they won’t be included in the search.

This should make it easier for you to quickly pick bridgecams that contain interesting content.

It’s also more fun!

Enjoy.

Neil

Technical info:
The search will exclude any position reports more than 4 days old.

If a ship is moving easterly or westerly, and its last report is 4 days old, the sunrise / sunset queries could have a margin of error of between 1 and 2 hours.

Usually this is only a problem for “Sunrise” queries where the ship is sailing west, or “Sunset” where the ship is sailing east, as in these situations, the ship will still be in darkness.

Allow a margin of error of almost 25 minutes per day based on the age of the location report. So if a report is two days old, the sunrise / sunset times will be out by almost an hour.

Ships travelling North / South won’t experience such a large margin of error.

New “Preferences” button

There’s a new “Preferences” button on the ShipWatcher page.

I had to do this, because I am continually adding more ships, and wanted an easy way for you to be able to control each ship that you see.

The “Preferences” page shows you all available ships, and lets you tick the ones you want to see. ShipWatcher will remember your preferences for next time.