Dear Lene and Vincent,

thanks guys. I'll look into Timemanager. It seems like being able to do the 
trick.

I am working on points, not lines. But it seems like exactly what TimeManager 
handles best.

Would you or anyone happen to know if TimeManager can handle time down to 
sub-seconds? I am fully aware that standard dbf date-formates do not hand 
shorter periods of time than a second (but Python for instance via DataTime 
does).

The reason for my question is that we have some tracking points sequences 
recorded at 1/30'th of a second.

Cheers
Hans
________________________________
From: Lene Fischer
Sent: Monday, June 17, 2013 19:14
To: Hans Skov-Petersen; qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: SV: Tracking data in QGIS

Hi Hans,
Try to look at Anita Grasers blog 
http://anitagraser.com/2013/05/20/timemanager-in-qgis-2-0/ Tmiemanager in QGIS 
2.0

You also has the possibility to put data into at database. as Vincent suggest.
If you are new in QGIS - feel free to join our seminar in Nødebo at june 20.
http://qgis.dk/news/brugermoede2013.html

Regards
Lene Fischer
________________________________
Fra: qgis-user-boun...@lists.osgeo.org [qgis-user-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] på 
vegne af Hans Skov-Petersen [h...@life.ku.dk]
Sendt: 17. juni 2013 18:33
Til: qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org
Emne: [Qgis-user] Tracking data in QGIS

Hi all of you,

I am quite new to QGIS – I know how to run it but has no indebt knowledge about 
the internals of the system.

Anyway, I am looking for options enabling me to analyse/display/replay tracks 
of multiple individuals over time. So it’s not only for a single person – like 
the GPS tracking tool – it is several people I need to handle concurrently.

Any one?

Hans

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