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The SurPad 4.2 is designed for assisting professionals to work efficiently for all types of land surveying and road engineering projects in the field. By utilizing the SurPad app on your Android smartphone or tablet, you can access a comprehensive range of professional-grade features for your GNSS receiver without the need for costly controllers.
The SurPad 4.2 is a powerful software for data collection. Its versatile design and powerful functions allow you to complete almost any surveying task quickly and easily. You can choose the display style you prefer, including list, grid, and customized style. SurPad 4.2 provides easy operation with graphic interaction including COGO calculation, QR code scanning, FTP transmission etc. SurPAD 4.2 has localizations in English, Ukrainian, Portuguese, Polish, Spanish, Turkish, Russian, Italian, Magyar, Swedish, Serbian, Greek, French, Bulgarian, Slovak, German, Finnish, Lithuanian, Czech, Norsk, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese.
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Quick connection
Can connect to GNSS by Bluetooth & WiFi. Can search and connect the device automatically, using wireless connections.
Better visualization
Supports online and offline layers with DXF, SHP, DWG and XML files. The CAD function allows you to draw graphics directly in field work.
Quick Calculations
It has a complete professional road design and stakeout feature, so you can calculate complex road stakeout data easily.
Better Perception
Important operations is accompanied by voice alerts: instrument connection, fixed GPS positioning solution and stakeout.
Essential viewing for fans. Bring tissues. And remember: The world can be deceived. But you won’t be. El Psy Kongroo.
If you watch all 23 episodes, you’ll never see Okabe’s final, triumphant “El Psy Kongroo” in the original the same way again. You’ll hear the echo of a man who spent thousands of years (relative to his perception) crawling through hell so that a single, different version of himself could open the door to heaven.
Why the “missing link” between Okabe’s failure and his final leap is the most painful—and rewarding—chapter in the series.
The only flaw? The pacing in the first four episodes is deliberately sluggish. But that’s the point. You’re supposed to feel Okabe’s stagnation. Push through. By Episode 5, the train has left the station—and it’s heading straight for a wall. Steins;Gate 0 is not a happy story. It’s not meant to be. It’s a story about learning to fail forward. The original Steins;Gate asks, “What would you sacrifice to save someone you love?” Steins;Gate 0 asks a harder question: “What would you sacrifice to save someone you’ve already lost—and failed?”
When Steins;Gate 0 was announced, many fans (myself included) were skeptical. We already knew the ending. We knew Okabe would eventually reach Steins;Gate . So why walk through the ashes of the Beta Attractor Field?
If Steins;Gate is a story about the relentless pursuit of a single, perfect world line, then Steins;Gate 0 is the story of what happens when that pursuit breaks you.
The answer lies not in the destination, but in every single agonizing episode along the way. For the uninitiated (though you really should watch the original first), Steins;Gate 0 follows the Okabe Rintarou who failed . After returning from saving Kurisu for the first time, he accidentally kills her himself. His scream of anguish is the last sound of the original series’ 23rd episode. 0 picks up in the aftermath.
Essential viewing for fans. Bring tissues. And remember: The world can be deceived. But you won’t be. El Psy Kongroo.
If you watch all 23 episodes, you’ll never see Okabe’s final, triumphant “El Psy Kongroo” in the original the same way again. You’ll hear the echo of a man who spent thousands of years (relative to his perception) crawling through hell so that a single, different version of himself could open the door to heaven.
Why the “missing link” between Okabe’s failure and his final leap is the most painful—and rewarding—chapter in the series.
The only flaw? The pacing in the first four episodes is deliberately sluggish. But that’s the point. You’re supposed to feel Okabe’s stagnation. Push through. By Episode 5, the train has left the station—and it’s heading straight for a wall. Steins;Gate 0 is not a happy story. It’s not meant to be. It’s a story about learning to fail forward. The original Steins;Gate asks, “What would you sacrifice to save someone you love?” Steins;Gate 0 asks a harder question: “What would you sacrifice to save someone you’ve already lost—and failed?”
When Steins;Gate 0 was announced, many fans (myself included) were skeptical. We already knew the ending. We knew Okabe would eventually reach Steins;Gate . So why walk through the ashes of the Beta Attractor Field?
If Steins;Gate is a story about the relentless pursuit of a single, perfect world line, then Steins;Gate 0 is the story of what happens when that pursuit breaks you.
The answer lies not in the destination, but in every single agonizing episode along the way. For the uninitiated (though you really should watch the original first), Steins;Gate 0 follows the Okabe Rintarou who failed . After returning from saving Kurisu for the first time, he accidentally kills her himself. His scream of anguish is the last sound of the original series’ 23rd episode. 0 picks up in the aftermath.