zuben el genub
Extreme Android User
It does that just fine. However, if you move the phone, it moves. When you are trying to find a faint fuzzy, you need the chart to stay still. You touch the phone to zoom in, and you can lose your place. Sky Map is great if you are using an equatorial mount. You can find the RA + DEC and just set your mount/scope and go.
If you are using an Alt/az mount or a dobsonian scope you can't use coordinates. However, there is a push to app that I downloaded but haven't tried.
I wind up using more geometry with a Telrad, then the finder scope to zoom in. That's where you need to zoom in on the chart and have it stay perfectly still. For seeing what's where and what's available in the sky, especially if you get disoriented looking overhead, Sky Map is great. Since we are suburban with light pollution, some constellations are faint. Sky Map can locate, then I can switch to finder and chart.
If you are using an Alt/az mount or a dobsonian scope you can't use coordinates. However, there is a push to app that I downloaded but haven't tried.
I wind up using more geometry with a Telrad, then the finder scope to zoom in. That's where you need to zoom in on the chart and have it stay perfectly still. For seeing what's where and what's available in the sky, especially if you get disoriented looking overhead, Sky Map is great. Since we are suburban with light pollution, some constellations are faint. Sky Map can locate, then I can switch to finder and chart.
