I think the map upgrade is great....but they do need to add easily viewable altitude floors to the B, C and D rings. I think all those complaining about it are just going by an initial observation. The same old foreflight is still there, you just have to turn off the aeronautical map if you don't like it.
Not all. Some of us have actual use-case specifics in our posts.
The very eager poster who loves computer derived chart building has the usual "new tech excitement" about same. That's cool. I've been involved in software projects that brought something new to market that replaced a (supposedly) old-fashioned system.
The thing about it is, eventually the user realizes they lost functionality in the new system. Because software is almost always released before it's a TRUE replacement. Essentially what we see today is an excellent framework for a fully replaced version of a cartographic project. A project that was built over decades by folks equally as smart as today's software engineers.
The excited software engineer poo-poo'd my gberic statement PLUS an example (VFR reporting points not being in the data and not available in the finished product) as wrong because he didn't find those important. That's a very common mental mistake in software systems that are claiming they'll "eventually replace" something. Whether that something is a filing cabinet and a secretary, or a map. Doesn't really matter.
The MATURE version of the "dreamware" will be an interactive map that isn't far from the modern day paper chart. In fact, we will be able to watch over many year's time the entire chart legend being coded into "electronic charts". It's essentially a checklist for the coders working on the project in fact. The day the electronic version can show you at a single glance, everything that's in that legend -- and then add ONE more new feature, is the real day the paper chart is (maybe) dead.
But maybe not. Will every aircraft everywhere have a digital display? If not... Paper still is the backup system because it intrinsically can be transported anywhere and doesn't require a pocket computer to display it, nor batteries, nor power source of any sort other than sunlight.
So... Is the paper chart dead? Eventually. Is the Foreflight move to get a basic start on electronic replacement underway? Yup. Will they be able to remove the scanned paper chart button any time soon? Guess that depends on how fast they can code and whether every detail on a paper chart is available as a data point.
Is it nifty? Sure. Is it a replacement? Wasn't intended to be yet. Is it worth $50 more a year? Perhaps. That's a value judgement.
This article describes how a professional cartographer can create a stunning and useful map. There's art to it. A computer drawing things from a database will never be able to fully replicate that art form. It will only be able to mimic it. Because a computer has to be told a value of importance to each item, and a cartographer knows these things in their head. (Granted, a legal chart like our aviation charts do have a minimum standard for what MUST be displayed and what is optional and that'll make it easier to code into hard rules a computer must follow.)
Start with the chart legend and replicate everything in it. Then add a certain touch of art that may or may not be easy to capture in computer logic. That's the direction it'll head... But it "ain't there yet", and that's okay.
The question always is, how much do you like tech that shows great usefulness and promise, and at what point do you start paying for it in the timeline from "just started" to "replaced the old way".
The article:
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/...ography_of_the_united_states_of_america_.html
(It's a cool read even if you don't relate it to aviation charts. It really shows how the human touch can make something a computer can create, so much better. Teach the computer to do this, and you'll forever change the world...)