QGIS is licensed under the GPL (GNU General Public License). That deals with how the program itself can be copied and modified. It makes no restrictions on how the program is actually used. You can use it for commercial profit if you wish. Of course, I am not a lawyer.
Now, the basemaps you might use are another thing. Open Street Map has it's own Open Data Commons Open Database License. The data is free to use as long as you give proper attribution to OSM.
Other map services you might use (Google, Bing, ESRI), will all have their own licenses you would need to check into.
Just to add, if you can't install applications to your hard drive, give portableapps a look. No writi g to the registry etc.
https://portableapps.com/apps
Libre Office portable (and others at the first link) can be installed on a USB stick or hard drive and taken where ever.
https://portableapps.com/apps/office/libreoffice_portable
Sure thats a good approach We also use KOOPJS sometimes delivers vector tiles or Esri GEOSERVICES featureserver REST API from postgis
Also use nocodb for spreadsheet like editing of PostgreSql database and exposing graphql and REST API https://www.nocodb.com/
This also works with OGC GPKG which is Sqlite
I used this app. It uses bluetooth, so the phone basically pretends to be any other bluetooth GPS.
If you want to use Windows though you are probably better off getting a Garmin GLO so you aren't reliant on an android phone. It will also be easier to mount in a position that gets the best satellite reception.
Haven't done a deep study of it, but I've settled in on https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Roboto as a good mix of readability (including at small point sizes) and compactness.
here is a poster I made documenting my data, processes, and results. https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/embed_code/key/7b9iHHda4ktc5o
Hey there, i don't know what your goal is. But there is open data available. If you could use this it will save you alot off time. There are more sources in my country. take a look at "https://www.openstreetmap.org" you can download data from this website. You can even download OSM data from within QGIS.
Openrouteservices or ORS tool maybe the thing you will need. It has thing for making isochrones from openstreetmap data. There is HERE api too for making similar service area or network analysis.
https://openrouteservice.org/
https://developer.here.com/
"The SQLIte format used in OsmAnd is based on the "BigPlanet" SQLite as supported by MOBAC. In OsmAnd we add a number of tables extending the format: "
https://osmand.net/help-online/technical-articles#OsmAnd_SQLite_Spec
You could try rasterbator if you want to do it for cheap. It basically takes your image and processes it so you can print it off as individual A4 sheets of paper.
How many images do you have in total? How big is your image folder?
But having a webserver is not that complicated honestly. If you have python installed, you can use python -m http.server <PORT>
, but if you don't or don't really know how to use the command line, you can have a look at fenix
But I feel we don't have the whole picture here. What are you trying to achieve in a more general way?