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I bought myself one of the Garmin 360s for Christmas;) and I absoultely love it
I particular like the fact that its only 5 ozs smaller than my Palm E-2 love that I can stick in my shirt pocket rather than leave in the car with WAAAS capability ( do the Tom toms have this/) I can actually use it when on foot. The Europe maps are expensive but a friend tried an on-line demo (link was provide by Garmin) for a small village in Spain where his wife's family is from and found it very accurate mike |
i have the garmin c320 but i can't see very well because of how large it is. so now i bought an acura unfortunately it's not interface wise as good as the garmin
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Originally Posted by Platcomike
(Post 6962724)
I echo the excellent reviews of the TomTom 910.
... I found the device excellent for those traumatic "roundabouts" (traffic circles) that are used in the UK. Before even getting to the circle, Mr. Cleese advises what to do. "Enter the roundabout, second exit". The unit also shows you visually what to do, so the co-pilot can help by screeming directions at you. Great fun. IF you miss the exit, he waits patiently for you go "go around". I love my TomTom 910. |
On my PDA
I am using Inav on my IPAQ HX2495. It is ultra portable, and I still have the ability to use it for emails and web browsing at the hotel. Tried the laptop route but too bulky for the car, and not easy to view when checking the route. I can still preplan at home by enetring all my favorites, and adding a new destination on the fly is simple but should be done at a stop. I have tried Co Pilot and Tom Tom but prefer Inav.
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I was reading a PC Mag articles on GPS nav systems and it said in particular to handheld/mobile systems, that a GPS cannot tell direction unless it is going at least 10mph, thus making the handheld units (used for walking) not a good idea. Is this true?:confused:
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Here is a whole thread on the subject that was here previously. I usually don't preach about "doing a search" but it might have been beneficial in this case.
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showt...eferrerid=5290 |
Originally Posted by alect
(Post 7060437)
I was reading a PC Mag articles on GPS nav systems and it said in particular to handheld/mobile systems, that a GPS cannot tell direction unless it is going at least 10mph, thus making the handheld units (used for walking) not a good idea. Is this true?:confused:
EDIT: I guess you're reading this article. I will mention that the guidance I received in pedestrian mode was specific to a pedestrian - it directed me down the Atlantic City boardwalk, which I think it would not have done if I was in automobile mode (at least I hope not). |
Originally Posted by alect
(Post 7060437)
I was reading a PC Mag articles on GPS nav systems and it said in particular to handheld/mobile systems, that a GPS cannot tell direction unless it is going at least 10mph, thus making the handheld units (used for walking) not a good idea. Is this true?:confused:
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