Brian Stirling
Diamond Member
- Feb 7, 2010
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I prefer to navigate knowing my relation to everything else.
I agree, seeing where you are relative to the larger area is very useful.
Brian
I prefer to navigate knowing my relation to everything else.
I prefer to navigate knowing my relation to everything else.
I'd rather you navigated by looking at the road and not trying to tap on some small circles on a smartphone screen.
I prefer to be able to zoom in/out to see the level of detail I want. When I'm far from an intersection it's useful to be zoomed out for the big picture, but as I get closer to the intersection I zoom in.
Brian
Navigation also doesn't work when you have persistent GPS lock problems that can't pinpoint you. In that case you need the top down map view so you can see and guess where you are in relation to surrounding features like cross streets, and then you need to know exactly what street to turn onto - a colored line doesn't give you that while a white dot with pop up text does.
I'm with Welsh, I don't really like the idea of other drivers trying to watch their phone for directions while driving. That's what voice navigation is for.
Do what suits you but you shouldn't really be dicking around with your smartphone as you head into a junction.
I suppose there are those the can't take their eyes of the phone while navigating, but that's not me. Often times when I'm approaching a town with the map zoomed out I can see how it wants to route me through the town and sometimes that's not the way I want to go. As I get closer I zoom in as needed but one doesn't have to do that at the last minute. When zoomed out you can pretty well judge how far till the next turn.
Going purely from turn-by-turn is all fine and good if you are certain you wish to follow the calculated route through a town and as I said, I often deviate from that. It's easier to know the options when zoomed out a bit...
Brian
Not just Google. My Garmin tried telling me the nearest Huckleberry's was 530 miles away, when I knew there was one in my city.
No database is perfect.
I seriously doubt that's the reason...It may be that Google is dumbing it down so that you have to use turn-by-turn with the idea that they have some legal exposure if someone gets into an accident while viewing the map. Forcing you to use turn-by-turn that can have voice prompts would largely absolve them of liability.
Brian
I seriously doubt that's the reason...
If so, then explain why turn by turn was delayed for 3-4 years on the iPhone when the Google Maps Android counterpart had it?
I guess Google didn't care about liability back then for iPhone users?
or does developing an app and publishing on the Apple app store automatically shield and absolve all developers from legal exposure?
You must own the worst nexus devices on the face of the earth.Yeah. Been saying this for a while now, but we all just gotta live with it. It also runs choppy as hell on my N10 although I think it's been improved. Instead of 10 fps its like 20 fps now.
didn't for me.Does doing so lock you into the old maps also?
It may be that Google is dumbing it down so that you have to use turn-by-turn with the idea that they have some legal exposure if someone gets into an accident while viewing the map. Forcing you to use turn-by-turn that can have voice prompts would largely absolve them of liability.
Brian
If I'm eating a donut from Dunkin Donuts while driving and I get into an accident, how is Dunkin Donuts responsible for it?And in earlier versions of the Android map app you weren't boxed into using turn-by-turn -- so what!
I don't know if they've been sued but it wouldn't surprise me.
At any rate I do not like the new Android version at all -- it sucks!
Brian
You tell me how fast it runs then? It's certainly not 60 fps smooth on either my Nexus 4 and Nexus 10 even with the map tiles pre-cached.You must own the worst nexus devices on the face of the earth.
You tell me how fast it runs then? It's certainly not 60 fps smooth on either my Nexus 4 and Nexus 10 even with the map tiles pre-cached.
On a separate note, my other observation about Google Maps is that the route options aren't very clear. If I don't know the area, I really don't know what to make of the 3 options except for the fact that there's times sorted on those. Maybe the 19 minute option is better than the 20 minute option but it involves 25 turns through local roads. If the 20 minute option is a matter of getting on the highway and getting off an an exit with minimal turns, I'd rather take the simpler one. I get a little confused about which one to choose. On iOS it's marked 1, 2, 3. It's still not the best, but at least I know option 1 is the best one typically, and option 2 and 3 are second choices. So is the first choice in Google Maps supposed to be the "best?" Or what?
... And the new Maps is crap and doesn't display the distance to destination anymore as you're driving.
Option 1 is the shortest time. Which is fine for short distance travel. But for long distance travel, shortest time is not always the best route. It's what drives me crazy when using Google Maps because it will often take me off the interstate to drive through all the small back roads and one lane roads to save like 5 minutes. But in the process you have to do about million stops and turns and drive through speed trap areas with constantly changing speed limit so you can't use cruise control. And no easy access food and gas areas. I love Google Maps for city driving, but I hate it for long distance driving. And the new Maps is crap and doesn't display the distance to destination anymore as you're driving.
Interesting. Yeah and after selecting one option then I get to see it on a map. I'd rather they just show me the routes on the map to begin with like iOS. If I don't know anything about the routes themselves, the best way to evaluate is likely visually.
Um, does your Google maps not show you all the routes and let you tap on the one that you want then? Because that's exactly how mine works. It gives you the suggested route in blue and the alternatives in grey, but you can tap on the alternatives to choose them.
1) Search destination
2) Click Route
3) Returns list of 3 routes in text only.
4) Select 1 of 3
5) Returns map view with selected route in blue, others in gray.
Yes, getting to the maps is nice, but I have to first make a decision regarding which route to take. I didn't realize this the first few times, and I was stumped at the text results and trying to imagine the map in my head. I just feel like selecting the routes should accompany a map, so the text only screen should not even be there.
1) Search destination
2) Click Route
3) Returns list of 3 routes in text only.
4) Select 1 of 3
5) Returns map view with selected route in blue, others in gray.
Yes, getting to the maps is nice, but I have to first make a decision regarding which route to take. I didn't realize this the first few times, and I was stumped at the text results and trying to imagine the map in my head. I just feel like selecting the routes should accompany a map, so the text only screen should not even be there.
When I do searches from Google Now:
Search the place, like Costco for instance. It shows a list of results, click Directions for the one you want, it then shows me a map with all the routes shown, and on the bottom I can swipe right to left to highlight each route and I'm one tap from starting navigation. It seems to be much faster than actually launching maps before searching.