Originally posted by: coxmaster
What happens when the GPS system fails in 2010? Google cant save it..
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: vi edit
Um yeah, I'll take the nice big touch screen of my Garmin over a cell phone for in car navigation any day, thank you.
I bet you won't carry your Garmin in your pocket any day
Plus what happens when you are in BFE no where and your cell coverage isn't available? Unless I'm in a tunnel i'm pretty much guaranteed that GPS is going to work.
GPS is GPS...Navigation on phones runs off of a GPS receiver, not cell reception.
Originally posted by: bignateyk
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: vi edit
Um yeah, I'll take the nice big touch screen of my Garmin over a cell phone for in car navigation any day, thank you.
I bet you won't carry your Garmin in your pocket any day
Plus what happens when you are in BFE no where and your cell coverage isn't available? Unless I'm in a tunnel i'm pretty much guaranteed that GPS is going to work.
GPS is GPS...Navigation on phones runs off of a GPS receiver, not cell reception.
Most phones have cell assisted GPS rather than true gps, which makes GPS not work unless you have a cell signal. This is true on the iphone, not sure about android phones.
Originally posted by: vi edit
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: vi edit
Um yeah, I'll take the nice big touch screen of my Garmin over a cell phone for in car navigation any day, thank you.
I bet you won't carry your Garmin in your pocket any day
Plus what happens when you are in BFE no where and your cell coverage isn't available? Unless I'm in a tunnel i'm pretty much guaranteed that GPS is going to work.
GPS is GPS...Navigation on phones runs off of a GPS receiver, not cell reception.
But if it relies on the data feed from google then it needs cell reception, no?
Originally posted by: Deeko
Originally posted by: bignateyk
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: vi edit
Um yeah, I'll take the nice big touch screen of my Garmin over a cell phone for in car navigation any day, thank you.
I bet you won't carry your Garmin in your pocket any day
Plus what happens when you are in BFE no where and your cell coverage isn't available? Unless I'm in a tunnel i'm pretty much guaranteed that GPS is going to work.
GPS is GPS...Navigation on phones runs off of a GPS receiver, not cell reception.
Most phones have cell assisted GPS rather than true gps, which makes GPS not work unless you have a cell signal. This is true on the iphone, not sure about android phones.
Most cell phones have a combination of real GPS and A-GPS. A-GPS is lower power and faster, whereas satellite GPS is more accurate. Today's phones will use a combination of both - A-GPS to get an estimate, real GPS to get the exact location.
I was under the impression this was the case with the iPhone as well. If not, wow, the iPhone really is garbage.
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
Originally posted by: SunnyD
Originally posted by: jonny13
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.
Ooops, missed that part. I stand corrected, Google will own this market soon.
But if you stray from your intended route, you're fucked. I don't see this as a replacement for a stand-alone GPS product, considering you basically need a constant connection to make it 100% functional. That connection means a cell phone subscription - so much for it being free.
Originally posted by: jonny13
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
Maps cache along your intended route, so even if your connection dies along the way the route will still show you what you need to see, and text-to-speech voice synthesis of street names still works, too.
Ooops, missed that part. I stand corrected, Google will own this market soon.
Originally posted by: Wonderful Pork
Originally posted by: Deeko
Originally posted by: bignateyk
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: vi edit
Um yeah, I'll take the nice big touch screen of my Garmin over a cell phone for in car navigation any day, thank you.
I bet you won't carry your Garmin in your pocket any day
Plus what happens when you are in BFE no where and your cell coverage isn't available? Unless I'm in a tunnel i'm pretty much guaranteed that GPS is going to work.
GPS is GPS...Navigation on phones runs off of a GPS receiver, not cell reception.
Most phones have cell assisted GPS rather than true gps, which makes GPS not work unless you have a cell signal. This is true on the iphone, not sure about android phones.
Most cell phones have a combination of real GPS and A-GPS. A-GPS is lower power and faster, whereas satellite GPS is more accurate. Today's phones will use a combination of both - A-GPS to get an estimate, real GPS to get the exact location.
I was under the impression this was the case with the iPhone as well. If not, wow, the iPhone really is garbage.
No, the iPhone has GPS and A-GPS.
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
I concur. I also don't want to use a tiny, gay ass phone screen if I want to see the display, find restaurants, etc.
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
I concur. I also don't want to use a tiny, gay ass phone screen if I want to see the display, find restaurants, etc.
I don't care who's top dog. Just give me a product that I can use.Originally posted by: lokiju
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: jonny13
I honestly don't see this threatening Garmin or Tom Tom, at least until it can be untethered from the web. I currently use Google Maps on a Blackberry, but once you get out of the large metro areas, it's worthless when your connections get weaker. That might not be an issue on the Coasts, but there are large areas of weak cell reception in the middle of the US and web based GPS apps make good paper weights there.
I concur. I also don't want to use a tiny, gay ass phone screen if I want to see the display, find restaurants, etc.
I think everyone's missing the reason it's such a threat.
Google is now their own seller of mapping data, just like Tom Tom and just like Navteq.
This is data that is being given away to consumers in the form of the Google Navigation app and has the potential to change the whole dynamic of who's the big dog on top when it comes to selling their mapping data to others to use as well.
