Yeah, T-Mobile has some issues. We just switched the office from AT&T to
T-Mobile, saved about $80K-$100K a year, but we get nothing but complaints
about the coverage. In that case I would stick with a standalone GPS too.


-Kyle

On Thu, Dec 10, 2015 at 12:48 PM, EGrider <gevan...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Kyle, you're right about my smart phone being able to locate lunch as long
> as I have a signal. It's just more convenient on a real GPS, and, as I've
> mentioned before, I have T-Mobile on a family plan. It's so easy to get out
> of signal range on T-Mobile that it's sad.
>
> The Beemer that I rented in Spain had a GPS was integrated with the bike's
> computer to the point that it popped up a message telling me when  I was
> getting low on gas. All I had to do was hit the gas icon and it would route
> me to the nearest  station. Try doing that on a smart phone while riding!
> It was pretty cool.
>
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