TeleNav has a monthly cost.

I used to have a wired GPS device that worked well with my Tungsten T3. I came 
with it's own software but used it with Mapopolis' maps (I don't they are 
support their maps anymore).

I enjoyed it until it stolen with my car.

When looking to get a new GPS, I considered the following:

1. I have 2 vehicles and the unit would periodically be swapped between the two.

2. I take the bus to work so my Treo would be with me mostly.

3. When we travel long distances, my Treo is often used to the alieviate 
boredom or to give the kids something to do instead of fussing.

4. I have spare 650 (no cellular or data service) that could be used 
perrmenantly in wife's SUV

5. Would the Treo's screen be large enough when mounted to the windshield of my 
SUV.

After considering all of these things, I decided against a Treo GPS solution.

I decide to get a standalone unit from Nextar for $188.88 for Amazon.

It includes:

- 3.5 inch Color screen
- Maps of 50 United States
- MP3 player
- SD slot
- Mount for windshield or dashboard
- Vehicle power adapter
- Power adapter for home
- Remote control
- Carrying case that holds unit and remote
- Builtin rechargable battery
- 3 hours of battery life

The map can 

- Announce with voice step by step instructions (does not say street names 
except freeways)
- toggle from 2D to 3D
- Shows speed mph and can alert you when going faster than posted speed
- has a clock and shows ETA for door to door
- has 1.5 points of interests
- allows you to create favorites (type in address. Use current location or use 
prior locations)
- Detour for number of miles and then return to same road
- Show each step or road in door to door route
- Avoid any road or roads in a route
- Automatically adjust to day or night colors to maximize viewing of maps
- Provides tracking while offroad

I am happy with it but wish it included maps of Canada too (since I am often 
over there).

I considered the GPS Treo Navigator 3 solution from Palm.com because it 
included most of the things above like the car mounting but also included the 
Canada maps. 

I just didn't want  my Treo tied up while on the road because I use it for so 
many other things.



Thanks,
I'll see you on the web!

Carl W. Brooks
http://www.Palmloyal.com

Palm Podcasts, Daily News, Software, Hardware, Mobile Email Services and More!
-----Original Message-----
From: Alli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, Aug 7, 2007 7:33 am
Subject: Re: [Treo] Treo and GPS
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [email protected]

                             

You can buy any combination you want. I've tried 4-5 different 
 softwares, and 4 different gps receivers (in various combinations). The 
 only exception is Garmin which will only work with their 
 software/hardware together.

 I've found that whether it's a cheap gps or an expensive one, initial 
 acquisition of satellites takes a minute or two. The software is the 
 important thing. I keep coming back to Telenav because it's the most up 
 to date as far as maps.

 Jim C wrote:
> Has anyone tried using a Treo 700p  with a GPS receiver?
> The link below is for a keychain Bluetooth  GPS receiver
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/39h9bl
> 
> THe thing that bothers me about this is it doesn't come with the
> software.  You have to buy it separate.  Are there other bluetooth GPS 
> units that work with Palm 700p and come with software?
       
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