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usually i use it lying down on the seat next to the driver's and, once it gets that lock, it's quite smooth and hardly ever looses it, even on a town like mine (lisbon, portugal) which has a lot, a LOT, of narrow streets.
it's not as good as my standalone unit, but that one has a sirf chip, so it's obviously better in those situations..
But, since GPS is really the only difference I'm going to see if I actually buy the iPhone 3G (currently have a first gen iPhone) knowing how well the GPS works would really be nice.
Tomorrow at WWDC Apple will likely announce their own video camera app or video iphone. Over the past two months, Apple has blocked our breakthrough video camera app, iVidCam, and our attempts to dialogue with them. We have become deeply disappointed by Apple's practice of ignoring developers instead of dialoguing and partnering with us as they led us to believe they would do. We feel misled, mistreated and overall saddened by Apple. As iPhone OS 3.0 and a possible new iPhone gets announced, we wonder what the real future of the iPhone and Apple's relationship with developers is.
We've posted on our website, www.gpapps.com, our communication with VP Phil Schiller (the keynote presenter for WWDC) and his team that describes our ordeal with Apple.
Please share this story with your readers.
yours,
David and Susan Lee
GP Apps
www.gpapps.com
The Nokia has the quality of a Tom Tom when navigating with Nokia Maps from Newark Airport to downtown Manhattan or travelling from Austria to Switzerland. Nokia Maps is a fully functioning app which gives you vocal maneuver direction, has a night and days view and saves you a lot money with the ability to download maps in the permanent store. It can store more than usa, austria an switzerland together with multi media stuff.
The iPhones 3G GPS signal receiption in comparison seems to be weak. It seems that not only builidings and trees but every cloud on the sky is affecting the receiption quality.
Google Maps is a routing tool but it is not usable as a navigation tool. It gives no vocal direction, you neither have view modes (night, day, direction symbols etc). And it needs a permanent cellular uplink for the ongoing actualisation of the map. If you don't have a cheap data rate it will cost you a fortune!
Recently Navigon has release it's MobileNavigator Europe for iPhone 3G. It has comparable functionality like a TomTom - but at almost the same price. BUT... in direct comparison with the TomTom it's all rubbish. The GPS permanently loses its receiption while the TomTom does'nt.
This seems to be the same with the new 3Gs, which is faster in acquiring position and has also a magnetic compass sensor in addition.
Facit: Better use a TomTom or a Nokia N95 for Navigation.