A GPS Unit For Everyone

June 26th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

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Average Customer Review: (2 customer reviews)

It is a fairly certain that the time has come: quite literally everyone and everything is listed somewhere on a map. GPS technology is making its way into the American lifestyle at a pace that even the most overzealous forecasters of this type of technology may never have dreamed of. Many people, you know are using a GPS unit for anything from locating their way from point A two point B to checking out what kind of restaurants are close by.

Now there’s an idea! Whatever happened to driving aimlessly around looking for a decent place to eat? How about an even older solution: getting out your car and asking a local citizen or police officer for suggestions? You are correct in your thinking, if you believe that GPS units are deeply infiltrating American life similar to cell phones did roughly 10 years ago.

The reasons why are numerous and different, as well as the forms; a GPS unit is not strictly a handheld GPS types of devices anymore. With the dawn of the 21st century, GPS technology is everywhere from cell phones, to cars, computers. Perhaps in five years or less the wallets we carry live micro GPS chips installed so that if they’re stolen the authorities will have the ability to track them for us and get them back quickly.

One particular model, the lowrance iWAY GPS 600C is a GPS system that simple to use offering precise NAVTEQ roadmapping passed through a 12 — parallel channel GPS+WAAS receiver with visual and audio navigation. You get a very detailed satellite imagery of numerous metropolitan cities which provides a birds eye view of your route while making accessible millions of points of interest (POI).

How Useful Is a GPS Unit?

According to the waves of consumers who are buying GPS units, GPS is the greatest thing to come around since the mp3 player. The most-often cited reason for adoring one’s GPS device is the capability that it has to get you from one place to another without getting lost and without trying to read a map or read the Mapquest directions that you printed out, and spilled coffee on when you took that sharp turn a while back.

Yes, when it comes to driving unfamiliar routes, there’s no doubt that a GPS unit is a very handy thing to have in the car with you. However, is it worth the price? Younger consumers, the device generation, could not more emphatically reply that it is absolutely worth the price. Older generations of consumers, and sometimes the parents of the aforementioned device generation who are riding shotgun in their children’s cars, often disagree.

Whether it’s for the cost (gps for car units costing $200-$400 and subscriptions for cell phone GPS costing more than $10 per month) or simply because they don’t find a GPS unit to be necessary, many older people find the GPS revolution as annoying as they found the cell phone revolution five years ago.

Though this is the official stance of many people, it shouldn’t be ignored that many of those older men and women who, five years ago, were complaining about all those youngsters having cell phones now have cell phones of their own. Will it be the same for GPS? Only time will tell.

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