| Blog | # of Comments |
|---|---|
| Joystiq | 3 Comments |
| Engadget | 2 Comments |
| Engadget HD | 1 Comment |
| Engadget Mobile | 3 Comments |
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
Reception is terrible, lots of lost connections, does not maintain solid lock while on the move, and so on. It seems to be a function of hardware design/limitation and not software. Basically IMO the iPhone is lousy compared to other PDAs/Smartphones when it comes to built in GPS reception for turn by turn nav purposes. Taking a static fix for Google Maps etc seems to be fine. But wow the reception is overall weak and lock is easily broken. Seen this on multiple handsets.
I say this because a lot of people who think these apps so far (Sygic, Navigon) work "Great" with a few niggles have yet to actually use let's say Tomtom, iGo or Garmin Mobile XT on Windows Mobile handsets from the last year or two to see the difference in robustness - you can actually use it as a real turn by turn GPS without worrying about lock breaking easily.
Nav on the iPhone is a fragile proposition, IMO only fixable by using an actual solid GPS solution because the iPhone does not incorporate one good enough for "good enough" turn by turn nav to bring it up to a level of similar experience compared to what you get on Windows Mobile for standalone GPS. Hell even Telenav on Palm Pre and Windows Mobile rocks compared to the spotty experience on iPhone caused by the reception limitations of the built in GPS.
Therefore, spring for the car mount instead since Tomtom was wise enough to build a GPS into it (they dont do this for any other platform, which is a dead giveaway they know very well the iPhone GPS is not solid, in addition to trying to reach 2G customers as well of course), seems like that will give you a solid nav experience on iPhone.