I've never tried google so I can't speak to it. But I have been using sprint nav since way back when you had to pay an extra $10 bucks a month for it and I must say it has worked flawlessly for me for many many years. I have been meaning to try google nav but since I have all my addresses in the sprint nav favorites I always forget to use google. The fact that I can edit addresses and poi's online from the sprint nav website is s great convenience, especially when my wife is lost and I have to find and add an address for her on the fly.
I've never tried google so I can't speak to it. But I have been using sprint nav since way back when you had to pay an extra $10 bucks a month for it and I must say it has worked flawlessly for me for many many years. I have been meaning to try google nav but since I have all my addresses in the sprint nav favorites I always forget to use google. The fact that I can edit addresses and poi's online from the sprint nav website is s great convenience, especially when my wife is lost and I have to find and add an address for her on the fly.
Now, what would be nice is if Google incorporated some sort of syncability with the hand held with regards to POIs and pre-planned addresses (like you pointed out).
With TeleNav, I am able to pre plan an entire trip, and sync on the fly. Makes trips easier to plan than on Google.
+1 to Google Navigation as well. So feature-rich and easy to use, plus voice actions make loading directions so quick. Here's a review I did that also has a video: Google Nav
What if you need to navigate to a particular hacienda in the Argentinian pampa? Or to a cathedral in Charleroi, Belgium? Or to the Taj Mahal in India? Does it understand all those tongues, twangs, and 'funny' (ha, ha) pronunciations? No, it doesn't! At all! It can't even begin to comprehend anything not sounding very much like standard white people's American English!
It doesn't even understand standard British English! The cradle of the language! Bring lunch if you want to navigate around Oxford with it! Good luck!
It's useless for anyone without a standard caucasian American accent. And that is about 6 billion people!
I bet even the bros from the hood – an undeniable pillar of American culture and society of course – can't get it to work!
...or flag waving god fearing redneck country hicks from rural Kentucky for that matter!
I used to think so too but then I learned how well Google Nav integrates with Google Maps and your GMail Contacts
Star a location in Maps and a couple seconds later it's sync'd
Enter GPS coordinates (from "whats here" in Maps) as a Contact address and a couple seconds later it's sync'd
I used to think so too but then I learned how well Google Nav integrates with Google Maps and your GMail Contacts
Star a location in Maps and a couple seconds later it's sync'd
Enter GPS coordinates (from "whats here" in Maps) as a Contact address and a couple seconds later it's sync'd
Not best if you're traveling internationally (international roaming data fees) or if you're frequently in areas with no coverage. Again, best is always subjective regardless of topic. Don't assume that everyone's in the same boat as you with identical needs/wants.
If the OP needs locally stored maps, look into Navigon, CoPilot, etc.
So far, Google Maps Nav has covered my needs. I took a 3,000+ mile road trip recently and used nothing but Google Maps. However, it's not a one-size-fits-all world.
If your traveling internationally with a CDMA phone there may not be a Data connection AT ALL
As for offline maps....
If you lose your data connection while using Google Maps Navigation (Beta):
Navigation and voice guidance will continue as long as you do not deviate from your prescribed route, but underlying map tiles may not load.
The navigation icon in the notification bar will be gray instead of blue.
If you deviate from your route, you will not receive a reroute until you re-establish a data connection.
Additional Information
Google Maps Navigation (Beta) works by communicating through your Android-powered device's mobile data connection to access routes, traffic, geographical and business information, etc.. If you're driving in an area with spotty or no data connectivity, you'll still be able to use Google Maps Navigation (Beta) through the use of pre-fetched map data. Pre-fetched map data for your route is passively downloaded and stored locally on your device, and Google Maps Navigation (Beta) will rely on this data when your device loses its data connection.
It has worked for awhile... (even before the last update)
I just tested it again and as long as you stay "on the route" NO data connection is required. It followed a 10 mile route with many turns with data turned completely off. When I stopped at a store along the route the phone said something like "Please Follow the Route"
It has worked for awhile... (even before the last update)
I just tested it again and as long as you stay "on the route" NO data connection is required. It followed a 10 mile route with many turns with data turned completely off. When I stopped at a store along the route the phone said something like "Please Follow the Route"
It was good at it b4 then, but it's been noticeably better for my wife and I since the update. We were coming back from an out-of-state trip yesterday and had absolutely no service. Had to reroute because of an accident and it didn't need a network connection to do it. It was like magic!
It was good at it b4 then, but it's been noticeably better for my wife and I since the update. We were coming back from an out-of-state trip yesterday and had absolutely no service. Had to reroute because of an accident and it didn't need a network connection to do it. It was like magic!
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