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Editor's Choice Award Winner
Garmin's StreetPilot®
C550
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by
Dave Larner
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I
recently came back from spending
three weeks in Europe, loaded with a
suitcase full of the latest
technologies. A variety of
vendors were kind enough to provide
their latest wares for our real
world testing. The field included
Garmin's latest portable GPS, Palm's
new Treo™ 680 smartphone, digital
cameras from Casio, Olympus, and
Canon, a Bose noise canceling
headset, a variety of photo editing
software tools and a myriad of
connectors, adapters, chargers and
supporting gear.
From Zürich to Venice to Lake Como,
winding past the leaning Tower of
Pisa through Florence we rigorously
tested this gear to find the best
for the traveling speaking
professional and my recommendations
are outlined below:
Portable GPS - For those of
you that have attempted to navigate
the roads in a foreign country (or
here in the U.S. for that matter)
you’ll agree that getting lost is no
fun. Florence proved to be a worthy
testing ground for our Garmin GPS.
This beautiful city, sitting on the
water's edge seems to be the perfect
model for the latest video racing
games. Nowhere have I seen so many
small cars, battling it out with an
unlimited supply of motorcycles,
bicyclists and pedestrians all
converging with little to no
instruction on streets barely narrow
enough for your average pizza
carrier.
To compound this, it was extremely
difficult to read the Italian street
names. And once read, they
constantly changed as almost every
street leads to a turnabout, a
square, an alley, or a dead-end. Our
Garmin Portable GPS was a
lifesaver; it fearlessly took us to
every major attraction that we
wanted to visit.
The touch sensitive screen was
extremely easy to use and calculated
and recalculated routes with
blistering speed. We were even
able to reprogram our destinations
while in the room, and then select
them from a list when we were ready
to go. The only time that it gave us
difficulty was when navigating
through areas with road construction
as this information is not known to
the system. We ran into this same
situation in the states when
traveling around Boston's Big Dig
area. Although it had difficulty
pronouncing some of the Italian
street names, the unit worked like a
charm. Its voice prompts were
accurate and timely and its ability
to display the mileage to the
selected destination along with an
estimated E.T.A. kept us from
worrying about whether we had gone
too far. It was so helpful that we
learned to regret the couple of
times that we ignored its advice
because “we thought that we knew
better.” Without it, we would still
be in Italy eating pizza and Gelato.
For this trip we chose the Garmin
StreetPilot® C550. This
particular model can be plugged into
the cigarette lighter or operated on
its rechargeable battery. It has a
variety of other outstanding
features including an MP3 player and
a portable windshield mounting
system. Whether you bring your own
from home, or obtain one from the
car rental agency, a GPS unit is an
absolute must have!
When shopping for GPS, look for
an easy-to-read screen, a simple
menu system, fast response times and
quality support. Additional features
include real-time traffic reports,
automatic routing of multiple
destinations, and one of the newest
features - mobile access to movie
theater show times and other local
information. Although I prefer
the Garmin units, there are a
variety of suppliers including Tom
Tom, Magellan, Mio, and LG priced
from $200 to over $1000. Oh yes, and
one more thing. If you're traveling
to Europe, make sure that you have
the European maps loaded on your
system. These are generally an extra
cost option. I also highly recommend
local travel guides, which are
available for many of these units
that highlight additional
attractions, gas stations points of
interest and other relevant topics.
Manufacturer: Garmin
http://www.garmin.com
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