On Thu, Oct 29, 2009 at 11:54 AM, Kevin T. Neely <ktneely@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > That really works? I've been rocking mobile navigation for a couple years > with Ovi Maps (formerly Nokia Maps), and more recently waze. The first is > excellent, the latter very promising. > > I understand that Ovi Maps is not quite ready for primetime on the N900. > Maybe one of the reasons they postponed the launch? > > K > The Wayfinder Map app that came on the N8x0 is excruciatingly painful to use for actual navigation. The map data (at least in my area of the USA) is extremely out of date, and the POI database is severely lacking. You can't load the whole country at once, only the western or eastern half, and if you're traveling across the dividing line it couldn't be any less user-friendly. You can't have more than one map active at a time, so even though you can add maps at will, navigating between any two of them is impossible. Trying to enter a destination is an exercise in futility. If you manually pan the map and place a "favorite" and use that for your destination the directions are pretty good and the voice prompts are excellent, but there are so many obstacles to getting to that point that the app is pretty much useless for anything but showing you where you currently are. Plus, the app as shipped is crippled to only show your current location - if you want navigation you have to pay as much as a whole standalone navigation device, but you don't get the stability or any of the other strengths of the standalone devices. All of the other "navigation" apps for the tablets are works in progress and none of them natively do routing. Navit claims to, but if it does they've certainly hidden that functionality well. RoadMap does rudimentary routing, but you have to create the route manually. If you can't do routing, then you can't do navigation... Neither Ovi nor waze is available for the tablets, and if Ovi is the phone version of the tablet Map app that it appears to be, I'm less than impressed. You do have to pay extra to get navigation and it more than likely uses the same map data. Waze does indeed seem very promising, but again they are duplicating much of what OpenStreetMap has been working on for years, and everybody would benefit much more if they would integrate their technology with OSM instead of striking out on their own. OSM already has a huge amount of map data, but the user interface is a PITA and they would greatly benefit from an app exactly like waze. I don't own a smartphone, but Android 2.0 may be what changes my mind on the matter. Even if I could afford an N900 I wouldn't risk it at this point. Maybe if they are still being produced and supported in 2 or 3 years I'll consider it. My mobile mapping experience thus far has been with PDA, Tablet and Laptop map/navigation software, and I have yet to find an application - even the expensive ones - for any of those that is in the same league as even the worst standalone GPSr. The usability of even my piece of junk TomTom is light years beyond anything I've tried that wasn't a dedicated unit. Mark _______________________________________________ maemo-users mailing list maemo-users@xxxxxxxxx https://lists.maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-users