Archive for GPS

Nokia slips out 5 megapixel 6260 slide with AGPS, a first for S40 devices

Peeped in spy pics on these Interwebs since June, Nokia just went official with the 6260 slide. Unfortunately, “slide” in this case reveals a numeric keypad not a QWERTY. Otherwise, it’s pretty much an iterative step beyond the 6220 classic. As such, we’re looking at a 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss lens, WiFi, and HSDPA/HSUPA data to quickly share photos and video on Nokia’s Ovi service with the promise of support for other photo and video sharing sites you might actually use. The 6260 slide also features Nokia Maps riding AGPS — a first for a mass market, Series 40 device. Ships in early 2009 for about €299 before taxes and carrier subsidies, naturally. Bigger pics whenever Nokia gets around to publishing them.

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Nextar delivers Q4-01 / Q4-02 4.3-inch navigators

We get the idea that the Q4-01 and Q4-02 are simply non-MSN Direct versions of the Q4-MD we’ve already seen, but we’ll humor you anyway. The newest duo in the Q4 lineup includes a 4.3-inch touchscreen, voice-guided directions, NAVTEQ maps, an SD card slot, multimedia player and a rechargeable Li-ion to boot. The Q4-01 stops at just 50 states, while the Q4-02 adds in maps of Canada and Puerto Rico and includes six million points of interest. Both of these should be available right now in a variety of off-the-wall retailers, with the former listed at $299 and the latter $399. Oh, but you should know the Q4-01 will go for $99.99 on Black Friday (read: this Friday) at Kohl’s and Kmart. Time to knock elbows, people. The full release is after the break.

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dmedia G400 with WiMAX: MID or PND?

Filed under: GPS, Handhelds

Apparently the dmedia G400 MID was announced at the WiMAX Expo in Taipei back in June, but this is the first we’ve seen of it, and solid information is still a little hard to come by. The device will boast a 800 x 400 touchscreen, WiMAX, HSDPA / WCDMA, and GPS radios, a microSD slot, and will come in both 3.8-inch and 4.3-inch configurations. From what we could glean, the system with run atop a SiRFprima CPU, though we haven’t seen a lot (say, any) of MIDs using those chips. So, is this actually just a glorified PND? It’s hard to say, but we hear the units will hit retail sometime in the beginning of 2009, though we don’t know how much they’ll cost or where they’ll be available.

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ZTE - Basic Flip Phone with MP3 Player

ZTE - Basic Flip Phone with MP3 Player

This ZTE C79 headset has individual ample tool divergence in the direction of it — the expenditure. At $159, it option beseech to a user intested up-to-date a primary telephone, on the contrary who even wants a rare steady attributes. Here’s what we idea back end engaging it in the vicinity of a probation trot: there are clumsy unprincipled settings alternatively menus, creation from the contacts to the telephone chronicle were docile to jackpot plus conceive; the SMS was further average added had gross of the accepted formats (abc, ABC, T9 otherwise Term, etc); the camera was dependable, coupled with had numerous beautiful quality affection zoom, splendour, with crayon themes (black & pale added sepia). It packs sundry good-looking worthy speakers add-on comes added a GPS naked truth where modern document of an straits, your ring vesel live located (unfortunately you can’t manipulate it concerning directions). It extremely comes with the addition of a conversationalist telephone added is stereo bluetooth capable.

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SNIF Tags go commercial, promise to monitor your dog’s activity

Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

They’ve been keeping tabs on dogs around MIT for a few years now, but it looks like the activity-monitoring SNIF Tags are now finally making their public, and commercial, debut. Unlike some other devices that track your dog’s whereabouts with GPS, these make use of an accelerometer and some motion analysis software to determine exactly how active your dog is, all of which gets logged online via the included SNIF base station that connects to your router. Even more ambitiously, the tags also promise to let you and your dog engage in a bit of social networking, with the tags able to recognize when they’re close to another tag and record the encounter online when you get back home which, of course, depends on plenty of other dogs having the tags as well. Their $200 introductory price (or $300 after November 24th) won’t exactly help those chances, however, nor will the $10 a month fee for the premium membership (a year of service is included with the starter kit). If that’s not a deterrent for you though, you can get your order in right now by hitting up the ready link below.

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Telenav Shotgun connected GPS launched, reviewed

Filed under: GPS

It doesn’t seem like the connected GPS market is the best place to be at the moment — Dash just dropped hardware sales in a radical restructuring and Magellan’s halted development of the 5340 — but Telenav isn’t shying away, throwing its hat into the ring with the $300 Shotgun. A $12/month GPRS subscription gets you the usual slew of web-enabled features like real-time traffic and weather, live POI searches, gas pricing, and online trip planning, all wrapped in the usual Telenav PND UI and bolstered by 11 million preloaded POIs. Sounds like an interesting piece of kit, and it’s apparently well done — GPS Review took an early look at the 4.3-inch touchscreen PND and found it to be a “good start,” albeit with some minor annoyances that will hopefully be remedied in a future software update. Still, we’re just not all that convinced that another subscription fee is going to appeal to many in this economic climate — we’ll see if the Shotgun manages to fire. Peep tons more pics in the gallery.
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Holux quietly introduces 5-inch GPSmile 62 navigator

Filed under: GPS

What comes after the GPSmile 61? Why, the GPSmile 62, of course! The predictably titled successor to the big-bezeled unit we spotted at CES earlier this year has surfaced, though there’s no real indication that it’s coming stateside. Thus far, we’re seeing a 5-inch WQVGA display, an “edge-free” design, an SD card slot, integrated speakers and a removable rechargeable battery to boot. You’ll also find a built-in multimedia player as well as Bluetooth, and the TMC support should keep you posted on real-time traffic. You’re hopelessly riveted, aren’t you?

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Mobile Millennium project promises to track traffic with cellphones

Filed under: Cellphones, GPS, Transportation

UC Berkeley has been working on using cellphones to track traffic for some time now, first under the the decidedly less expansive Mobile Century project, and now under its new Mobile Millennium project, which has the backing of Nokia, NAVTEQ, and others. It actually first kicked off earlier this year, but it looks like it’s now about to take another big step forward, with the researchers set to open things up to the general public — or the general public in Northern California, at least. The idea here is to collect data from folks with GPS-equipped cellphones and combine it with existing traffic data, and then in turn make that information accessible via cellphone to let you plan out the speediest route. According to the researchers, the software will work on both Nokia and non-Nokia phones, but it seems that they’ve only tested it on the E71 and N95 so far (you can also view real-time traffic data on your computer). More details will apparently be announced when this new stage of the project officially gets underway on November 10th, but those interested in taking part can already register by hitting up the read link below.
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Magellan suspends development on Maestro Elite 5340 connected GPS

Filed under: GPS, Wireless

First comes the fallout at Dash, and now this. Apparently GPS manufacturers are finally caving to the realization that the vast majority doesn’t want yet another monthly fee tacked on in the form of a connected GPS — particularly when so many of the non-connected navigators work so well. TWICE has it that Magellan has “suspended development” on its Maestro Elite 5340 with Google Local search, noting that even though it “believes there is great promise in connected navigation, in the near term, consumers have shown an unwillingness to pay a steep price for PNDs, especially with the recent economic downturns.” If you’ll recall, we actually toyed with this very unit back at CES, and sadly, it seems those hands-on shots are as close as any citizen outside of the company will ever get to it.
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Samsung’s T*Omnia: all that and double the i900 Omnia’s resolution

Filed under: Cellphones

Like the i900 Omnia, eh? We sure did. Well here’s its prettier, smarter cousin tagged the T*Omnia. For the most part, it’s the same quad-band, WinMo 6.1 candybar with 7.2Mbps HSDPA data, WiFi, GPS, 5 megapixel cam, and nifty TouchWiz UI we’ve seen for months. But this hometown Korean version bumps the display to a WVGA, 800 x 480 pixels (up from 400 x 240) while slapping in a DMB digital television tuner to ensure its non-Stateside status for eternity… at least with this specific configuration. Perhaps Verizon would be so kind as to make use of that display?

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