Archive for November, 2009

SanDisk SDCFX4-016G-901 Best Prices, Sales, Reviews, Compare

Sunday, November 29th, 2009
SanDisk SDCFX4-016G-901

Product: SanDisk SDCFX4-016G-901

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I’m using this card in a Nikon D3 for about half a year now. I take about 1000 photos each week so my cards get a lot of use. As a professional I can’t afford to loose anything due to card problems, so reliability is a big concern.

This card is one of the fastest cards available at all. According to Rob Galbraith it is the fastest 16 gb card available at the moment (July-2009). I can confirm that using it in my D3. It is noticeable faster than any other card I have and my timings match the numbers he has on his home page.

I have had absolutely zero problem with this card, I have never lost a single photo because of errors or things like that. I really can’t think of anything negative about it. Even the price is reasonable.

To make full use of the speed your camera should support UDMA and obviously the same is true for the card reader. But there no disadvantage if you put this card in an older camera or standard card reader. It will work just as fine and reliable.

I can highly recommend this card to anyone who takes lots of photos but also needs a 100% reliable card.

When you shop for this card make sure it has the UDMA and 45 MB/s label. There was an earlier version of this card (early 2008) which was slower. The newer faster ones can easily be identified by the 45 MB/s print.

This is my first 16GB card. Previously I have stuck with cards no larger than 8GB, mainly because they are easier on the wallet (though the argument can be made that the 16GB cards are cheaper per GB) and because I am uncomfortable with such a large number of photos being housed on one card. Even with the 5D Mark II RAW files, we’re talking 500-600 photos on a card, and with a single failure all of those photos could be gone. I don’t mind carrying around a few more cards if I can minimize the lost data if this ever happens to me.

But between a few Extreme III 8GB’s, some Ultra II 8GB’s, a couple of Lexar Pro 300x 8GB’s, and a handful of Extreme III and Ultra II’s between 256MB and 2GB, I have not had a single failure on any card yet, knock on wood. And I was about to embark on a photo-heavy trip with the 5D Mark II, so I ordered the 16GB before my flight, to add to my existing stash.

This is a seriously fast card. As has been mentioned, according to the testing done by Rob Galbraith this is the fastest 16GB CF card out there, tied with the Lexar Pro 16GB in RAW transfer speed, and 1MB/sec faster than the Lexar in JPEG transfer speed. It tests slightly faster than my pair of Lexar Pro 300x 8GB cards in RAW transfer, but in real-world terms there is no noticeable difference.

If you’re upgrading from Extreme III’s, you’ll notice the difference: it’s on the order of a 25% speed increase. Upgrading from the Ultra II’s? That’s somewhere around a 350% speed increase over the 8GB Ultra II!!

If you can afford it, get it. You won’t be disappointed.

this item really good and deserves it’s price

if you have canon eos5d mark II or nikon d3x or new d-slr video functioned items this is a must

Garmin 010-00782-00 Black Friday Prices!

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Garmin 010-00782-00

Product: Garmin 010-00782-00

List Price: $449.99
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First let me give the bad. Don’t ever try to contact Garmin via phone. I waited 45 minutes just to get a live body. Then once I talked to someone he wanted to transfer me to someone else where I would have to wait another 30 minutes. I finally just hung up and sent them an email. The other bad is that Garmin has too many models and too many differences. Some of the nice features on the $200 model are not available on the $450 model. A perfect example is that this 1370t doesn’t include route planning, which is ridiculous. Garmin also seems to change their mount every time they bring out a new line. How about just keeping the powered mounts that seem to work so well? I was limited to the 1370t because it was one of the few that had both U.S. and Europe maps.

Now for the good. I had previously been using a Garmin 330 but it had old maps and was huge by today’s standards. This 1370T is a nice size, clear screen, and fast calculations. It has some nice features like Ecoroute, Cityxplorer, pedestrian mode, bluetooth, etc. The reason I was calling Garmin was because one of their cityxplorer maps was only downloading to 50%. Hopefully they get that figured out before I have to travel. I’m happy with the UI and everything else worked out well.

Buyers should be aware that the “lifetime subscription to Navtraffic” is actually an FM (as in FM radio) ad based service that pops ads onto your screen based on your location. You have to touch the screen to get rid of the ad. To turn the ads off – get this – you have to turn traffic off (page 37 in the owners manual).

Another thing…This very webpage advertising the Nuvi 1370t shows the pretty picture of the arrow showing the lane change onto Exit 2V onto 14th St, is actually called “Junction Assist” and is not available on the 1370T. It’s only available on the 1390 and 1490 (see page 17 and pg IV in the owners manual).

Otherwise, this unit does what they all do. Get you from point A to point B.

I’m disappointed with my purchase.

I bought this model to replace my old one for the same reason as many others – it comes with European maps pre-loaded which I wanted for an upcoming trip. So far I have only used it once, and the experience was full of flaws.

First, it wouldn’t charge when I connected it to my computer through the USB cable. Then while driving, the volume would drop to nothing out of nowhere. Another time while following the road, the screen showed me veering off-road and into a field for a mile before re-joining the highway.

This is the first Garmin I’ve had that gives you the speed limit for whatever stretch of road you’re on, which would be really great if it were accurate. When it works, it changes the second you pass the speed limit sign, but this is rare. Often, the speed limit displayed is different than the actual speed limit and many times I found myself speeding because I was trusting what the Nuvi told me.

It didn’t help that some features shown on the Amazon page weren’t actually available on this model, (especially ones that really sold me on this model to start with) even though the product description says that they are.

I gave the 1370T two stars because it worked fine for half of my trip, but the return was a disaster. Until I use it more, I’ll hold off saying it’s a piece of junk, but I don’t really feel comfortable trusting it to get me around places I’m not familiar with, which is the whole point of these things.

Odds are, this will be my last Garmin.

Bosch 37618-01-RT Best Prices!

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Bosch 37618-01-RT Best Prices!. Bosch 37618-01-RT Best Prices!.

Product: Bosch 37618-01-RT

List Price: $553.00
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I wanted a drill that would have enough power to drill through wood joists in my attic and that would not accelerate out of juice too often. I have old-fashioned the drill for several weeks and gather it to be everything I had hoped it would. I like the size; it is bigger than the bustle of the mill drill I scrutinize at HQ and Lowes. The light built into the putrid is a nice touch; it helpsout in indecent light conditions. I felt comfortable with Bosch as I have had a corded drill of theirs for about fifteen years. I have also musty and appreciated their hammer drills.

I expected this drill to be as top-notch or better than our previous 18V Bosch Brute Tough Drill, this one being the Litheon powered drill. The power doesn’t seem as strong, and the battery life is shorter instead of longer, especially when compared to the Blue Core Battery we had for our last drill. Would have bought the same thing I had before now looking help, and that would have saved us money as well.

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Hewlett-Packard P3005 Reviews, Compare, Prices

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Hewlett-Packard P3005

Product: Hewlett-Packard P3005

List Price: $691.00
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I work at a hotel where we have 3 of these printers and ALL of them have the same problems. First, the paper frequently “jams” in that every 20-30 pages printed it stops printing because it detects a jam; when you open up the paper tray, however, you find a page that the printer has attempted to feed but failed – it’s not even really jammed in the traditional sense. The “jam” happens less often when the paper tray is full so even though you can put a whole ream of paper into it you have to fill it up constantly so it won’t “jam” as often. One other thing: when the pages feed out of the printer they do not collect together anything close to neatly. After a few pages, the pile quickly becomes a jumbled mess with some pages almost coming off the pile. Do not buy this overpriced piece of plastic.

I have had this printer for about a month. It was very easy to setup on our small school network, I assigned it a fixed IP address to make it easier to find and install on the 10 computers. I used the HP network installation utility to create an install program that each of the Windows XP and Windows 2000 pc’s could use to load/install and make the default print driver. Very straight forward. (I set it up to default to double sided printing to save paper).

I downloaded the Vista PCL6 driver directly from HP and used that driver on our 4 Vista pc’s.

I estimate we will be printing a couple 1000 sheets a month. I choose this printer for a several reasons:

- Past experience with HP higher end printers (my work uses them by the dozens).

- Ability to Duplex print (double-sided).

- Heavier duty than most of the ‘bundled’ printers that come with a new PC. This LaserJet can easily handle our printing load.

- Paper tray holds a full ream of paper (500 sheets)! We should not have half full reams laying around.

- Fairly fast printing. Although using the duplex mode takes about 2.5 times the time to make a single sided print. Estimate the first page in less than 10 seconds, then if single sided, a print every 2-3 seconds. In duplex mode, the page comes out about half way and then pauses for a couple seconds and it is pulled back into the printer and then is ejected out with the back side printed on. Takes about 6-7 seconds to print both sides of a page. (These are normal word processing documents without large graphics).

- Built in networking, the Jet-direct embedded print server is very easy to manage with a web interface. Also very easy to check on usage and toner level. Very good status and usage information, telling how many of which size paper and if single sided or double sided, error messages or paper jam logs etc. (So far no paper jambs or errors!).

- Had a $450 instant rebate which cut the cost in half, very good value for the money. Picked it up locally for the same price as Amazon had. Didn’t have to wait for shipping and it was a sales tax-exempt purchase.

- Amazon had one of the best prices for the genuine HP toner kit, so I bought the toner from Amazon. You do get what you pay for, so compare the P3005dn to other printers in the same price range. This was a better deal than the HP P2015x.

- Printer came with one of the HP Q7551A toner kits ($110 value). This toner should last 6500 pages (the fuller Q7551X cost almost twice as much and gives double the number of pages). Double sided printing counts as 2 pages.

This was a good purchase for my school. I will write another review after we have used it for several months, maybe after the first toner change so I can state the number of copies we got.

Before I bought this printer, I had a similar one (an HP2420) that began to mal-function after using it for about a year. I thought it was just a “bad egg among a bunch”, so I bought another one: this is a HP P3005. I bought this printer because it is a low printer that fits in my shelf where I station it. After using it a few months it began to make a similar noise and problems as the previous one. After resetting it a couple of times it is still working, but I would be cautious to buy another one of these models.

Boss BV9995B Prices, Reviews, Sales, Compare

Monday, November 23rd, 2009
Boss BV9995B

Product: Boss BV9995B

List Price: $574.00
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1. The positive

—————

* Excellent screen size and resolution

* Versatile (can play numerous video and audio formats, plenty of inpus: SD card, USB, DVD/CD, Bluetooth, auxilary)

* The USB input works flawlessly, recognizing the files fairly quickly

* The LCD has 3 different tilt levels for better viewing angles, and various brightness settings

* Looks and feels well-built / solid

* Auxilary input in the front (3.5″) allows for easy connecting of MP3 players / cell phones (particularly useful since the Bluetooth is worthless on this device, per below)

* Comes with a small remote

2. The negative

—————

(1) The Bluetooth: Drops out all the time, listening to Pandora or other streaming radio through the cell phone impossible. The sound quality with the included microphone is mediocre at best. Have not tried to pair the Bluetooth with a laptop or a device with a more powerful Bluetooth signal than a cell phone, but again, I don’t plan on using a laptop while driving. Hence, the Bluetooth is worthless in my opinion.

(2) For some reason, after few hours of continuous watching, the movies running off the USB start ’skipping’, which can get very obnoxious. Thankfully, this only happens occasionally, and it may have something to do with overheating of components while driving in a hot summer day, even though the device has a cooling fan in the back.

(3) In addition to the $25 for the wire harness, a $15 antenna harness is required ($40 at worstbuy; I was quoted $60+ elsewhere). The radio is not HD/digital and the reception quality is noticingly worse than my stock stereo.

(4) The SD card input is very slow, taking 1-2 minutes to “load up” the list of songs on a 4GB card. The recognition is much faster with a high quality SD card with smaller capacity (i.e. 2GB Sandisk ultra/extreme).

(3) The cooling fan can be loud, and the LCD brightness is not adequate for bright, sunny days. The movies are still watchable with the screen tilted down, but much is washed out.

(6) The remote must be directly pointed at the IR sensor to work, and the layout is not very user friendly / intuitive

SUMMARY

——-

Overall, it’s far from a perfect device, but comparing its price to some bigger names (which I’m guessing are no better in addressing the issues I mentioned earlier), and the amount of joy it provides on loooong cross-country drives, this system is well worth it…

I bought this product in April 2009. So far this set is working fine. It sounds really great and the resolution is very good. The touch screen works really well.I have found no fault so far and I hope that I don’t find any.

great product it works 100% the screen it`s great i guees that the only bad thing that its a little complicated on the touchscreen because you have to touch twice not all the times so it can work well other than that it`s more than i was expecting of it i really recomend it the quality of sound very good i hope that this review helps somebody to decide if your going to buy a car stereo.

Samsung NP-N140-JA04US Best Price, Reviews, Compare

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009
Samsung NP-N140-JA04US

Product: Samsung NP-N140-JA04US

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This Samsung netbook is surprisingly nice!

I scoured every review on all the netbooks before deciding to buy this one first. Having seen early generation netbooks, the question loomed in my mind – is it a piece of junk? This thing is less than $400.

The answer is – a resounding NO! This is a nice netbook, and for many people it could be their primary PC.

Build Quality/Looks: No problem here. It has very nice fit and finish. The Blue Sapphire model actually looks quite expensive. Next to both a $3000 Sony Vaio and a $2000 Dell notebook, when closed it compared favorably. The fake chrome bezel around the keyboard adds a nice touch.

Screen: Very nice for a small screen. Yes, it’s much smaller than notebook screens, but for basic web browsing and email it’s fine. Bright, sharp and clear – Samsung is one of the world’s leading LCD panel makers, so no surprise here.

Keyboard: decent, really doesn’t feel Lilliputian as I feared. You could easily type emails and short documents with it. Professional writers, bloggers or excel jockeys will be dissatisfied. The keys need a fair amount of force to engage – I found I missed the “o” key a few times until I realized I wasn’t typing hard enough.

Touchpad: the touchpad felt smallish, but the whole thing is small so I think that’s just a matter of getting used to it. The right and left click buttons felt flimsy, but they worked fine. What was really cool was the partial multi-touch controls which are similar to what Apple uses in its track pads. This is very useful, especially for scrolling on the web browser, which you do a lot with the small screen.

Connections: very nicely loaded – 3 USB ports, external video screen, etc. No complaints in this department.

OS/software: Windows 7 Starter runs very well on this machine, and is a nice step up from annoying Vista. I especially like the better control of popups through the “Action Center” and the “Gadgets” which are a copy of Apple Widgets. The task bar, another Apple innovation, also works nicely.

Battery life: astounding! This was one of the strong points about this netbook. I easily got 7 hours of life, even with heavy video viewing, browsing and downloading. This alone is one of the two biggest reasons to buy this little beauty.

What are the cons?

The biggest single thing I disliked about this machine was the slow Atom processor. I am more impatient than most and another person in my office thought it was fine. This is the biggest drawback – more so than the small keys and keyboard. Even opening basic windows functions like settings and email took noticeably longer than it does with a full-fledged Intel chip.

This netbook should instill fear in the hearts of HP and Dell executives everywhere. It is a very nicely equipped machine that will be a nice “satellite” computer for travelers that are tired of lugging around heavier machines. It will suit senior citizens nicely as a primary machine, and will be decent for the Facebook/twitter generation or “non-power-users.” Even power users will find the slow speed only mildly annoying and just may fall in love with it for the battery life and extreme portability.

Everything works as advertised, and I even like Windows 7 Starter. This replaces an older Asus running Linox. The keyboard ergonomics are good for a small computer, and battery life has been excellent.

The product is great but the Samsung Recovery Solution 4 does not work for complete DVD backup as the company claims! Having had 2 hard drives crash on me in the past 3 years, I think a DVD backup is essential. If it happens in the 1st year, you are covered by SAMSUNG, otherwise, buying the Windows 7 from Microsoft could be an expensive purchase!

Abraham

Phase Linear UV8020 Prices, Reviews, Sales, Compare

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Phase Linear UV8020

Product: Phase Linear UV8020

List Price: $399.99
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I was a little apprehensive to buy one of these because of the low price and the myriad of features that it performed. But I went ahead and bought one. I bought a 3 yr warranty from squaretrade just in case it broke. I was especially concerned with the motorized screen which slides down when you need to insert or remove a DVD,CD, or SD card. Once the package actually arrived the unit felt very nice and seemed to be built solidly. I installed this myself in my Lexus. It has 5 preamp RCA outputs which includes a subwoofer output. It also has 2 RCA video outs and 1 RCA video input for a backup camera. It also comes with a remote (feels a little cheap but works adequately). I was a little diappointed with the front AUX input as it is smaller than a standard headphone jack and you have to use a nonstandard cable (they provide 1 cable for audio only and 1 for video/audio). If your looking for Bluetoooth, Navigation, or Satellite ready, look elsewhwere.

Pros:
Lots of features. It also seems to have excellent laser quality as it plays many of my CD’s which are so scratched up they will not play in any other player I own. You can play music (not video) from an SD card. In fact if you have pictures on an SD card you can play them in a slideshow. DVD playback works as it should and it has an auto resume feature so even once you shut off the car it will return to the point in the movie you were at. The unit sounds good with no hum or high pitch whine linked to engine rpm like you experience with some units. The motorized screen works well and feels solid and strong. The radio receiver seems to pick up more stations than my factory radio did.

Cons:
I wish it had some visualizations while you were listening to music. For instance even a bouncing EQ or ANY animation. Instead while listening to CD’s it does have a graphic, but nothing more. It seems a shame to waste that beautiful 7″ screen. Several of the features can only be accessed via the remote. This could be a problem if you lose it or break it. Included instructions were lacking, however most people should be able to use it without any instructions needed. It only supports regular SD cards, so no 4GB or larger cards will work. It simply says SD card error if you try. The screen does seem to get washed out when the sunlight hits it directly. (however pretty much ALL LCD screens do this).
I bought this after looking at a few other models and now I wish I’d gotten something else. The install was easy and the unit looks nice. It also comes with 2 trim pieces so I didn’t need to buy a mounting kit for my Honda Odyssey.

My complaints:
- It does not take SDHC cards, so you’re limited to 2GB SD cards.
- The SD card file menu only shows you the first 8 letters or so of each file name. This makes it difficult to find the album or the song you want to listen to.
- The installation manual is terrible. It’s nothing but a wiring diagram. I guess they don’t expect anyone but professionals to install it.
- To get DVD’s to play, you need to wire the unit up to your parking brake. However, they don’t include any instructions on how to do this.
- The radio reception is noticeably worse than my Honda stock radio that I took out.

Magellan MA4370RGXNA Prices, Reviews, Sales, Compare

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Magellan MA4370RGXNA

Product: Magellan MA4370RGXNA

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Just got my refurb’d 4370 in a couple of days ago since we’re going to go on a couple of trips in the near future. I initially wanted to use my iphone 3G with Navigon but have found that the it only intermittently works – think the 3G is too slow and it kills the GPS process and is constantly showing no GPS signal though google maps picks up the GPS signal (blinking blue dot just fine) but the software seems to work fine on my brother’s 3GS. I already have a built in GPS unit on my 05′Accord Hybrid that is super easy to use but can’t take it with me when we fly. I love the navigon maps on the iphone and their lane assist/reality view but I wanted something much more reliable and here are my initial impressions:

Upon opening the box:
1) Unit looked brand spanking new
2) Only sign that it was a refurb unit was the white box as well as “rf” stamped at teh bottom of the unit in very small letters
3) All parts were in the box: USB cable, CD, quick start, traffic code coupon, slip case, car charger, and wall charger

Upon powering it on:
1) Boots up fairly fast
2) Was expecting it to take awhile to aqcuire a signal since I was inside (though I do have windows in my office) but it acquired a signal fairly quickly (~30 seconds)
3) I downloaded the Content Manager software and plugged in the unit – found that the maps were already up to date but there was a new OS update. Update was quick.
4) Was able to pair it with my iphone fairly quickly – though the mic sounded super soft when I tried calling myself to test
5) Copied over an avi video file to an SD card and it worked great – not sure how often I will use this feature since can’t watch and navigate at the same time. It won’t recognize any of my music files (m4a extensions). Don’t want to go through the trouble of converting it to MP3.
6) the visual crispness of the maps looked great on the screen
7) Did notice some lag inbetween some of the screens as others have noted

Upon driving around to test the unit:
1) The built in speaker is decent and loud enough
2) Tried the FM transmitter and it worked ok. Sound quality is ok – not great – but definitely understandable
3) Though the unit is labeled as TTS for speaking street names, I found that it ocassionally only spoke the names of the street. Seems like it doesn’t like announcing numbered streets (ie 20th ave, etc.). This was a bit of a disappointment since I was hoping it would like Navigon does on the iphone.
4) The 4370 didn’t seem to provide a lot of directions compared to Navigon or my accord’s nav system. Granted that my destination was fairly straight forward, it didn’t provide any guidance on slight curves/turns while my car’s GPS was providing guidance so I was a little disappointed. Some of the intersections I passed would have been confusing if I wasn’t already familar with the area that I was testing. The 4370 seemed to assume that if the route was on the same street, there was no need to provide verbal guidance even at a fork in the road (for those in SF area, 19th ave and Junipero Serra right coming from hwy 280).
5) I tried deviating from the recommended route and it recalcuated very quickly and provided an alternate
6) Traffic seemed to work fine though don’t expect it to be instantaneous when an accident just happens – will require some delay to get the accident reported.
7) Lane guidance seemed ok but the doesn’t seem as visually appealing as Navigon on the iphone.
8) Love the fact that the unit will auto shut-off if you are using the car charger and turn off the engine.
9) Wished the car mount would fold flat so you can store it better and not worry about breaking it.

Overall, seemed to be decent unit and for the price is a good deal. Just wished the 4370 was more chatty and provided more directions/instructions as well as speak street names more vs turn left/right…

——–
Thought I’d provide some additional comments after taking a 4 day trip using the Magellan….
Things that I liked:
1) The auto night/color adjustment. It auto dims and changes to the night high contrast colors based on time of day as well as if it knows that you’re on a route that take you through a tunnel.
2) Chiming before turns – subtle feature but it reinforces when you should turn
3) Maps are fairly up to date – worked perfectly even though my Accords nav maps had no idea how to get around in the small town of Copperopolis, CA.
4) Very quick recalculations of directions when needed
5) When it loses GPS signal it doesn’t stop in its track like some other units or like the Navigon software on the iphone. It assumes your maintaining the same speed in the same direction until it acquires the GPS signal again – (ie when you lose line of sight when you go through a long tunnel)
6) Battery life is decent – if you decide not to plug it in.
7) Address entry is easy – love the fact that to get started you can just enter in the zip code, then the street address versus having to type in a state then long city name. The address book is a useful feature as well since it allows you to pre-enter all of the destinations of your upcoming trip.

Things I didn’t like as much:
1) The unit froze up once on our 4 day trip. There was no indication/error except I realized the map and distance to the destination wasn’t changing (was on a long stretch of back country roads so everything looked the same on the map) Had to power cycle it. Luckily this thing boots up fast and continues onto your current destination. It hasn’t frozen up since but would have caused lots of trouble if there was an exit that was missed due to the freezing up.
2) Dual plug – USB power and 3MM traffic plug that you have to plug into the unit (though both are on the same cable) – would have been nice if they could have integrated it together so that all you have to fiddle with is a single plug.
3) Traffic – It comes with 3 free months – after that, it’s $39.99 per year – haven’t had the unit reroute that often due to traffic so not sure I’d renew this when my trial is over.

My wife has also taken it on a couple of other trips to Baltimore & Atlanta without any issues and she loves it compared to the nav in her 01′ TL.

After using it I’m upgrading my rating to 4 stars and with the price drop to $109 for the refurb unit, I’d highly recommend it and may pick up another one for a family member.
I was looking for a better GPS unit than the one I had(The Magellan Roadmate 1412). I liked the updated graphics and the bluetooth functionality. After recieving it, the basic features were easy to figure out without reading the instructions. I have to admit that I’m one of those people that normally have no problems figuering out most tech equipment. The bluetooth functionality was the only problem. I have a Samsung Omnia which was not listed on the compatibility list but another similar model was listed so I tried anyway. After fiddling with it for about an hour I finally got the units paired and was able to make and recieve calls but it was not stable and very unreliable. After 1 or 2 calls an exclamation point icon would appear on the screen indicating a bluetooth problem and the unit would no longer pair with the phone. I would have to do a hard restart and re-pair the phone and GPS unit. After about 3 days of this I gave up and went back to the in-ear bluetooth. Other than the bluetooth issue, I like the unit. Since it was just over $100 I don’t feel ripped-off about not having the bluetooth function. When the bluetooth did work, the sound quality wasn’t that great anyway. To conclude, I would recommend this to anyone wanting a GPS unit in the $100 range that does not need bluetooth functionality. If your phone is on the very short compatibility list, maybe it will work for you.
So far so good with this refurb. It came with all the parts but one and that was a tiny safety screw for the mount that I can pick up at the hardware. I was able to register the device with Magellan no problem.

The Magellan did boot up with a CE Operating System error first time but, was a message that said to reboot and report if it continues. So far it has not come back. (TomTom OS has never error-ed)

The SMS texting feature does not work (Paired with BlackBerry). Magellan has a disclaimer on the text feature. It only works on some cell phones.

Using the hands free calling does work. The sound quality on the receiving end “from the built in speaker” is not the greatest.

Using the factory warranty (well) I hope it never comes up. I did buy the SquareTrade warranty with this to be safe.

No trial period on the Traffic Service so I have not turned it on yet.

My TomTom was and is still great and after 2 years my stepson has it. I needed a bigger screen and read good things on Megellan while shopping.

Garmin 010-00455-00 Best Price, Review, Compare

Friday, November 20th, 2009
Garmin 010-00455-00

Product: Garmin 010-00455-00

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After trying other Garmin units, this is the one I kept. Simply wonderful. I bought it when it was more than triple its current price and thought it was good deal then. It’s a great deal now.

It has all the characteristics that I was looking for:

1) VERY compact — easily able to fit in a breast pocket
2) Text-to-Speech — announces proper street names, not just “turn left in 500 feet”; radically reduces how much you need to look at the screen to figure out the real instructions; wouldn’t own a GPS unit wihtout this
3) Bright Screen — readable in virtually every situation

AND

Faster location of the GPS satellites. This turns out to be quite important in day-to-day use. In the other systems, it wasn’t unusual that we could be driving for a couple minutes before it located the satellites and could give us directions. With this unit, the satellites are located almost as quickly as the unit fully starts up.

One comment on how we use this: We don’t mount it on the dash board or on the window (which is technically illegal here in California). Instead we just lay this on the center console in our van or car. The antenna system is plenty sensitive to work just like this and we’ve never lost the satellite signals except in tunnels.

We also like all the potential of the traveling features (clock, calculator, etc.), but this is the one to own even if you just use it for the basic GPS features.

Very impressed.

[July 2006 Update]
How Its Ease-of-Use Enhanced Our Vacation: We were recently on a vacation combined with a business conference. While I was at the conference, my family had the confidence to explore the city without ever getting lost. Even our kids were able to help enter addreses and find locations.

Factoring In Added Cost: Just a warning about upgrade costs. Although Garmin does a good job of releasing updates to their system software that either fixes bugs or adds enhancements, the cost to update the built-in maps is extra. And they issue updates about once a year.

And it took an electronic device. LOL.

OK, here is the deal. This product is as good as any GPS I have ever used or seen. It is small and easily carried with you wherever you go (something most of them can’t do at all). It can be used in any vehile (caveat, you do not get multiple mounts, but extra mounts can be purchased for $25), and even has pedestrian and bicycle modes. ABOVE ALL it is easy to use, thanks to good software and an excellent touch screen, although a getting started manual would have helped me enormously.

The thing is great at telling you what to do and where to go. There are no second guesses. It says take a right, it highlights the turn graphically and it even tells you the road or route you are turning onto verbally, something most GPS’s are missing. Instead of “turn right in .02 miles”, you get “turn on to Vista Drive in .02 miles”. It even has some landmarks that comfort you along the way.

On of the best features is something my wife experienced on a trip to NY. She is not familiar at all with the roads here on the east coast and was taking a rather long drive to NY to a hotel we had never stayed at. Along the way, she managed to mess up and miss one turn. For her, that could have been a major hassle. I mean, you know what it is like. I have spent as much as an hour getting back on track when I was lucky. Even more time was lost when I wasn’t lucky because of detours or road work. One detour in California took me over two hours to recover from on what was originally a 1/2 hour trip. Other GPSs do this too, but this one seems incredibly adept and efficient at it.

When she missed her turn, the system immediately recognized it and redirected her. She lost about five minutes for her goof and didn’t have to ask directions or even pause in her travels.

In NY, she used it repeatedly in pedestrian mode to find where she was going. And it worked like a charm even in the confines of all the buildings in NY.

OK, my complaints are why it doesn’t get a 5 star rating. Read them closely, because there are ways around a couple of them, but that said, I don’t think ANY GPS would get 5 stars from me.

1. There is no “getting started” manual, although it is referenced by Garmin in one of their manuals, it doesn’t exist in the package or on the website. All such a manual (which could be one page long) has to say is how to get it working the first time. I will tell you after this how to work around it, but I think it results in a number of these devices being returned in frustration.

2. It does sometimes get confused about the best route. Don’t get me wrong, it will get you there and will show you exactly where you are. But when I use it on roads I know, it often isn’t optimal. For example, it wanted me to take a road I knew had 10 traffic lights instead of an open freeway in one instance. Or it told me to drive a half a mile out of my way when the left turn onto the highway I wanted was right in front of me.

3. Detour mode is great if there really is a detour. But I accidentally hit this once and there does not appear to be a way to turn it off. I found this incredibly annoying on one trip because I knew it was the best route, but needed details at the end of the trip and the GPS was trying to send me every way but the right way because I accidentally clicked a button. :-(

4. It has an emulation mude allowing it to pre-navigate a trip for you. I thought this would be an INCREDIBLY useful feature. You could practice a complex route before you actually took the trip. But it works at real speed. So emulating a four hour trip would indeed take, well, four hours. Silly indeed. Great for sales demos, but useless for the customer. If someone knows a way around this, it would be a great thing to tell folks.

5. The battery is not customer replacable.

OK, so how do you work around 1? You charge the battery, you go outside to use it the first time under an open sky, and you give it at least five minutes to acquire the satellite positions. It won’t work on your couch in the living room unless you are very lucky. It needs at least 3-4 satellites to triangulate your position, and I couldn’t get more than one indoors. Outside, it picks up more than enough satellites to get the job done. Oh, and dont’ forget to open the antenna. :-)

How about working around 2? Live with it, it is a factor of the mapping software. It ain’t perfect, but it is great when you get lost. That one wrong turn is easily corrected. When you are in an unfamiliar area, it really doesn’t matter if you use the perfect route anyway in most cases, just that you got there safely. And add to that you always know where you are, and you have something worth every penny. It truly kills the stress factor of driving in an unfamiliar area.

Now 3 is a problem. Don’t use the detour feature unless you are absolutely sure you need to take an actual detour. It takes you literally that the route is detoured, and the only way I could find to work around it was to restart the entire trip over from your current location. Something annoying while driving on the highway if you don’t have another person in the car to reset it.

For 4, there is no workaround I have found. It makes this mode useless for only the shortest of trips.

For 5, again, you have no workaround. You will have to take it in for service if the battery wears out. IPODs have a similar issue though, so I am used to that. Battery life appears to be 4-6 hours. So when I use it around town or on short trips, I don’t even bother to use the cigarette ligher adapter.

Conclusion: Awesome unit. Wins every comparative review I have found. Works great. And gives you peace of mind for you and your family in your travels.
I was recently looking to purchase a GPS unit and I had resigned myself to spending approximately $800. The obvious choices presented to me were the Garmin Nuvi 350 and the TomTom 910. For use in the USA, both machines are essentially equally equipped, with large, bright color touch screens and pre-loaded maps. The TomTom also includes maps of Europe, but as I don’t intend to travel there anytime soon, this was not a compelling selling feature.

I spent a bit of time in the store using both devices side-by-side. I entered identical destinations and observed how many keystrokes it took to get the machines to recognize the address. The Garmin Nuvi, with a very refined user interface, took significantly fewer keystrokes in most cases. Since the Nuvi allows you to enter the state first, the machine can pinpoint your destination city much more quickly than the TomTom, which requires that you enter the city before the state. As such, you are presented with a (sometimes) very long list of matching cities, which you then must scroll through to find the correct one. Consider, for example, a city name like “Springfield.” Once you manage to key in enough characters that the machine can guess the name, it presents you with a list of Springfields, one for each state! There are a lot of Springfields in the US, so you end up wasting considerably time clicking past the ones you don’t want.

Now that the addresses were entered (and I was already starting to get annoyed with the TomTom’s inefficiency), the machines begin to calculate a driving route. The Garmin found a reasonable route from Paramus, NJ to Cambridge, MA in about 8 seconds, and it took another 5 or so to draw the map and announce the first move. The trip was estimated to require about 3 1/2 hours (reasonable, if not a bit low). On the other hand, the TomTom required more like 30 seconds to calculate the route, plus another 10 or so to draw the map. What’s worse, the TomTom told me it would take over 8 hours to reach the destination. Only on a pre-Thanksgiving Wednesday in snow, many years ago, has it ever taken that long!

I figured perhaps some other customer had chosen a route preference that led to this odd path. After searching hopelessly through several poorly labeled menus on the TomTom and failing to see a “shortest distance” or “quickest trip” option, I tried resetting the machine’s preferences. Unfortunately, the machine’s touch screen registered a finger-touch event right after the reset (I must have brushed the screen accidentally), and it locked in a foreign language I couldn’t read. (I guess the first question it asks after a reset is “what language do you want?”) There was no “back” button that I could find, and it kept asking additional questions in this foreign tongue. I needed a translator to continue! At that point, there was no sense in playing with the TomTom any further. The user interface was simply one frustration piled on another. Even if they were to update the menu choices to be more logical, the touch-sensitive feature is slightly misaligned, requiring you to press the bottom corner of a button you want in order to get the correct selection. Button presses made in the center of a button often resulted in the button above being chosen. I don’t appreciate electronics that waste my time.

The speed of the Garmin’s route calculation is more important that simply allowing you to set off quicker, though. If you miss a turn en route, the machine must recalculate your trip so it can correct your path. The Garmin recovers from missed turns quickly enough that it can usually find and announce the correcting route before the next turn. If a machine cannot recover this quickly, you’ll simply miss that turn, too, and the machine will set off recalculating another new route. You’ll end up in a vicious cycle of missed turns if the machine is off-line for too long. I have not used the TomTom in a car, but given that it was such a laggard in the store, I would want to experiment with it during a missed turn before investing such a large sum.

As for bright light visibility, the Garmin is more than adequate. I have a convertible, and even in bright sunlight with the top down, the Garmin is adequately legible. The built-in speaker, though small, is powerful and clear. Directions are easily audible over the wind and road noise, assuming I’ve got the stereo at a reasonably low level. The Text to Speech (TTS) feature allowing the unit to speak street names performs well enough to recognize the street without looking at the unit.

The windshield mount worked quite well despite the stiff suspension in my car, my aggressive driving habits, and the fact that it was in the direct sun and heat for several hours today. (The car corners at greater than 0.95g, and achieves about 1.00g in deceleration, which did not so much as shake the unit or the mount. Larger transient forces such as expansion joints also failed to upset the suction cup mount.) The machine snaps in and out of the charger / holder with complete ease.

Garmin’s unit is much thinner than the TomTom, and its battery is rated for up to 8 hours of use while unplugged from the car charger (a wall charger is also included). Becaues the unit is so small (think iPod size), it fits easily into a pocket for walking trips, hiking, and biking. It’s also very easy to place in a brief case or pocketbook, further protecting your investment when you park.

$800 is a lot of money to spend on a GPS device, but the Garmin has justified the expense with an exemplary machine. With plenty of map data, a very polished and efficient user interface, and simple setup and operation, they have managed to outshine the competition.

As a footnote, I had planned to purchase the Garmin from Best Buy or Circuit City until they told me there was a 15% restocking fee for a returned item. Given the unique nature of this device (you need to like using it IN YOUR CAR, not in the store), this could be quite a loss if you decide against the item. Amazon has no such penalty. However, if you choose the Garmin, I suspect you will never want to send it back! Hope this helps you choose.

UPDATE: After a 1300 mile road trip to Virginia, I am still extremely pleased with the Garmin Nuvi 350. Even gravel side roads off the Blue Ridge Parkway were accurately labeled and present in the map data! No matter where we were, a few taps on the screen brought up a list of nearby restaurants (marked with arrows so you can choose only ones that don’t require a U-turn!) or stores. Also, do not underestimate the utility of having a portable, battery-powered device while walking around unfamiliar cities and towns. It’s a huge help. In short, this device is a joy to use. Garmin also plan to release Macintosh compatible software in the next several months (according to press releases on their Web site) so that we Mac users will be able to keep our Nuvi’s accurate in the future.

Best Regards,
Daniel Wambold, MD
www.ascendiac.com

Thule 687XT Reviews, Compare, Prices

Friday, November 20th, 2009
Thule 687XT

Product: Thule 687XT

List Price: $599.95
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This is a great cargo box. It’s light, sturdy, has tons of room, is easy to attach, and looks great. The only down side for me has been the fact that it does not fit my vehicle (2009 Honda Pilot). Thule’s website says it fits, but the rear hatch door will not open fully with this box installed as far forward on the vehicle as possible. I’m just going to live with it because I need the space, but it should not be listed as a fit for my vehicle.
Purchased this for a recent trip. Unit held 5 duffel bags, soft tackle box and some other gear including life jackets. Attaches to the roof bars easily. Stayed tight the entire trip; left it on unloaded. Clamps close tightly on the roof bars from each side. Minimal wind noise and unoticed impact to gas mileage. Used it on a Ford Expediton.

I did find it hard to lock when filled. Required two people to hold the top down to ensure all locking points engaged; probably becuase of the amount of stuff loaded. Can be installed with two people and does not weight much though it is a bit awkward to get on top of the truck. This was not unexpected. Unit opens from either side but be careful to lock one side before opening the other, otherwise the hinges get out of position.

An improvement would be to add internal hook points for a cargo net or bungee cords. The straps provided for the unit are only useful for long items such as skis and I did not use them.

A bit pricey but seems well made.
This item installs in under 10 minutes. Perfectly user
friendly and very adjustable. Every possible function
well thought out and executed.