Archive for the ‘Car Gadgets’ Category

Navigation Systems Put to the Test: The Results

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Navleadphoto

On Wednesday, we laid out plans to take several navigation systems — the pricey factory systems in an Acura TSX, a BMW 3 Series and an Infiniti G37, plus a $180 handheld Garmin Nuvi 255W — and see how they dealt with a range of simple and challenging routes. We started easy, then threw in everything from pit stops and missed exits to recently constructed highways and brand-new housing developments.



The results were illuminating. By day’s end, each of the systems had stumbled at least once. But when we tallied the evaluation, BMW’s Harman-supplied system won the day.



We’ll explain.



Navinfinitisplit



Leg 1: Easy downtown route



Winners: G37, Garmin

The G37 and Garmin emerged strong. Both made quick work of the first leg, which took us from our Chicago offices to U.S. Cellular Field — downtown to the Dan Ryan Expressway, exiting near 35th Street, turning right to the stadium. The 3 Series and TSX struggled: The TSX’s navigation system couldn’t locate the stadium’s address (333 W. 35th St.), and the 3 Series needed its ZIP code. We procured the destination from a smart phone, thus satisfying the BMW, and found it in the TSX under the point-of-interest finder. But the Bimmer’s problems weren’t over. Stymied by the loops of the downtown parking garage, the BMW took us on a six-block parade of right turns before finally tracking down a highway on-ramp. Arriving southbound at 35th St., BMW’s female navigation voice instructed a left turn. The Sox played, in fact, on the right.

Navacuramap2



Leg 2: Suburbs, missed exits



Winner: 3 Series

From the ballpark to Elmhurst, Ill., the G37 and 3 Series found expedient routes that put us immediately back on the highway — the same routing Google Maps would have us take. The TSX and the Garmin, however, routed editors down 2.5 miles of surface streets before finally merging onto the highway. (That jaunt would cost four extra minutes, according to Google Maps.)



Upon staging a missed exit near our destination — Elmhurst Memorial Hospital — the TSX, Garmin and G37 routed us to the next exit down the highway. (Our intrepid editors in the BMW ended up taking the exit everyone else remembered to skip, so we can’t evaluate how it would have fared. Yarg.) All but the TSX used a four-lane avenue just north of the hospital to reach it; the TSX picked a stop-sign-ridden two-laner west of the hospital to arrive. It costs an extra minute, according to Google Maps.



More concerning: Upon inputting “Elmhurst Memorial Hospital” into the point-of-interest finder, the G37 routed us to the hospital’s business center, some three miles away. (We arrived, found Audis instead of ambulances, and backtracked.) The Acura gave us the option of both locations — specifying that one was a business center — while the BMW and Garmin defaulted to the actual hospital.



“If you don’t know the hospital’s address and are in need of medical care, this would be a very annoying detour,” editor Amanda Wegrzyn noted. That’s putting it lightly.


Navbmwmap3



Leg 3: Detours, New Roads



Winner: 3 Series

Our third leg took us south to New Lenox, Ill. The G37 chose a westbound highway that would eventually join our southbound route. It would’ve cost three extra minutes, Google Maps says. No matter; we ignored it. We had a pit stop to simulate, and it required sticking to the southbound route — the route the TSX, 3 Series and Garmin had automatically plotted. The pit stop landed us right off the interstate at a well-worn Arby’s, with no immediate entrance back onto the highway’s southbound lanes.



After a few moments’ recalculations, the G37, TSX and Garmin had us on a 3.5-mile loop to get to the next on-ramp south. The BMW, meanwhile, instructed a U-turn to head west, back under the freeway and away from Arby’s, and onto a second westbound highway. It joined up with our original southbound route, incurred minimal surface streets and got us to New Lenox with time to spare. Editor Joe Bruzek, who travels the area often, says the BMW took the route he’d choose.



The Garmin-toting TSX group arrived second, having both taken the 3.5-mile detour toward the next on-ramp south of Arby’s. The systems differed near the end: The Acura wanted editors to exit the highway some four miles early to take rural roads to New Lennox. It would have added about six minutes, Google Maps says. We stuck with the Garmin’s highway route, which had the TSX arriving 10 minutes after Team BMW.



Alas, the G37 had a mind of its own. Like the TSX, it directed us toward the next on-ramp south of Arby’s, followed by directions for the next highway interchange — but toward the northbound off-ramp, the opposite direction of New Lenox. It had editors driving a mile north, exiting an overpass and re-entering on the southbound side.



Naturally, the G37 was last to arrive.

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The Winner: BMW 3 Series



All four systems took recently completed sections of the I-355, and all four found a new subdivision in Plainfield, Ill., though the BMW’s showed a few more roads than the others. In the end, the 3 Series’ system put us on the most expedient routes, even lopping off some time at the end. After a rough start, it completed the evaluation with few of the G37’s wrong-headed instructions and none of the smaller routing issues the TSX and Garmin incurred. It’s not the cheapest or most feature-packed system, but for simply getting the job done, BMW’s system won the day.

Navigation Systems Put to the Test

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Navchallengecars1

One of the most popular options available for new cars is a navigation system. Often these add $1,000 to $3,000 to the sticker price and can even be wrapped into more expensive packages.



It’s certainly easier to swallow that slightly higher monthly payment if the navigation system you just paid for works the way you think it should. But after testing hundreds of cars over the years, we know they don’t all deliver. So we took three luxury cars with the expensive add-ons and a simple $180 Garmin aftermarket unit — the kind you stick to your windshield — to the test around the bustling Chicago metro area.



With three navigation-equipped cars on hand — a 2010 Acura TSX, a 2011 BMW 3 Series and a 2010 Infiniti G37 — we put their routing to the test. All three cars use different navigation suppliers, and all three systems vary in price and features.

  • The G37’s $1,850 navigation system requires upgrading, at minimum, to the G37 Journey — one rung up from the base model. It includes Zagat restaurant ratings, traffic and weather, Bluetooth streaming audio a larger hard drive for storing music, DVD capability and voice recognition. With upgraded graphics and technology for 2010, this system represents that latest and greatest Infiniti has to offer, spokesman Ray Daniels told us.
  • BMW’s $2,100 navigation system is available on any 3 Series. Besides a traffic display, it also adds the automaker’s iDrive system, now in its latest generation, with improved graphics, a host of shortcut buttons and the requisite additional configuration menus.
  • The TSX’s navigation system is part of a hefty $3,100 Technology Package that includes upgraded ELS audio, a six-CD changer, traffic and weather, a backup camera and nominal enhancements to the Bluetooth and climate control systems. Its grainy graphics reveal its age: The only DVD-based system in the test, the TSX’s navigation will be replaced by a faster hard-drive unit for 2011, spokesman Gary Robinson said.
Navgarmin

To establish a baseline, we brought along a Garmin Nuvi 255W. Purchased last April, it retails today for $180. We configured all systems, including the Garmin, to eliminate any routing preferences, meaning highways and toll roads were fair game.



Most systems allow for route choices — a quick route or a short route, for example. We always selected the quick route. More importantly, we also eliminated traffic-based routing. Traffic conditions, reported to each car through a streaming data feed, can change by the minute. A slight variance in traffic could result in a navigation system directing a car another way, skewing the results simply because it was last in the convoy.



The routing is what counts. With three teams of drivers, we set out to see how the systems handle a series of progressive route complications. After all, seldom does a road trip go without a missed turn or a bathroom detour.



Navchallenge1

Whether a system costs $200 or $2,000, wonky logic can still send you blocks — or miles — out of the way to get back on track after a detour. Old map databases can direct you the wrong way down a one-way street, or refuse to shortcut you down roads built a year or two ago. We’ve experienced both.



“You have maps that, even though they are coming from different companies, are being integrated and aggregated,” said Mark Boyadjis, an analyst who is on the automotive team at iSuppli, a California-based electronics consultancy. “All navigation systems have a proprietary routing system, or routing engine. ... It’s that sort of software that determines how a car gets from point A to point B. So there might be variations.”



Our evaluations took us from our downtown Chicago offices along the following routes:

  • A five-mile simple urban route from downtown to U.S. Cellular Field, home of the Chicago White Sox.
  • A 20-mile suburban route from U.S. Cellular Field to Elmhurst, Ill., including a simulated missed exit off Chicagoland’s I-294 toll way.
  • A 34-mile exurban route from Elmhurst to New Lenox, Ill., including a simulated bathroom break off I-294 with no clear entrance back to the highway and traveling along sections of I-355 that were completed at the end of 2007.
  • Finally, to see the currency of each system’s map display, we checked out one of the numerous new subdivisions in Plainfield, Ill.
By day’s end, each team had detailed impressions — on routing, address entry and more. A fair fight? Weigh in with any thoughts below, and stay tuned for tomorrow’s results.

Ford’s Wi-Fi-Enabled Assembly Line

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

11EdgeAssembly

Ford announced today that it is installing Wi-Fi access points at assembly lines for vehicles using the latest Sync systems. This allows the company to install the latest software to Sync-equipped vehicles on the line, without using hardware that would need physical maintenance.

Whenever the company updates Sync — which technically can be done throughout a model year’s life — the newest version will be zapped into the cars on the line. The first plant to use it is in Ontario, Canada, where the 2011 Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX SUVs are assembled. The Chicago plant that will build the new Ford Explorer is next on the list.

Related

Ford Sync Adds Smartphone App Control

Ford Reduces Distractions by Limiting Sync Features

Recall Alert: 796,000 Garmin Navigation Systems

Thursday, August 26th, 2010



Garmin International has issued a recall for about 796,000 GPS units in the United States, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The affected units are both aftermarket systems and factory-installed units placed in some Volvo, Volkswagen, Suzuki, Smart, Land Rover, Mazda, Nissan and Mercedes-Benz vehicles. One of the units is labeled Mopar as well, which is the replacement and accessory part maker for the Chrysler Group. A full list of the affected units is provided below.

A potential overheating issue triggered the recall. The batteries, in combination with a specific circuit board layout, can overheat, possibly causing a fire in the car. No reported failures have caused significant property damage or injuries yet, according to Garmin.

Garmin will notify owners of the affected systems, and technicians will repair the GPS units for free by replacing the battery and inserting a spacer on top of the battery. Owners can contact Garmin at 913-397-8200 or NHTSA's vehicle safety hot line at 888-327-4236.

  • GARMIN/AVIS NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/AVIS/BUDGET NUVI 780/9999
  • GARMIN/EUROPCAR NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/HERTZ NUVI 765/9999
  • GARMIN/HONDA NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/LANDROVER NUVI 750/9999
  • GARMIN/MAZDA NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/MERCEDES NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/MOPAR NUVI 250/9999
  • GARMIN/NISSAN NUVI 750/9999
  • GARMIN/NISSAN NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 200W/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 250W/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 260W/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 710/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 715/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 750/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 755/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 755T/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 765/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 765T/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 770/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 775/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 775T/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 780/9999
  • GARMIN/NUVI 785T/9999
  • GARMIN/SMART NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/SUZUKI NUVI 750/9999
  • GARMIN/SUZUKI NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/SUZUKI NUVI 765/9999
  • GARMIN/VOLKSWAGON NUVI 765/9999
  • GARMIN/VOLKSWAGON NUVI 765T/9999
  • GARMIN/VOLVO NUVI 760/9999
  • GARMIN/VOLVO NUVI 765/9999

Mobile TV Roundup: Which One is For You?

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

By Jim Nash and David Thomas

In a development cheered by optometrists and the parents of fussy children everywhere, TV is making its way into cars. There have been inroads before, but today there are more options than ever to get your fix of ESPN or your kids’ fix of “Phineas & Ferb.”

Figuring out which solution is best isn’t easy, though. Do you go with an expensive in-car option that is easy to use, like Sirius Backseat TV? Or do you try a mobile offering that you can take anywhere, like Hulu Plus?



Here's our take on four options that are ready for prime time (but maybe not your wallet). We looked at two in-car options — Flo TV and Sirius Backseat TV — and two mobile options — Slingbox Pro-HD and Hulu Plus. Depending on which one you choose, you can watch live TV with full DVR functionality or extensive archives of on-demand TV programming.



It’s no surprise that these products aren’t free. Hulu Plus, which offers on-demand programs, costs about $120 a year. Sirius Backseat TV, which carries only three cable channels — all aimed at kids — runs more than $500 in hardware costs before service fees kick in. Getting a Slingbox into your hands will cost at least $300 in hardware costs, not including the price of a smart phone.



The news is mixed when it comes to setting up these services. Sirius Backseat TV is available as an option in select Chrysler models, and starting the service takes only two clicks. Firing up Slingbox involves an old-fashioned evening of reading manuals, wiring, rewiring and inhaling entertainment-center dust.



They all have one thing in common: They all require a clear signal.



Flotvaction

Flo TV


Remember UHF TV? When that went the way of the dodo, Flo TV picked up that frequency spectrum to broadcast its mobile TV network. Its main benefit is that it looks like most of the TV you watch at home compared with the rest of our picks. Our editors traveled from Chicago to Indiana while watching Comedy Central and never experienced a low signal. Flo TV is currently offered in new Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep models.

What We Like:

  • Roughly 20 networks, including CNN, ABC Mobile and ESPN Mobile for the adults; Disney, Nickelodeon and MTV for the kids.
  • It uses the car’s built-in screens or Flo TV-branded portable units.
  • Portable unit with a built-in DVD player costs $199, much less than an iPad.
  • It works with some smart phones.
  • You can pause live TV.

What We Don’t:

  • Video quality is, well, broadcast quality. Folks accustomed to a digital or high-definition signal at home will not be happy with the bunny-ear quality — though it’s a very good bunny ear.
  • No iPhone or iPad support, but the company says iPhone support is coming.
  • Monthly fee is $14.99, but if you buy Flo TV as an option in a new Chrysler, you get a year of free service.
  • You must use a certified aftermarket installer to get Flo TV hard-wired into your current car.

Siriustv1

Sirius Backseat TV

Sirius, best known for its satellite radio services, offers a limited number of TV networks that can be sent to in-car display screens in select Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep models. You also can buy a system for other cars directly from Sirius.

What We Like:

  • The $7.99 monthly cost is low, but it must be tacked on to an existing Sirius radio subscription.
  • In the Chrysler Town & Country we tested recently, it is extremely easy — two finger presses of the LCD screen — to get the TV up and running.
  • For parents of young children, the three networks — Disney Channel, Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network — may be all the programming you’ll ever need.
  • You can watch seamlessly driving cross-country.

Siriuschannels

What We Don’t:

  • There’s no separate rate option apart from radio.
  • Just three channels are available.
  • It suffers the same reception issues when driving under structures — tunnels, parking garages — that satellite radio does.
  • Hardware is only a $520 option for most Chryslers, but a more expensive rear entertainment package must be equipped as well.
  • Hardware cost of $500 for other cars.



Hulugoodrec

Hulu Plus

Hulu is a popular online video site that runs full-length TV episodes as well as some movies. It has never been a good portable option because it uses Flash, a technology that won’t run on iPhones and iPads. Hulu Plus is an iPhone- and iPad-compatible application, but it is still in a beta phase. Even though we found many positives with the Hulu app, the 3G reception may be its undoing.

What We Like:

  • Everything is on-demand. You can start and stop shows whenever you please.
  • Voluminous content choices, including recent episodes from ABC, NBC and Fox — such as “Glee” and “The Office” — that you can watch usually the day after they air.
  • Video clarity when using a strong 3G signal or Wi-Fi approaches high-definition quality.
  • A slick menu interface lets you add shows to a queue to watch them later.
  • You can watch entire runs of many TV series, from cult favorites like “Lost,” “The X-Files” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” to classics like “The Dick Van Dyke Show.”
  • No hardware expenses if you own Apple portables already.


Hulurecbad2

What We Don’t:

  • Not only does Hulu Plus cost $9.99 a month, you still have to sit through commercials! Granted, it’s only a 15- to 30-second spot whereas you’d normally watch five or six spots during one commercial break of a TV broadcast, but this is still a nuisance for paying customers.
  • No CBS or DVD-profitable cable shows like “Mad Men,” “Eureka,” “Battlestar Galactica” or premium cable series, like HBO’s “True Blood.”
  • Reception is poor on AT&T’s 3G network in Chicago, and you can’t pause a program to build up the buffer like you can with Hulu’s website. Check out poor pixalated Jimmy Fallon above. A mobile Wi-Fi device may be a good investment to avoid this hang-up.

Slingbox1

Slingbox Pro-HD

Sling Media can shunt your satellite, cable and DVR feeds to a variety of smart phones as well as PCs and Macs. With a good signal and plenty of money, nothing can stop Slingbox customers from turning an SUV into a mobile living room.

What We Like:

  • Watching live sports and breaking news from our palms ... OK, pro wrestling on SyFy network, too.
  • Knowing that Sling is integrating its tech into Dish TV's line of DVRs.
  • The video quality was stellar when we sat in a signal-saturated location.
What We Don't Like:

  • The complexity of the setup. It took four hours to hook up the Slingbox and the Slingbox Link Turbo (which uses a building's electrical wiring to connect with your computer router). Most of this headache is expected to disappear if you buy Dish TV's "SlingLoaded" ViP 922 DVR.
  • The price. The Pro-HD costs $300 direct from the company. A Slingbox Link runs $80 to $150, and the app needed to watch TV on your iPhone costs $30. Upgrading to Dish's ViP 922 DVR costs $300 spread over 12 monthly installments.
  • Unless you buy Dish's $10-per-month multi-DVR service, viewers at home and on the road have to watch the same channel.
  • Video quality highly depends on signal quality. Every place you've ever had to say, "Can you hear me now?" is where the video stream will buck, stutter or just plain stop.

What Does This Button Do?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010
Jettabutton

We get into a lot of new cars here at Cars.com. For the most part, they all feature the same controls — volume knobs, hood releases and temperature settings are usually universal. But sometimes we get in a car and wonder, “What the heck does this do?”



That would be the case with the button above, found in the 2011 Volkswagen Jetta 2.5 SEL that we currently have at the office. Have any ideas? In-car karaoke? Bluetooth?

Actually, it’s the control button for the Jetta’s navigation system, which is standard on the SEL. You press the button, and a computerized voice will ask you to input instructions for your route. Why it looks like a microphone from Rock Band we don’t know.

2011|Volkswagen|Jetta

Testing iPhone 4 FaceTime With Chrysler’s In-Car Wi-Fi

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010
Autonet1

We can’t think of anything that would send chills down the spines of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and safety advocates everywhere more than video chatting while driving. While we do not endorse the behavior, two new technologies have made the seemingly sci-fi task possible. The new iPhone 4 has a video-to-video feature called FaceTime, however, both users need to not only have an iPhone 4 but also a Wi-Fi connection. How do you get a Wi-Fi connection into a car? Well, you bolt a Wi-Fi router to one side of the rear cargo area of a 2010 Chrysler Town & Country. That’s how. This is part of an optional Uconnect dealer-installed system designed by AutoNet that costs $499, plus another $29 monthly. I’ve already detailed how you can get similar capability from a wireless data card for your laptop or new mobile Wi-Fi hotspots sold by Sprint or Verizon. However, I liked how Uconnect was installed in the car and couldn’t be forgotten at the office, and it didn’t need to be recharged.



Loginscreen

The drawbacks, though, to using my iPhone with Uconnect was an annoying login screen that would launch on my iPhone’s Safari web browser after I selected the Wi-Fi router from my Settings menu. Typically, a secured router will just ask for a password inside the Settings menu, not take you to a web browser page.



Next, you need to click “log in” and wait while another screen finally announces your connection. Typically, this process took about 15 to 30 seconds each time I not only got in the car, but every time I unlocked the iPhone. That was the real aggravation with the router and iPhone combo. It did work better with a laptop, but you still would need to log in again every time the car started up.  



Screenshotoffacetime

FaceTime worked well once the little Wi-Fi radar icon lit up. I chatted with my wife, who was at home, from the parked minivan down the street. I did not test this while driving since I was by myself throughout the car loan and thought that it would be — unsurprisingly — too dangerous. The screenshot is of my family room as my wife has a firm “do-not-publish-my-photo-on-your-blog” rule.



There was a little delay in the video, which was about the same amount of time I’ve seen mentioned in online reviews of the new phone, and obviously far from the stunning screens seen in the TV commercials.



Webspeeds

I’d also worry about the Wi-Fi connection and signal strength from AutoNet. I did test that on my 23-mile commute home. Using a free app, I tested the download speed of the Wi-Fi at three different spots. Only one of the tests showed a connection strong enough for video and likely FaceTime. Oddly enough, I tested my standard 3G cellular download speed during the same drive home, and it was nearly twice as fast as the strongest AutoNet Wi-Fi speed, at 1938 kbps versus 908 kbps. However, that seems higher than what the company told us in 2009 when senior editor Joe Wiesenfelder first checked it out.



The larger question is do I even want to video chat while driving? Definitely not. The extra glance or two of eye contact you’d want to give the person on the other end would be enough to distract you from driving. The expense also seems too high to provide the service for passengers. Is video chat going to become as common as Bluetooth hands-free devices? Or is it too much for the road? Tell us what you think in the comment section below.

AT&T Navigator for iPhone: Review

Friday, July 23rd, 2010
At3

I've always wondered why turn-by-turn, voice-guided GPS wasn't on the first iPhone, but now I think I know. Having used AT&T's Navigator and many of its competitors, I can only conclude that a full-function consumer GPS is harder to pull off than a 20-year-old tattoo.



Each portable GPS app, service and device has its share of glaring omissions and malfunctions to go along with their inherent utility.



AT&T's new Navigator is a solid product with a couple of promising features, including one that lets you verbally tell the app your destination and one that lists gas stations by price. On the downside, the Navigator (made by TeleNav) is overly ambitious. It depends on a lot of little and big technological pieces to perform the way AT&T says it will. Not all of those pieces reliably do their part, making the Navigator experience a mixed bag.

Att4



Price

Most people would probably be happier with it if it were free, or at least cheaper. The Navigator costs $9.99 per month — though AT&T cut that by $3 for July — or $69.99 per year. These kinds of subscription plans, sometimes called software as a service, are increasingly common for mobile services, and the Navigator's price is comparable to its competitors'. One exception is Sprint's Navigation app (also made by TeleNav), which doesn't charge a separate fee. It's a standard feature of Sprint's mobile-phone data plan, which means consumers buying the Sprint data plan pay for Navigation whether they use it or not.



Data rates apply, of course. AT&T says 30 average routes equal 1 megabyte.



Accuracy

All things being equal, Navigator maps are more likely to be accurate than those used in other portable navigation devices because you never have to download map updates. The graphics are just images downloaded to the app on the fly from centralized computer servers — it's like a YouTube for maps. All subscribers automatically gain access to the most recent maps. Real-time map downloads also make it possible to get live traffic and, sometime soon, local weather reports.



Unburdened by stored maps — which, after all, are memory-hogging data and graphics files — the iPhone can hold more apps and content. Most GPS services store maps on the device itself. Since Navigator isn’t connecting to a server for information, map animation is smoother. Of course, with these systems you often pay more upfront and often need to download updates.



A chief downside of the Navigator, if you haven't already guessed, is that you get turn-by-turn directions only when you have access to AT&T's data network. Without that technological piece — the network — you'll be forced to find a real navigator until the Navigator returns.

Att2

Usability

The Navigator has a wonderfully simple display, but it can still be difficult to read at a glance. Also, the iPhone's beautiful optical-glass screen offers more annoying reflections than a Hollywood autobiography.



The Navigator has one supremely useful feature, though it's still a work in progress. When searching for an address, business or intersection, you can choose to speak the words rather than type them on a keyboard. It's a multistep process in which you actually call a version of AT&T's directory assistance.



I could program an address via speakerphone while stopped at a traffic light, but only because it was a long light and I'd practiced. AT&T's voice-recognition software is among the best in the business, but it was confused often by my requests. The real hitch in the procedure is that the address you ask for is sent to the app's Recent Places list, which is three layers deep into the app. From there, you have to make it your new destination, which requires more clicks.



The Navigator will sort nearby gas stations by pump price, subcategorized by grade, too. This is truly great. I bow in the direction of the person who made this feature happen. But getting to a list of diesel stations, for instance, is four clicks down from the map.



Att1

You should subscribe to the Navigator if you want one fewer gizmo in your life: a conventional GPS device. It does just about everything you'll ever need from GPS, including finding cheap gas. It'll work as you walk or bike, too.



Because there is so much competition out there, you may not want to invest in a yearlong subscription, but it's easy to set up a monthly account, and once you have that, you can cancel after a business trio and then restart it for a cross-country driving vacation, with plenty of room on your phone for music, or music apps.



Visit the Navigator’s FAQ to get more info, including a list of other compatible phones.

Subaru Latest to Offer In-Car Wi-Fi

Friday, July 16th, 2010
2011outback

We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: It doesn’t make sense to pay for most in-car Wi-Fi solutions from automakers.

 

Chrysler and GM offer similar systems to one announced today by Subaru. The Japanese automaker will offer a mobile internet system in its 2011 Outback for $499 plus a $35 activation fee. It will then cost another $29 per month. Subaru will pick up the first three months of the subscription fee for free.



We don’t recommend in-car solutions because major wireless carriers like Verizon and Sprint offer portable Wi-Fi hotspot devices. The Verizon MiFi 2200 costs $49.99 after discounts, but the monthly charges range from $40 to $60. Sprint offers a similar device, but unlike the Subaru and Verizon solutions, it uses the faster 4G wireless network. The Overdrive Mobile Hotspot costs $99 after rebates and features only one unlimited monthly plan at $60 a month.



The benefit to these mobile Wi-Fi devices is that you can take them with you outside the car.



Perhaps dealers should start renting out kiosks to mobile companies instead of offering in-car solutions. 

Ford Sync Now Understands 10,000 Commands

Thursday, July 15th, 2010
Ford is showing off the latest update to its Sync multimedia system that will debut in the upcoming 2011 Edge SUV.



The 10,000 commands Sync now understands — versus 100 in the first generation — is the showstopper, but after watching the somewhat lengthy video above, we’ve found a few things that we really think will improve the daily interaction with Sync after our years of firsthand testing of the current system.

  • You no longer need to specify “Phone” or “USB” before a command. This is the most annoying part of the current system. Sync now understands what you want when you say “Call Joe.” You don’t have to say “Phone” first.
  • You can use multiple words for the same action, like “Play song” or “Play track.”
  • You can control the climate controls via Sync with the MyFord Touch system.
  • Navigation now allows you to speak an exact address for guidance, but we’re not sure if you have to be parked for it to work.Ford has confirmed that you can read new addresses while driving.
While these updates seem to be a major step forward, MyFord Touch will be a higher-end version of the Sync system, requiring upgrades of certain models. To get MyFord Touch on the 2011 Edge, you have to opt for a more expensive Limited trim where it is standard or as part of a $1,000 option package on the SEL.