Hi,
This is the thing that is making me concerned. I am using the Hollux
1200, and I have 10 satellites with 12-ft accuracy and I'm still about a
block or more off.
Can you do anything with latitude/longitude or settings in the range or
anything like that?
----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:brettsta21@xxxxxxxxx>Brett
To: <mailto:gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2009 7:53 PM
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: How well does mobile geo work?
Hi Amy,
Are you using the internal GPS on the device, or an external one.
External ones should give greater accuracy. Some of the internal ones are
quite good, but it will depend on the phone and at walking speeds they
often aren't as accurate. If your not sure of your results, press 0 to
check on the amount of satellites Mgeo is tracking and it will also give
you an estimated accuracy value.
Hope this helps,
Brett.
----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:amym2@xxxxxxx>Amy Murillo-Hicks
To: <mailto:gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 10:12 AM
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: How well does mobile geo work?
Hello,
I've just started with my trial version of Mobile Geo with the to mobile
dash, and have a couple of questions.
Are any of you using the dash, and are you able to use both the external
Bluetooth GPS and Bluetooth headset together?
More importantly, I live on a residential street with houses spaced a
decent distance apart. As I stand out in front of my house, the GPS has
me plotted at an address about a block and a half away from my actual
address. When using a route home, I was told, during a pedestrian route
to turn on a street a block my actual block, and at another time, during
a vehicle route, I was told to turn right across a busy intersecting
street rather than left on to the correct street. Both times the same
address was entered as the destination. Is there a way of adjusting
settings to fix this, or does this sound like a satellite or mapping
problem?
Thanks for any advice,
Amy
----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:renee@xxxxxxxx>Renee M Zelickson
To: <mailto:gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2009 4:41 PM
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: How well does mobile geo work?
I am hoping Sendero will come out with a seperate divice for gps. I'd
rather not use a cell phone with it, because I feel it would use to much
battery power and I would rather have my phone of r phone calls .
Renee
On May 25, 2009, at 6:29 PM, Brett wrote:
Hi,
In all cases, an external GPS receiver will do better than an internal
one, although some internal ones are pretty good. How well MGeo runs on
a smartphone or pocket PC will depend on the amount of ram and rom the
device has and the processor speed. I'm not sure what the specs of the
Ipaq were, so don't know if that was the issue. I also can't give a
personal comparison of MGeo compared to a Braille note, as I have never
tried GPS on a Braille note.
Cheers,
Brett.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Chuck Pettke"
<<mailto:cpettke169307@xxxxxxxxxxx>cpettke169307@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <<mailto:gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 8:19 AM
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: How well does mobile geo work?
I tried a trial version of Mobile Geo on my HP IPaq and found that I
was
less than impressed. My IPaq has a built-in GPS receiver and I have
heard
that if you pair the pocket PC (which is what the IPaq is) with an
external
receiver you get a better signal. I also found that the response to
commands
varied quite a bit. Sometimes it was very quick and other times Mobile
Geo
was slow to respond. I do use the Sendero's BrailleNote GPS and like it
much
more than I did Mobile Geo. Although it is not as portable as carrying
around a smart phone or pocket PC. If you have access to both platforms
(a
BrailleNote and a Windows Mobile device) and don't mind carrying around
the
BrailleNote, I'd choose Sendero GPS for the BrailleNote. I also suspect
that
Mobile Geo's responsiveness is highly platform dependent. I believe
most of
my issues were because of the IPaq and not Mobile Geo.
-----Original Message-----
From:
<mailto:gps-talkusers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:gps-talkusers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Eric Brinkman
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2009 1:36 PM
To: <mailto:gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gps-talkusers] How well does mobile geo work?
I'm thinking about getting either mobile geo or brailleNote GPS to
replace
my SenseNav, since GW have dropped the ball in regards to updates. I'm
leaning towards mobile geo due to the portability and small size of a
cell
phone. However I have several issues.
1. Battery life. Using a bluetooth receiver plus things like WiFi
must
drain the phone's battery quickly. What kinds of results have others
had?
2. No braille display
3. Since Sendero is lisencing the product and not building it
themselves,
it could suffer from the same lack of updates as SenseNav.
However I understand that the features of Sendero GPS version 5 are
available for mobile geo, whereas SenseNav hasn't been updated in well
over
a year.
Thoughts and suggestions would be apreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Eric
________________
Renee M. Zelickson
<mailto:renee@xxxxxxxx>renee@xxxxxxxx
www.zeli.net
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