Technology4 mins ago
Sat Nav's
Would you FULLY TRUST them? even with updates.
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Evening TWR....I wouldn't be without mine but I don't rely on it completely... I use my brain a bit too.
I have no sense of direction at all....none....MrG tore his hair out often...
I do like that it can tell me immediately if I have gone wrong....usually when I am singing away with Rod Stewart on a long journey.....xx
I have no sense of direction at all....none....MrG tore his hair out often...
I do like that it can tell me immediately if I have gone wrong....usually when I am singing away with Rod Stewart on a long journey.....xx
MrG could and my daughter can...look at a map and have a route in their head then mentally follow it.....I can't and my sat nav has made my journeys much more relaxed.
Twr...if I told you the tales of my getting lost because of not having a sense of direction you wouldn't believe them.....I have met some wonderful people and some police officers with great senses of humour........when I've been lost.....☺
Twr...if I told you the tales of my getting lost because of not having a sense of direction you wouldn't believe them.....I have met some wonderful people and some police officers with great senses of humour........when I've been lost.....☺
Since I can go somewhere in the morning, and not be able to find my way back in the afternoon (I am not kidding!) - I think the Sat Nav is the greatest invention of the modern age.
Anything that even gives me the correct compass direction is an improvement on what I can do, so if it takes a bit longer its way than my way, that's no problem, because I don't have a way!
Love - never leave home without it.
Anything that even gives me the correct compass direction is an improvement on what I can do, so if it takes a bit longer its way than my way, that's no problem, because I don't have a way!
Love - never leave home without it.
There is no comparison between driving alone by map or a navigator - the latter is far better. If you are driving around an unfamiliar/distant urban area then you would have to have a very detailed map to be really useful in locating your destination - repeat that again and again and you have to buy yourself a small library of maps. Then step up to the situation where you fly into a foreign country, hire a car and set off. I have done this lots and lots of times, originally navigating by whatever map(s) I had, more recently by navigator. Not only is the navigator easier to carry but it beats navigating by maps hands down.
That said, I usually like to carry some map/maps that allow me to see long distance routes at a glance - possibly a carry-over by habit. You cannot switch off mentally and blindly follow the navigator's instructions, that has the potential of getting you into trouble.
That said, I usually like to carry some map/maps that allow me to see long distance routes at a glance - possibly a carry-over by habit. You cannot switch off mentally and blindly follow the navigator's instructions, that has the potential of getting you into trouble.
Daisy.....so can I....have you ever had to phone on of the people you're with to come and find you?
I once got half way back from the ladies in restaurant in France. I was lost and my very poor french and sign language resulted in one of the waitresses taking me back to the ladies....I nearly cried.....☺
I once got half way back from the ladies in restaurant in France. I was lost and my very poor french and sign language resulted in one of the waitresses taking me back to the ladies....I nearly cried.....☺
My first "satnav" was actually a handheld Garmin GPS balanced on my dashboard so LOTS of common sense was required as I only had an arrow and a mileage to go by. This stood me in good stead for the TomTom I now use.
I could never go back to buggering about with bloody A-Zs - all that stopping and squinting then setting off again. I agree with Andy Hughes, it is a great invention and I'd be f****d without mine as I do a LOT of driving in unfamiliar territory.
Conclusion: it's *mostly* trustworthy, but I wouldn't follow it into a duckpond, oh and I still have (and use) all my OS mapwork skills when out walking.
I could never go back to buggering about with bloody A-Zs - all that stopping and squinting then setting off again. I agree with Andy Hughes, it is a great invention and I'd be f****d without mine as I do a LOT of driving in unfamiliar territory.
Conclusion: it's *mostly* trustworthy, but I wouldn't follow it into a duckpond, oh and I still have (and use) all my OS mapwork skills when out walking.