[SIZE=2]Ganito ba kalapad ang hanap mo na widescreen?[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2][/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Just showing what I explained earlier …[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]The satnav is the PDA at the base of the TV. It’s an O2 XDA Serra (aka HTC Touch Pro) which has a built-in GPS receiver with A-GPS support.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2][/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Here it is with the keyboard open. It can output video whatever’s on the PDA screen and can accept a memory card up to 32GB. I took it after being disappointed with the iPhone 3G’s GPS application. My wife’s happy with the iPhone though.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]---[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Weeks ago I chanced upon an old PDA at a garage sale. It was a Fujitsu-Siemens Pocket Loox 610 running on WinMobile 2003. It doesn’t have a built-in phone, it has no camera, and no WiFi … but it has Bluetooth. And for £3 it was dirt-cheap. All I have to do is install an application and pair it with a Bluetooth GPS receiver and then …[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2][/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]an instant satnav system running Garmin Mobile XT. It may be old, but it still gives the same routes as modern satnav systems do, specifically Garmins. It’s even loaded with detailed street maps for the whole of Western Europe.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Admittedly, the GPS receiver is more expensive … but prices are going down. The first Bluetooth receiver I bought cost me £45 a few years ago. The one I bought 2 weeks ago, a Navman B10, was only £15 … built with one of the best chipsets around – a SiRF III.[/SIZE]
Just a bit bigger than a matchbox, it slips perfectly in your pocket and you can leave it there while using it.




[/SIZE]
[/SIZE]
[/SIZE]
[/SIZE]
Reply With Quote
![Google Play GPS Navigation System [merged threads]](https://play.google.com/intl/en_us/badges/images/generic/en_badge_web_generic.png)