Magellan Maestro 3200 Review

February 9, 2009 · Posted in Main Content · Comment 

Maestro 3200

Technical Details

  • Connectivity Technology: USB
  • Display Size: 3.5 inches
  • Native Resolution: 320 x 240
  • Battery Average Life: 3 Hours
  • Map Type: Puerto Rico, Hawaii, 48 United States

Product Features

  • New 3.5″ QVGA full-color, anti-glare, touch-screen display
  • 1.3 Million Searchable Points of Interest:
  • New look and function with an ultra-thin, stylish,industrial design
  • QuickSpell intelligently searches and checks spelling when
  • SmartDetour prompts drivers to route around traffic delays

Our Opinion

The Maestro 3200 has some great features.  The map is extensive, with tons of points of interest.  The screen is reasonable easy to read, and battery life is very good for a color portable.

Recalculation of routes can take some time, bad for quick route decision making.  Sometimes the routing is not perfect, but overall the routing is good. Not a lot of extra features, but a solid GPS unit for the $150 and under niche.

We recommend the Magellan Maestro 3200 as a great budget GPS system.

Navigon 8100T Review

December 28, 2008 · Posted in Navigon, Reviews · Comment 
Navigon 8100T Review

Navigon 8100T Review

Navigon GPS Unit Looks Pretty, Takes Its Sweet Time

GPS is supposed to get you where you want to go. The Navigon 8100T does deliver on its promise of no wrong turns and the occasional Dairy Queen pit stop. However, at $600, it seems the poor house is a little too high on this unit’s points-of-interest list.

The Navigon 8100T is a dashboard-mounted GPS unit with a flat, sexy, 4.8-inch touchscreen. It’s easy to affix it to your dash via a suction cup. We especially liked the Reality View Pro feature, which gave us a realistic image of all of the streets we never knew existed in our area, complete with their actual road signs.

Also, the unit’s Panorama View is the most whiz-bang feature: It displays pretty 3-D effects not unlike those in Pole Position. Whether or not that is a good thing is between you, the local authorities and your steering wheel. Still, like the game, the graphics are good, but a bit bland. Considering the unit boasts 3-D, both images and the points of interest could pop better — and quicker, so you actually have a chance of checking out something new before you zoom past it at 60 mph. In other words, don’t expect to have the Toon Patrol from Roger Rabbit as your copilot. Still, it’s a nice touch that’s relatively easy on the eyes.

For the full review, check out Wired reviews.

Wired

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