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Let's see...Samsung or Iphone - 500 to 700 bucks, not heat resistant...and if lost...more trouble than it's worth. Of course, the Samsung is known to be water resistant, but it goes up in flames from time to time, all by itself!GPS unit - 300-500, WATER and heat resistant...if lost...no big deal...no personal information.Yeah...makes sense...
I see a lot of folks using their cell phons for navigation on a motorcycle. They obviously feel comfortable with that arrangement. I don't. The cell phone is my hand held computer with a huge amount of data/stuff for my daily life. I don't like the idea of having that device out where it might decide to take a walk. It's like putting a IPad on the bike...way more capability than needed and way too much to lose. I'm stuck in the rut of one device for one use. The GPS does a great job (mostly) of answering my navigation questions, no matter where I am. My phone...not so much. Two weeks ago I was in a radio quiet zone. No cell coverage. GPS worked just fine. This was important because we were way out in hell and beyond, on a 1 lane road, and getting quite lost. We are talking Deliverance territory. The GPS worked. I have had similar problems on other trips. No cell coverage but the GPS works. Along those same lines, SPOT Tracker seems to work everywhere. Bottom line, I'll pay the price for a dedicated GPS navigation device. Maybe not Garmin. I have seen some ads for Chinese GPS that are motorcycle specific and really inexpensive. Maybe someone here will try that out and spare me the joy of being the first. Heck, you only have a few bucks on the line and it's for a good cause...(Guzzi Content).
Apparently you have not figured out that the Navigation apps for cell phones download maps and don't need a cell connection to work. If your GPS will work, so will the cell phone app. And yes, for most of the apps you get lifetime map downloads. Again, price is not comparable. If you already have a phone you only have to buy the app. So, several hundred for the GPS or less than $50 for an app. Yes, your current phone may not be shock, water or dust resistant. Mine is and when you get your next phone you can get one too. Or, like Wayne mentioned, you can go online and get rugged phones for very little money. No, you don't need to buy it with a service plan if you don't want to. And, yes, you can get different voices for directions as well.It still surprises me how much misinformation there is about phones.
Or how much tracking and information gathering the 'phones' do.
This is something I didn't bring up, since my main point was Garmin's questionable (in my eyes) business practices.As an information security, privacy, governance and compliance professional of several decades standing, guess what is never turned on on my smartphone? Location services. I can't stop anyone from localizing me to a tower group, but I'm durned if I'm gonna tell Google (or anyone else) my position accurate to 5 meters every few minutes. When I use my SPOT satellite tracker, I can choose who sees that data and exactly how much of it they can see.
When I use my SPOT satellite tracker, I can choose who sees that data and exactly how much of it they can see....
GPS only works one direction. A pure GPS device cannot collect and send any data unless it has a cell plan & built in phone.
(From ITSec) When I use my SPOT satellite tracker, I can choose who sees that data and exactly how much of it they can see........ or so it says here ....
Well, at least it would take a court order to get more of it than I choose to share. That, and the gang at SPOT purge their data regularly. They also don't sell it, or correlate it with any other data about me (*cough* Google, *cough cough* Apple). Mostly that's because they have no other data about me to use to correlate it! Running SPOT tracking info through SPOTwalla allows much more fine-grain control over what data can be seen too.From the SPOT website: "SPOT archives your data for only 30 days, we encourage you to save your Tracks with SPOT Adventures where you can create an adventure and save it forever, or download your data to your desktop for use outside of your SPOT account."
As an IT pro I am surprised that you think you can hide your location. Anyone who really wants it will get it. You are just keeping the honest people out (and they dont want your location anyway).
That's impressive Ok here's a question, I want a good bright GPS or app that doesn't require a package to service it e.g. cell coverage what do I buy.I currently use an old TomTom car unit but it's not nearly bright enough. I don't mind spending a few bucks for a good one recommended here.Sent from my shoe phone!
Ok here's a question, I want a good bright GPS or app that doesn't require a package to service it e.g. cell coverage what do I buy.
...very helpful to keep family members apprised when on expeditions (4x4 adventures with 911 option) deep into the mountains or desert, and just for convenience when on the moto long distance trips. It provides them peace of mind to see ....
Scroll up a bit and you'll see the link I posted for the TomTom Rider...$299 USD.
Well, there's paranoid, and then there's other paranoid. This thing where every time we pull up to a stop, or in the campground at night, men have to go off somewhere where they can get a cell signal and say "I need to check in with my wife, she'll worry herself sick if she doesn't hear from me ...." I mean, what's that all about? Fay and I been married 41 years and we love each other, and we're concerned for each other, but everyone hyperventilating if they don't hear from each other every 8 or 12 hours, or make sure the spot on the map keeps moving?People didn't used to be like that, I don't think. And it has nothing to do with a loss of love or concern, it has more to do with the same sort of sense that's being called "paranoia" when discussing people using your data to steal from or harm you.When I go off to a rally, it might be 5 days or a week before Fay hears from me. I have an ICE card in my helmet and in my wallet, and the State Police and hospitals have excellent communication capability, so if something happens that she needs to know about, she'll know. Otherwise I'll come home, and download my pictures, and we'll have a cozy "welcome home" evening and look at the pics and hear all about it.Sure, some people "prefer" to talk every day, but it's not like "Well, I'll call home when I get a chance", it's more like "I HAVE TO call home ... " and their fingers fidget and they can't think of anything else until they do it ... ?Just not me ...Lannis
ROFL...truly entertaining...but you're inferring and projecting WAY more than I ever intended to a degree that has nothing to do with the way SPOT is being used. It's simply a tool to help keep people informed just as an FYI, it has little to do with "checking in" because of an obligation to do so. If you want or don't want to talk to your significant other at the end of the day, that's a different requirement than what SPOT is intended to solve!
Not so, The spot communicates via satellite. First of ll it figures out where it is then sends the co-ordinats to the satellite and from there to Spot headquarters I assume.When you receive a message you can zoom in to about 10 feet.
So it uses the GPS satellites but it's not a GPS device, me thinks you are splitting hairs here. It certainly has no cellular connection, will work out in the middle of the Atlantic with no cell coverage.