So the wifi ipad certainly does have gps capabilities without data.
I completely agree with this statement except for the "does have GPS capabilities" part.
So the wifi ipad certainly does have gps capabilities without data.
Hmmm I have a wifi ipad. Turned off wifi/ bluetooth. Drove around
NO INTERNET CONNECTION and my ipad was able to pinpoint my location.
Since I did not have DATA i could not search or street view etc.
But it new exactly where I was located. So the wifi ipad certainly does have gps capabilities without data.
I would have agreed with you 2 years ago but not anymore. I will not be buying another portable nav unit for 3 main reasons:Let's be realistic here.
The typical family buys 1 portable nav unit, keeps it in the glovebox 350 days a year, and moves it from car to car to car the other 15 days.
A portable nav's biggest benefit is to be there, sitting quietly in the sweaty glove box, until that time that WHAM you're lost or need directions. You reach into the glove box, you mount the thing on a beanbag or a suction cup BOOM problem solved.
An unwieldy iPad can't be the Johnny-on-the-spot problem solver that a $120 Nuvi is. Though there are a million things the iPad can be, there are some that it shouldn't be and an in-car nav is one of them.
BJ
I don't understand all these people who want 3G iPads as well as already owning a 3G capable mobile phone/iPhone?
Why are people paying for two data plans?
And as for using the iPad instead of a TomTom... have you seen the size of the iPad. Where on earth are you going to mount it for viewing?
I would have agreed with you 2 years ago but not anymore. I will not be buying another portable nav unit for 3 main reasons:
1. Keeping the maps current is a hassle and expensive.
2. No google searches for POI's. I feel limited when searching for locations on a portable nav unit.
3. Phones especially the iPhone nav apps are at your fingertips just like a portable nav unit in the glove box.
Lets face it, with the existence of iPhone (and hopefully future iPad) apps, portable nav units will have to fight for their position. $400 is a lot to spend on a single nav unit when you can get so much more with the iPad or iPhone.
Besides, the iPad is the size of a cafeteria tray. Mounting that in the car is pretty silly.
BJ
A truly decent Nuvi can be had for $100 or less, not sure where you're getting a $400 price from.
Until the maps need updating. Or, you try to search for something that is not in the outdated POI database.My point here is that GPS units are quickly becoming inexpensive and disposable. Something you throw in the glovebox and forget about.
But it new exactly where I was located. So the wifi ipad certainly does have gps capabilities without data.