TomTom rolls out Urban Rider motorcycle GPS
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2010 9:50 pm
http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/27/tomt ... cycle-gps/
looks pretty spiff! and usable with gloves!!!
looks pretty spiff! and usable with gloves!!!
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The TomTom rider (and I assume this version as well) doesn't have a speaker. It connects to a Cardo Systems Scala Rider headset via Bluetooth for directions.bpatrick5 wrote:It would have to be almost embarrassingly loud. Plus, it would have to mount in in front of the speedo, I assume. I tried our Garmin on mine and couldn't hear it.
Hey, is that a TomTomn One? I just bought one myself.nateandcourt wrote:That's pretty spiffy mine was not really designed for my scoot but its plenty loud.
Yeah its the tomtom one.Croatoan wrote:Hey, is that a TomTomn One? I just bought one myself.nateandcourt wrote:That's pretty spiffy mine was not really designed for my scoot but its plenty loud.
Dont mind not hearing it, just need to see where I am going.
Nope.rsrider wrote:The GPS system is failing, with nothing on the board to replace those satellites that have gone dark and those that are soon going to go dark. When it hits a certain limit, the DOD will stop civilian access to the system and give priority to military and other government traffic. Back to maps, probably within 5 years.
Also, all GPS satellites are merely passive information providing systems blanket broadcasting their location/time. All specific latitude/longitude/directional calculations are performed by the end-user's GPS device. So the concept of the gov't needing to block civilian use to give themselves priority wouldn't make much sense.rsrider wrote:The GPS system is failing, with nothing on the board to replace those satellites that have gone dark and those that are soon going to go dark. When it hits a certain limit, the DOD will stop civilian access to the system and give priority to military and other government traffic. Back to maps, probably within 5 years.
Garmin, for one, would pay to launch their own satellites if that were even remotely true.rsrider wrote:The GPS system is failing, with nothing on the board to replace those satellites that have gone dark and those that are soon going to go dark. When it hits a certain limit, the DOD will stop civilian access to the system and give priority to military and other government traffic. Back to maps, probably within 5 years.