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11 Feb 2011
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i am not using galaxy and have no idea. however, i would like to suggest you different thing.
if you use all in one devices like galaxy and if it's breaks down, you will lose all of your equipment. i think this would be the last think you want to have.
i mainly carry an 9" notebook with ssd, cheap nokia phone with mp3 player, and a gps. even one gets broken you can still use the other two. and probably will cost cheaper.
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ozhan u.
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11 Feb 2011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ozhanu
i am not using galaxy and have no idea. however, i would like to suggest you different thing.
if you use all in one devices like galaxy and if it's breaks down, you will lose all of your equipment. i think this would be the last think you want to have.
i mainly carry an 9" notebook with ssd, cheap nokia phone with mp3 player, and a gps. even one gets broken you can still use the other two. and probably will cost cheaper.
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I've been in the camp for a long time too, separate everything.
Yet technology really has been leaping forward lately, specially in terms of quality.
From the reviews I've read about this Samsung smart device is that the overall quality and user friendly features are simply outstanding.
I'm also looking at pairing down all the weight I've been carrying around on the bike.
That Samsung Galaxy makes a heck of a lot of sense.
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12 Feb 2011
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I can't help but agree with the above comments. Separate devices mean you don't lose everything in the event of one part single dying, getting damaged (alot of rain on your route!) or stolen.
We're on the road now and are travelling with an Asus netbook. I had a look at at the Galaxy and iPad recently in a shop in Bangkok and whilst they're very pretty and lovely to lose still have nothing near to the power, memory or usability (GPS aside!) of my netbook so I'll wait. I can't help but feel that Apple could make the iPad into a great laptop killer but of course have designed it without any of the capability of a laptop so it won't affect their own laptop sales. The thing is, people don't want both. You'll find that on the road you'll download things frm other travellers you meet and need so much space for photos and video that you'll be glad of the extra memory of a netbook.
I say get yourself an Asus netbook (alot cheaper!), take an iPod nano, and buy either a proper built for purpose satnav or get one of those regular sized phones that has GPS capability.
Alternatively, get a compass, you're just heading South after all!!....
Ps. don't forget that if you're still really desperate for a fancy toy, the new iPad 2 is rumoured to be reveaved at some point in Feb '11......
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13 Feb 2011
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thanks for all the interesting responses so far. I can see good in both sides of the all-in-one/separate gadgets arguments.
call me a computer illiterate if you like, but does the GPS function work on the Galaxy if it's not connected to a monthly phone plan? does it have in built maps or would i need to download them from Garmin or someone else?
i took a look at a galaxy today and i noticed it doesn't have USB sockets on its sides. How would I stick a memory stick in it then?
cheers
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13 Feb 2011
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I researched that exact point and yes, the GPS on the Galaxy Tab will work without a cellular plan but from what I've read the time taken to get a fix on a satellite is much slower and takes ages.
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13 Feb 2011
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Can't say anything about it's usefulness, but the misses has one and says the battery only lasts 6-10 hours.
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14 Feb 2011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mumbulz
does the GPS function work on the Galaxy if it's not connected to a monthly phone plan? does it have in built maps or would i need to download them from Garmin or someone else?
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No the Tab doesn't have any built in maps, and to the best of my knowledge Garmin don't sell any SatNav software for android devices, so the Garmin solutions is a none starter. There is some satnav software called copilot that would work for the US and Canada, but the only maps they have for South America is Brazil. Link anyway CoPilot Live v8 | Map Coverage: ALK Technologies
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mumbulz
i took a look at a galaxy today and i noticed it doesn't have USB sockets on its sides. How would I stick a memory stick in it then?
cheers
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You can't put a memory stick into the Galaxy Tab (I assume it is the galaxy tab you are referring to) - You can however use MicroSD cards with it, they go into the right hand side just below the slot for the sim cards.
I really would look at other solutions however, the Galaxy Tab is fine for what it is, but it won't come close to matching a proper SatNav unit for either robustness, ease of use or coverage.
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14 Feb 2011
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kindle ?
so, there's probably no perfect solution?
and as we all have different definitions of what is absolutely essential and what would be nice then we are probably all going to come up with a different answer.
All that said, here's my thoughts on the latest christmas present bought for my lovely lady . . . .. . .
We usually use 1 of 2 laptops we carry, we keep all data backed up onto usb hard drives and we have a PDA style 'phone that acts as an excellent GPS unit running the best option depending on country; TomTom, Garmin, OziExplorer, etc. All this works fine and is no problem while we are travelling in our 4x4.
However, we are planning an extensive hiking and camping trip this spring and so needed to scale down.
I wanted something lightweight, excellent battery life but cheap enough to not be too upset if it died for whatever reason.
The lovely lady wanted an e-book reader - coz she likes to read alot and books are heavy!
The solution was Amazons kindle.
We've only had the thing a few weeks so far but I am more and more impressed the more i realise what it can do.
It is VERY compact but still has a resolution that's more than acceptable, you can create 'offline' map pages and routes or whatever info and save that as a pdf (on your pc) and then these pdfs are more than acceptable on the kindle, i have been impressed at how visual even a black and white version of google earth image is.
You can access the internet, only one page at a time which can be restrictive but it's perfectly adequate for essential browsing and even memory demanding pages just as google maps will run ok.
There is a way to utilise google maps and it acts as a gps unit, haven't worked that out yet and not sure then how good the battery would be (currently the battery last between 3 and 4 WEEKS!!!).
so, you can read, you can have your guidebooks, you can load anything that can be made into a pdf, you can surf internet.
BUT, and for us this has been the nicest surprise . . . . .
There is no sim card, consequently no 'contract' in fact no charges whatsoever for accessing internet via GPRS and/or 3G.
Connection is fast enough to surf as we drive.
So for a little over £100 you get an incredible amount of book storage (we have over 400 books on ours now), you get completely free internet access worldwide (ok subject to the phone companies having an agreement with amazon). Excellent battery life. and no heavy/expensive gadget to carry!
down points?
well yes of course there . . . . . . . .
it's not colour.
it's not a computer.
no camera.
the keyboard is cumbersome.
it's not a phone.
but for the price we're more than happy.
I think if you want a navigation unit to rely on then you need to consider a garmin type product. But, for a reference if i get lost style then this would do (hope so coz we're going middle of nowhere in 2 months time!)
for storage of things like photos etc then you'd still need to consider a seperate USB hard drive and move photos from your cameras SD card to hard drive there are some units that have this feature built in or you wait until you hit the next town with a computer.
that's my thoughts.
phil.
Last edited by Phil Flanagan; 14 Feb 2011 at 14:32.
Reason: spelling !
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15 Feb 2011
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Lutterworth,Midlands, UK
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Phil Flanagan
so, there's probably no perfect solution?
and as we all have different definitions of what is absolutely essential and what would be nice then we are probably all going to come up with a different answer.
All that said, here's my thoughts on the latest christmas present bought for my lovely lady . . . .. . .
We usually use 1 of 2 laptops we carry, we keep all data backed up onto usb hard drives and we have a PDA style 'phone that acts as an excellent GPS unit running the best option depending on country; TomTom, Garmin, OziExplorer, etc. All this works fine and is no problem while we are travelling in our 4x4.
However, we are planning an extensive hiking and camping trip this spring and so needed to scale down.
I wanted something lightweight, excellent battery life but cheap enough to not be too upset if it died for whatever reason.
The lovely lady wanted an e-book reader - coz she likes to read alot and books are heavy!
The solution was Amazons kindle.
We've only had the thing a few weeks so far but I am more and more impressed the more i realise what it can do.
It is VERY compact but still has a resolution that's more than acceptable, you can create 'offline' map pages and routes or whatever info and save that as a pdf (on your pc) and then these pdfs are more than acceptable on the kindle, i have been impressed at how visual even a black and white version of google earth image is.
You can access the internet, only one page at a time which can be restrictive but it's perfectly adequate for essential browsing and even memory demanding pages just as google maps will run ok.
There is a way to utilise google maps and it acts as a gps unit, haven't worked that out yet and not sure then how good the battery would be (currently the battery last between 3 and 4 WEEKS!!!).
so, you can read, you can have your guidebooks, you can load anything that can be made into a pdf, you can surf internet.
BUT, and for us this has been the nicest surprise . . . . .
There is no sim card, consequently no 'contract' in fact no charges whatsoever for accessing internet via GPRS and/or 3G.
Connection is fast enough to surf as we drive.
So for a little over £100 you get an incredible amount of book storage (we have over 400 books on ours now), you get completely free internet access worldwide (ok subject to the phone companies having an agreement with amazon). Excellent battery life. and no heavy/expensive gadget to carry!
down points?
well yes of course there . . . . . . . .
it's not colour.
it's not a computer.
no camera.
the keyboard is cumbersome.
it's not a phone.
but for the price we're more than happy.
I think if you want a navigation unit to rely on then you need to consider a garmin type product. But, for a reference if i get lost style then this would do (hope so coz we're going middle of nowhere in 2 months time!)
for storage of things like photos etc then you'd still need to consider a seperate USB hard drive and move photos from your cameras SD card to hard drive there are some units that have this feature built in or you wait until you hit the next town with a computer.
that's my thoughts.
phil.
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intresting I like books but these things seem more and more useful i hadnt even considered that they could store guide books (technophobe)
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