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On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 13:02:39 -0800, Brent Geery wrote:
On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 14:04:16 -0500, Matt O'Toole wrote: For the last 3 years I've been using Maptech's Pocket Navigator, which runs on a PDA, with a companion program on a laptop. You can't use one without the other. It works great though, the PDA being much faster and easier to use, plus you can see the screen in direct sunlight. So far this is my favorite. Pocket Navigator = old and crippled version of Memory Map Navigator. What's so much better about MM Navigator? MM has an upgrade program where all you pay is the difference between what Maptech charges for Pocket Nav and what they charge for Memory Map Navigator or the Pro version. The Pro version even has support for AIS display on the PocktPC. http://www.memory-map.com/software_upgrade.htm can give you the cost to upgrade to MMN or MMP. This is probably the cheapest route. Upgrading will probably be cheapest way to get MM, but FYI for anyone else buying new: The cheapest retailer for the Pro version that I have found is the Canadian http://www.maptown.com. They have the Pro version for US$173 (vs $225 retail) for the retail boxed version delivered to the US. They also have the retail box version of MM Navigator for $111 delivered to the US, but it's cheaper to just buy a license from http://www.memory-map.com and download the software. Don't forget you need a PDA with add-on GPS too, so if you don't have either you should look for a bundle. We got ours from Maptech themselves, everything for like $600. Why Memory Map is not more well known i beyond me. It is written by an active sailor and cruiser and it is by far the most intuitive and easy to use chart plotting software out there IMHO, and it is blazing fast, like no other bar none. I feel the same way about Pocket Navigator compared to the other stuff I've used, but if you say MM Navigator is that much better it's worth a try. Designing for the PDA is probably similar to what designers faced when developing the original Maptech for DOS. Limited resources enforces design discipline. The later Maptech stuff looks like someone just threw together a bunch of VB or Delphi widgets and called it a day. Matt O. |
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