And for the dude hyperventilating in livid color, settle down dude! The world won’t end tomorrow. Some of us brains don’t operate nearly as slowly as yours apparently does.
[In my best DiNiro voice] You talkin to ME?
Cos I think I have every right to hyperventilate if I think your [distracted] driving might put me or my loved ones at risk on the roads. As I said earlier, I used S&T on my laptop before the Garmin, so I know how different they are. And I don't believe my brain is any slower than most [well, most days, lol] so I consider your comment as totally out of line.
The other point is that when I said "to each his own risks", I was referring to the risk to a laptop that's kept out in the open while driving, as well as the risks of distraction involved in using a laptop while driving - one sudden stop, and your laptop can be toast.
Please reread Turtle's posts, as he explains the differences better than I do, and he's absolutely right.
I tried one of those newfangled standalone Garmins and it was so small I couldn’t see it.
In all the comments I've heard and read, no one has ever made that one before - I'm just sayin.
It now sits in my wife’s car. As for as I’m concerned, Garmins are great for cars, but for 18 wheelers like I drive, I need something much more flexible and capable and that also gives me a panoramic view that you can’t get with a standalone GPS device.
Not to mention that with Streets & Trips you can do 10 times more things with it as well. In fact, most of my friends that use Garmins and Tom Toms use Streets & Trips to do all their trip planning, which is now going to be much easier because I hear Streets & Trips 2010 exports gpx files directly into Garmin and other gpx compatible GPS devices. Thus, if you are smart, you will be using Streets & Trips to do your trip planning as well.[/QUOTE]
I do use S&T, and Garmin, and the good ol atlas [and sometimes, my fellow drivers, too] to trip plan - so perhaps I'm not quite as dumb as I look, eh?
[In my best DiNiro voice] You talkin to ME?
Cos I think I have every right to hyperventilate if I think your [distracted] driving might put me or my loved ones at risk on the roads. As I said earlier, I used S&T on my laptop before the Garmin, so I know how different they are. And I don't believe my brain is any slower than most [well, most days, lol] so I consider your comment as totally out of line.
The other point is that when I said "to each his own risks", I was referring to the risk to a laptop that's kept out in the open while driving, as well as the risks of distraction involved in using a laptop while driving - one sudden stop, and your laptop can be toast.
Please reread Turtle's posts, as he explains the differences better than I do, and he's absolutely right.
I tried one of those newfangled standalone Garmins and it was so small I couldn’t see it.
In all the comments I've heard and read, no one has ever made that one before - I'm just sayin.
It now sits in my wife’s car. As for as I’m concerned, Garmins are great for cars, but for 18 wheelers like I drive, I need something much more flexible and capable and that also gives me a panoramic view that you can’t get with a standalone GPS device.
Not to mention that with Streets & Trips you can do 10 times more things with it as well. In fact, most of my friends that use Garmins and Tom Toms use Streets & Trips to do all their trip planning, which is now going to be much easier because I hear Streets & Trips 2010 exports gpx files directly into Garmin and other gpx compatible GPS devices. Thus, if you are smart, you will be using Streets & Trips to do your trip planning as well.[/QUOTE]
I do use S&T, and Garmin, and the good ol atlas [and sometimes, my fellow drivers, too] to trip plan - so perhaps I'm not quite as dumb as I look, eh?