Had a TomTom Rider for a weekend
Sean et al,
Here are my first impressions
Disclaimer: All of the following information is my subjective opinion and I have only had a very short time to play with the unit. I have had no contact with TomTom and am not aware of any of their plans. The following could therefore be no better than Elephant wind.
Well after all the wait it was worth it. Just picked up one of the beta units from the London based designers.
It has a great screen and very fast processor. Screen redrawns are very smooth. The colours are bright and the has a good number of pixels, giving a smooth image with no jaggies.
It is designed for idiot usage. Very good menus, and simple layout.
The GPS unit seems pretty powerful as it is doing a good job of finding satallites even when I am at the computer.
I haven't had a chance to test the mapping, but the map of our area is exeptionally good. Much better than the Garmin v6 map. I have seen later Garmin versions so cannot compare with them.
The 3D view is cute and works well with the fast screen redraws.
Whats in the box.
The TTR unit
A clip on/off clamp with a swivel ball joint and two sizes of bar clamps.
A bluetooth receiver
A single earpiece and microphone with a wire that plugs into the bluetooth receiver. The plug is 2.5mm with 4 connectors. (presumably for the earpice and mike)
A charger which charges the TTR and the bluetooth receiver.
If there was anything else, it fell off the bike on the way home
All the routing is done on the unit. You do not get any PC based mapping software, although the SD memory card is removable and there is a mini USB connector on the TTR, so you can get updates and stuff of the TomTom site. Whether they will do online route creation for downloading, I do not know. Lets hope so.
More impressions.
As far as I can find out all the mapping routing is meant to be done on the unit. TomTom may provide an online mapping/routing service, but that is only a guess (my wish). As far as I know, the software/map release is stable and the only issues are with the physical units shock protection and waterproofness.
The unit is very easy to use, and will allow multiple waypoints in the route, but you cannot drag your route from one road onto your preferred road like you can in Mapsource on the PC. It is easy to find adresses using postcodes although I think it is only looking at the first 4 digits of the postcode. Once they are in it starts asking you for more address info using a variety of criteria.
The most impressive features are the quality of the screen and the processor speed. The mapping information does seem very good as well.
Images of the TTR I borrowed are here.
http://www.thewatermargin.com/html/F650GS/TomTomRider.htm
Is it worth the money? Hmmm If you are a power user, I think you will want the PC mapping facilities available in Mapsource. If you are a basic user, maybe, but there are other much cheaper options.
Any questions?
:howdy: PB