Brian, I have the same, It works great.
Roy, I have the Dell Axim x51v, they send the software and receiver, the volume is pretty good, it comes with an a/c adapter kit that lets you charge the axim battery while in transit. Installation was simple, put a cd into labtop, it transfers to axim, and away you go. I paid about $162.00 for the GPS package, and I think you may have to have the dell axim to run software, not 100% on that.
Michael J. Ashburn
I have MS street and roads 2006.
Yesterday I had an inspection of a one year old house, end of warranty inspection, but the streets were not in the data base.
How and when does MS update the data.
Works great on older locations.
I purchased this Garmin GPS software for use with my HP Pocket PC and Laptop for $209. I already owned the Pocket PC and the Laptop. No need to pay for another monitor device. Great system for use on both devices.
Like Joe Lyvers I went with a package that works with my PDA. Uses TomTom software which is upgradable for free whenever it becomes available. If you can get the “Spouse package”. It says things like…“You were suppose to turn left back there!” “Ask this gang of guys on the corner where the on ramp for the expressway is” or my personal favorite…" I think we’re lost" All joking aside. It works very well except whenever there is real new properties but then I use Google Map. It gives detailed directions along with a printable map and is free.
We (four inspectors) used mine to navigate to the convention last year and it took us right to the front door of the hotel. Unlike the MS maps and streets which is a piece of FOD!
Streets and Trips is not detailed for outside of major city use. You will get lost in the sticks! Mapopolis is the “grandfather” of all the handheld GPS street-based software (**www.mapopolis.com](http://www.mapopolis.com)). Best of all, it’s free to try. The maps are also free (on a time limited basis). The cost of buying maps across every square inch of North America is dirt cheap. Best of all, it works extremely well on both Microsoft and Palm based hand-helds.** If you want to go to a laptop software package, try Teletype (which also has handheld versions - **www.Teletype.com](http://www.Teletype.com)). Again, country roads are well detailed.**
I did the same but I still print things out just in case there is a satelite problem or the system goes blewy.
As far as places in the sticks go, I still get directions and input those locations by hand on my desktop and transfer the file to my tablet via my wireless network.
I’m not looking so much to save time as I like to take a nap while on long trips and let the voice prompts wake me when it’s time to turn off the highway.