Navigon’s MobileNavigator is by far my favorite* iPhone GPS app – after reviewing an ad hoc distribution of it, I paid $69 to buy it (while it was on sale a little while ago) and have also purchased the traffic feature via an in-app purchase (also while it was on sale). Today, Navigon has made available several MyRegion versions of their navigation app which cover a portion of the U.S., each available for $24.99 (this is an introductory price and the regular price will be $29.99 after April 12).
Hi. My name is Marianne. I am addicted to iPhone GPS apps.
Okay, one iPhone GPS app reviewed and another one coming up. I think I’ve gotten a little obsessed with GPS apps for the iPhone, but I feel like I’ve just been waiting for so long for them. I’ve just hated digging out my TomTom GPS unit, doing my damndest to install the suction-cup mount so it will stay put (which it never does), and watch it get confused more often than not while my perfectly capable iPhone stared at me woefully, muttering lame excuses about how no official GPS apps were available for it yet. No more, finally!
However, although it uses the same map data source as Sygic’s app, TeleAtlas, my street isn’t on its map and it takes longer to acquire a GPS location after start-up. Street names are also hard to read with the daytime color scheme, which cannot be changed. Also, there are no language or voice customization options, nor much in the way of navigation preferences and settings. I’ll start using it to get me around the city this weekend to see how it does performing its main function.
Review of Sygic’s Mobile Maps navigation app for the iPhone
If you read my blog, you know that I’ve been waiting and waiting for a true turn-by-turn navigation app for the iPhone for some time now. Sygic put out one of the first comprehensive turn-by-turn apps earlier this month, and I’ve just completed my review of their Mobile Maps North America app (link opens iTunes). It’s not perfect, but it’s pretty damn good in my book, with enough features to make me want to retire my stand-alone TomTom Go 720 GPS device. Read my full review here.
Mobile Maps navigation app – more first impressions
I’ve started to use the Mobile Maps turn-by-turn navigation app that I mentioned the other day and it’s working out quite well so far. It runs smoothly and has gotten me to all of my destinations without any problems, though it gave me a more round-about way to get to one than I would have liked (and different from the route my TomTom Go 720 gives me for this same destination).
- Quick route re-calculation
- Good graphics
- Reliable – hasn’t lost the GPS signal or gotten confused at all
- Tells me which side of the road my destination is on!
- Highway lane guidance display
- Voice guidance volume is too low, even at highest volume setting
- No way to search all POI categories at once
- No integration with contacts list
First peek: Mobile Maps America navigation app by Sygic
I’ve been waiting for true voice-guided turn-by-turn apps for the iPhone for what feels like aeons now, and they’re starting to trickle into the App Store. The first one available for the U.S. was the Gokivo + Yahoo! Local Search app that requires an in-app purchase of $9.99 for each month of use. Next was the AT&T Navigator app, which also requires a monthly subscription fee of $9.99, billed to your AT&T account. Both of these apps rely heavily on the cellular network since no map data is stored locally on your iPhone, a not-so-ideal situation if you happen to travel through an area where coverage is spotty or nonexistent. TomTom and Navigon have promised navigation apps as well, but release dates for these are still unknown. Enter Sygic, who first gave a demo of their iPhone navigation app at Mobile World Congress in February, even before the iPhone SDK allowed for apps that could provide turn-by-turn voice guidance. +1o points to Sygic for moving forward despite that limitation, and they’re now rewarded with being one of the first apps of its kind in the U.S.