What though is lost is the ability to just turn on the home computer, to get to work plotting a route or routes (or just looking at a third party route or track you’ve received) without having to faff around each time, connecting the device and waiting whilst maps are dragged across. It panders to those Garmin owners who refuse to use BaseCamp at all. Many owners do not create their own bespoke routes, therefore the need to have maps on a home computer at all can be ruled out.Į. To some degree or another, the time saved is then lost whilst the XT owner waits for the maps on the device to be dragged across to the home computer.ĭ. It saves time, as only one update is required, that of the device. They also demand music, phones, weather updates, traffic, how often they activated the turn indicators, texts on the move, WhatsAp and their VIN number, not forgetting windy roads and the ability to control a video camera, all at the touch of a button, all from their GPS device.Ĭ. Bods had been demanding better wireless connectivity, apparently. ![]() It exploits the XT’s unique ability to update maps wirelessly. It saves a possible misfit between the maps held on the device and those on the home computer.ī. I guess this dropping of the ability to load the maps onto the home computer and onto the device makes sense on several levels.Ī.
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