Tablet vs gps
On 3/23/2015 8:42 PM, True North wrote:
On Monday, 23 March 2015 11:16:26 UTC-3, Justan Olphart wrote:
On 3/23/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:
On Monday, 23 March 2015 10:06:16 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 3/23/2015 8:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 3/23/15 7:21 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 3/23/2015 7:00 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 22 Mar 2015 23:22:42 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:
The iPad I have has a GPS built in. As the guy in the video explained
it will receive the GPS signal and work with Navionics even if you
don't
have a 3G connection or have it shut off. That's how I understood what
he said.
===
That's the way Navionics on my smartphone works as long as you've
downloaded the charts you need in advance. I do that at home on my
wifi connection by going to the areas I'm interested in and zooming in
for maximum detail. After that, the charts for that area are
permanently stored.
I have an older (2011) iPad-2 but it is the full featured version with
64Gb, wi-fi, cellular, and has the GPS chipset. This might give me a
reason to use it. It just sits on my desk because I don't really have a
use for it.
I sold my iPad after a year and went back to a Macbook Air. The iPad was
nice for "entertainment," but I never got used to the inability to reach
the file system in a "normal" computer way. My wife has a Kindle and
enjoys it: she's on the commuter bus twice a day and reads books or does
email offline. Last week, I bought her a new iPhone and in the process
at the phone store I was offered a new iPad for "almost free," which
makes me wonder if the bloom of tablets is fading a little.
I really don't follow the smart phone and tablet varieties that seem to
have taken over and dominated so many people's lives today. My wife is
an iPhone addict, constantly using it for texting, calling, playing
Scrabble or some similar game with 10 people at the same time. I have a
Android cell phone that I guess is a "smart phone" but I rarely use it
and when I do it's just to make a quick phone call. I don't use it's
internet browser and rarely use it to read email. Old fashioned I
guess. I like computers with a real keyboard. Trying to text someone a
message on the tiny little keyboard that slides out or on the fake
keyboard on the screen takes me forever. I just have no interest in it.
I used the iPad for a while at the guitar shop and it was much better
for browsing or emailing but it wasn't a cell phone. I usually just
left it out on a table with it displaying the shop's website, list of
guitars and prices for customer's use. When I turned the shop over to
my friend I took it home and it just sits, unused.
I seldom use my HTC 'smart phone' either, so when the 3 year contract was up with Virgin last August, I changed over to prepaid. I pay $100.00 up front and if I don't get too gabby or carried away with texts, that'll last the full year..working out to just over $8.00 per month for my cellphone (plus 15% tax)
I doubt many can beat that.
How much data, text, minutes do you get for $100?
--
Respectfully submitted by Justan
Laugh of the day from Krause
"I'm not to blame anymore for the atmosphere in here.
I've been "born again" as a nice guy."
0 data...calls are 40 cents a minute. texts .25 each. Adds up quickly if you are the gabby sort.
Tracfone has a better deal. 1200 minutes, 1200 texts and 1.2 gig data
$100 for a year.
--
Respectfully submitted by Justan
Laugh of the day from Krause
"I'm not to blame anymore for the atmosphere in here.
I've been "born again" as a nice guy."
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