Verizon VZ Navigator Review
Published on March 5th, 2007 in gps navigation, phones, reviews, software
If you don’t feel like spending hundreds of dollars on a stand alone navigation system and don’t like dealing with extra wires and batteries in your car you should look into VZ Navigator from Verizon. You’ll need a compatible phone, a data plan, and a place to go. The service costs $3 per day, or you can pay $10 per month for unlimited use.
The review gives the Verizon VZ Navigator service 3.5 out of 5.
The underlying architecture of cell phone–based navigation is quite different from that used by a dedicated GPS device that sits on your dashboard. First, it uses triangulation from cell towers to establish your position, not a satellite fix. Of course, that means it relies on your cellular service. Testing the service in the Northeast United States, where Verizon’s coverage is very strong, I had no problems getting and keeping a steady lock.
To make most of this service you are recommended to use a phone with a full qwerty keyboard and large screen. The pros are the price, text-to-speech feature, and always up-to-date maps and POI database. The few negative points is the lack of 3D rendering, traffic info, and the fact that it depends on cell phone coverage to locate position.
Here is a list of the compatible phones:
- LG VX5300, VX8300, Chocolate, VX8600, enV, the V
- Samsung SCH-a930, SCH-a870, SCH-a990, SCH-u740
- Kyocera K323
- Motorola V325, V325i, MOTOKRZR K1m, RAZR V3c w/LBS, RAZR V3m
- VZW G’zOne Type-V
- Nokia 6315i
- Verizon Releases Navigator available with Motorola V325
- Verizon GPS Navigation now with Traffic Data
- motorola blaze
- Casio G’zOne GPS phone
- LG-VX10000 has GPS
September 14th, 2007 at 7:23 pm
I recently went on a weekend trip tp visit my girlfriend in State College PA. Jusat to tes this on a long trip, it got me from Pittsburgh to State College (a 2.5 hour drive) just they way you should. I even gave it the benefit of a doubt when I got there and it took me through a new shortcut I didn’t know existed. Also while there we decided to go see Penn’s Cave. I typed in the places address and it took us there, not problems (we wouldn’t have found it without the Verizon Navigator). These were rural areas and it work wonderfully. I had it as a 2.99 daily thing, but now use it all the time for my job. Easy, Cheap, and so far incredibly reliable. The voice talk is get for when it is on my dashboard mount. I leave the phone plugged in the charger with it runnign the program and it is a great little device. I have a Razor so the screen is easier to see.
May 26th, 2008 at 11:12 am
is this a phone? can it text? and where can you bye it???