Why buy a committed GPS navigator back you can backpack one in your pocket? That's Nokia's sales angle for the 6210 Navigator, the latest adaptable buzz with built-in GPS navigation.
As Nokia phones go, this is a solid offering. It has HSDPA for accelerated web admission over the 3G network, a abrupt processor for basal lag amid airheaded and functions, a brittle six-centimetre awning and a space-saving slide-out keyboard.
However, while the antecedent archetypal 6110 Navigator had an absolute GPS aeronautics account for the activity of the device, the 6210 spots you alone the aboriginal six months free. After that, you're up for a cable if you appetite to booty advantage of the aeronautics services.
So, although you can still use the phone's mapping software, to accept the 6210 acquaint you how to get from A to B agency you're up for anywhere from $16 a ages for bounded "walk and drive" aeronautics to $124 for a year accoutrement Australia and New Zealand.
If you intend application the buzz abundantly and its GPS appearance in your car you'd additionally appetite to agency in the amount of a windscreen-mounting kit (Nokia CR-39, $43.99) and a car charger (Nokia DC-4, $14.99). Suddenly, a committed GPS arrangement from the brand of TomTom - a arrangement with lifetime, absolute use and a chargeless windscreen arise and car charger - looks like bigger value.
On the added hand, if you generally adventure overseas, the 6210 lets you download Nokia maps for adopted countries for aloof $8 a month. This absolutely beats the amount of affairs maps for committed GPS devices, which can amount hundreds of dollars extra.
This "ad-hoc navigation" back you're walking in alien places, alike in your home town, is area the 6210 makes sense. It does a acceptable job of accepting you around, abnormally back walking. In the car, it sometimes affected added circuitous routes than a TomTom GPS did and was sometimes a little apathetic to recalculate a avenue back we took a amiss turn.
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