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Language & Travel |
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GARMIN 010-10887-00 City Navigator Europe NT Studio : Garmin by Garmin Brand : Garmin Model : 0101088700 Publisher : Garmin Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days EAN : 0075375906592 UPC : 753759065492 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 7 reviews)
List Price : $190.95 Our Price : $111.90
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Product Description |
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SOFTWARE, MAPSOURCE CITY NAVIGATOR |
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Garmin Europe Worked Fine |
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We used Garmin City Navigator for bicycling in Europe. It showed all but the smallest of roads (paths), even gravel roads. I was very happy with it and would use it also for driving. The maps loaded onto my Garmin Nuvi 260 easily with the included software. The points of interest were also very helpful. |
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Well, it works..... |
I've recently moved to the US - bought the add on for my US purchased Garmin for a business trip back to the UK. The software installed fine although it is a bit dated and I haven't found the button to press to install it to a memory card ( quite happy admit I'm missing something - will update on this ).
In general I got where I needed to go. In most cases I was in familiar-ish territory and was surprised by the routes taken and in one case over a 5 mile journey I was sent towards a no-entry sign and an illegal u-turn, which were restrictions in place well before 2007. I haven't explored too many big metropolises in the US but had never had these sorts of problems!?
Saying that, it does install fine onto the GPS and didn't get lost! |
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Some helpful hints |
The registration really isn't a nightmare - inside the packaging there's a leaflet with a 8 character coupon code. When you run the DVD, make sure you're online, have your Garmin unit plugged in and powered on, choose to get a 25 character unlock code, enter the 8 character coupon code when prompted and away you go.
As for getting maps onto the Garmin unit, what I did was,
- Run the MapSource program (either runs automatically or it'll be in the Windows Start menu under "Garmin"). Yes, it's not pretty but it does the job.
- Select the whole map of Europe. Use the map select tool (a button on the MapSource toolbar that looks like a polygon with a yellow glow) and drag over the whole image of Europe. Storing all of the maps requires about 1400MB total. You can also select/de-select sub-regions of the map.
- Choose the menu option. "Transfer->Send to device". Now, you have a choice of storing maps in your unit's internal memory (appear in the list as a "nuvi" device) or an SD card that you might have in the unit (appears as a separate device in the list, something like "H:"). My unit had maps of North America pre-installed when I bought it. When I tried to transfer the maps of Europe to the internal memory, it told me that I had only about 500MB-ish available. So, I transferred the maps to the 4GB SD card instead.
- Go watch that episode of "The Wire" that you've been meaning to get round to. Indexing and downloading takes a while.
- You're done! It's really not bad at all - just accept that if you want to store maps in the unit's internal memory, there's a limited amount of space available so you'll probably just want to store the countries that you're travelling to. Otherwise, get a nice SD card (you should check the Garmin website to see if your unit can take 4GB SD cards, or only up to 2GB) and put the maps on there. |
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Maps OK; Garmin registration not so... |
Bought this to travel to Belgium & Amsterdam for use with an eTrex Vista unit. While the maps worked fine on the unit, getting this registered via the web interface was a PITA. I had already installed the North American maps and getting the Garmin registration process to recognize two products required multiple back&forth email exchanges. I'm not convinced the problem was resolved, but I did get the maps unlocked and loaded onto the unit; which is what I really cared about.
With the limited use I gave the maps I only had one issue. I was navigating to a restaurant in Amsterdam and I ended up at a 'coffee shop'. Turns out that they used to serve food there and now serve 'other things'. The owner told me how they had moved the food down the street 1/2 a block as they needed more room for the food and had turned the old restaurant into a 'coffee shop'. Not a big deal, but be aware of the dynamic nature of the POIs. Other than that, worked great; got me to where I wanted to go (on foot & bike). |
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Does what you'd expect, but now how you'd expect it |
After updating firmware and the built-in US maps on my Garmin Nuvi, I expected this CD-ROM to be a matter of firing up an install utility that connects to the nuvi and...ZAP...puts all the roads of Europe on it. Unfortunately, it doesn't work like that at all.
First off, the CD-ROM is Windows only. Blah. I'll forgive that, but it's not even a particularly friendly Windows program. To use it, you have to go through some bologna on-line to use the code that comes in the packaging and then register on [...] and then get another code that activates a license for just one Garmin GPS. Annoying.
The next step, after surviving the copy protection and activation nonsense, is to fire up what appears to be the world's most pathetic PC mapping software, reminiscent of a Windows 3.1 application ported from DOS: few menu options and even fewer that are truly intuitive. Apparently what you need to do here is select the regions of Europe you want to load on your Garmin and then download them, bearing in mind that there is a finite amount of free space on your GPS and, apparently, not enough free space to hold all the roads of Europe...bummer.
Selecting the regions isn't what you'd expect, either. You can't just click on France and load all of its roads; there are a bunch of different regions of France, each of which must be clicked individually. You can't even just get Paris to Charles de Gaulle airport in one region. Central Paris is one region and CDG is in another. While you're at it, you probably should select a few more regions, like La Defense and all the adjacent regions to central Paris, because, heaven forbid, you decide to drive outside central Paris and not have the roads 10 miles outside of the city center loaded. Once you're done trying your best to guess every conceivable place you might drive in Europe (without choosing too many...remember, you only have so much space!) you can download all the maps to your GPS.
Once you actually *get* the maps on the GPS, it works pretty much how you'd expect. In Ireland, the thing paid for itself in spades, finding these little single-lane roads up the side of the mountain you'd swear was a driveway and not an honest road, but, it turns out, is the only way to get from here to there. The only operational oddity I could detect is that the already long boot time of my Nuvi appears to be even longer. Perhaps that's another reason not to load the whole continent.
For me, I love my Nuvi because I am away from home more days a year than I am home and it is handy to know I have maps to get me from anywhere to anywhere when I land in unfamiliar territory at 2 AM. I had hoped this map upgrade would give me that freedom for both North America and Europe, but, alas, that is not the case. I have North America and the subset of regions of Europe I thought I might be going to some time soon. I hope I don't get diverted to Frankfurt, though, without having preloaded the maps ahead of time. |
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