Navman N60i

By Pam Carroll on 13/10/2006

More Navman reviews , RRP: AU$1099.00

Description:

Its new "navigate to pictures technology", which combines a photo of a location with its exact geographical coordinates, makes finding travel landmarks and returning to unmarked secret hideaways a snap.

Users' rating:

9/10

Upside
Yes, we've seen GPS devices integrated with extra functionality à la PDAs and MP3 players, but there hasn't been too much innovation in what you could do with the GPS itself, until perhaps now.

The Navman N60i has a built-in 1.3 megapixel camera, which doesn't stand up to the picture taking prowess of the average mobile phone these days, but it's what you can do with the snaps it takes that's the pretty cool part. The Navman N60i, and its companion N40i (AU$849), lets you navigate to an image rather than an address. You can download photos of famous landmarks from the NavPix library hosted on the Navman Web site or get back to a favourite unnamed beach or hunting spot by taking a picture there which automatically loads and stores a GPS fix of the spot where you took it.

To build the NavPix library, Navman teamed up with leading travel publisher, Lonely Planet, so not only do you get the latest Lonely Planet images, but also up to 100 words of travel information from the guidebooks including hotels, shops and restaurants across 19 major cities.

This content is all free to download, and, in addition to photography supplied by Lonely Planet, users can create their own photo libraries taken on Navman cameras and upload them to share with others on www.navman.com.

For more conventional 3D navigation, the N60i is pre-loaded with Australia-wide street level mapping. Speed and red light camera warnings are also available via free download from Navman website.

The design of this unit is slimmer than previous models, making it very portable. The 4.3-inch colour touch-screen boasts a new anti-fingerprint/anti-glare surface and there are convenient quick-access Fuel and Parking buttons along the right side of the screen.

It has SiRF Star III GPS receiver which produces a much stronger and faster signal than many older GPS devices. It also features an infrared remote control, 64MB SDRAM + 2GB integrated Flash ROM, (you should be able to store up to 200 favourite destinations or multi-stop trips) and a spare SD slot for additional mapping. Navman claims the rechargeable Li-ion battery should last up to five hours.

Downside
Unfortunately, the clever NavPix idea drives up the price of the N60i, just as prices of GPS devices in general were starting to become more reasonable. The N40i, with a smaller 3.5-inch screen and only 256 MB integrated Flash ROM will save you AU$250. Plus, with only 1.3 megapixels, you'll still have to carry a higher quality camera to document any images you want to keep for other than navigation purposes.

Outlook
Simplicity is paramount in a GPS unit, as the last thing you want is complexity in a device that is designed to give you directions. With NavPix, a smaller form factor, and shortcut buttons to Fuel and Parking locations, the Navman N60i is a big step in the right direction.

The N60i will be available in Australia in mid November and will replace the Navman iCN700 series.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

errol
09/08/2007, 04:41 PM

rating
10
/10

Nav man N60i Brilliant tried had to get it lost but came through with flying colours. Best Gps i have used yet.
Cheers errol

Pros: pix real gem to use

Report offensive comment

colyoung
01/02/2007, 03:25 AM

rating
8
/10

I've tried both the Tom Tom 901 and Nuvi 660,but IMO the Navman beats the lot.Its concise menus are easy to follow and it has an RDS traffic system that actually works!

Pros: Looks good,does its job and the Navpix is a Wow.

Cons: Touch screen a bit hit and miss at times.No text to speech.

Report offensive comment

colyoung
15/01/2007, 04:06 AM

rating
8
/10

I like it better than my tom tom 910

Pros: Easy to use and Navpix is super

Cons: Mounting the bracket is a pain.

Report offensive comment

watto
08/01/2007, 02:13 PM

rating
9
/10

Terrific little unit. Easy to use and read.

Pros: Easy to use. Very accurate.

Cons: Maps are sometimes not accurate, but this is probably a fault with Sensis and not Navman.

Report offensive comment

Uccello
08/11/2006, 09:36 PM

rating
10
/10

Nice Slim Desighn, Love Navpix

Report offensive comment


25/10/2006, 10:39 AM

rating
10
/10

never get lost

Report offensive comment


17/10/2006, 04:34 PM

rating
10
/10

great product i have the N40i its a dream machine

great unit. it does not have all those irrelevant extras. they have kept the extras to be inline with navigation. i have a stereo in my car and a hands free for my phone. What is the point of them. You cant listen to music or talk via your blue tooth whilst navigating. but i did take a photo of a great pub that had no street signs near it. Its great. My wife does not know addresses so she takes a photo or downloads it, clicks on it and goes. I love it.

Pros: navigate to pics. brilliant idea. I dont need a blue tooth i cant use while navigating or a mp3 player while navigating. they are a waste of money i have a stereo in the can and a headset for my phone

Cons: it should come with more pre loaded navpix

Report offensive comment


17/10/2006, 04:28 PM

rating
8
/10

Wow NaxPix looks awesome-look forward to buying one

Report offensive comment

sandz
16/10/2006, 01:33 AM

rating
8
/10

pretty good navigator!

Pros: easy to use, clear LCD, can change the view of map

Cons: the camera isn't that good, sometimes the touch screen is too sensitive and types in the wrong letter etc.

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • Uniden Trax 350

  • TomTom Go 730

  • Nokia World 2008: Making the internet personal

  • Top GPS features

  • GPS traffic messaging FAQ

  • How Navteq mapped Australia

  • Traffic-enabled GPS navigators

  • Navman S300t

  • TomTom XL Traffic (2nd generation)

More articles »

Product finder

Membership benefits

Create a personalised homepage

Create a personalised homepage

Choose your interests from our 16 categories and only see articles relevant to you. Sign up for a free CNET Australia membership now!