BEST CAR GPS FOR YOU 2018 UPDATED
Still these days...Our phone can’t Do..."BUT GPS DO":
Let’s See How It is possible For all of Us-
![]() |
| GARMIN GPS |
These days in the world where app-enabled smartphones have apparently limitless capacity, one must ask whether the once-innovative GPS device has lost its bearings.
Turn-by-turn navigation system, real-time traffic reporting, satellite-tracked speeds, voice guidance, and crowd-sourced alerts are all part of popular apps like Google Maps and Waze, so dishing out $300 for redundant features can seem foolish.
GPS creators with years of experience and millions of actual-world test miles now offer advanced driver assistance features, Bluetooth connectivity, geo-based recommendations, voice commands, and much more on large HD display tv. For many smartphone users, in day-to-day life includes watching their monthly data allotment dwindle, but modern GPS units can be operated independently on Wi-Fi and your data.
Either you upgrading your older car with new technology or simply looking for a high-quality navigation partner, our list of the best in-car GPS devices is sure to have something to meet your needs.
| Garmin Speak |
The Garmin Speak collaborate GPS Navigation with Amazon’s digital assistant, Alexa, resulting in a compact unit with an OLED screen and a couple of voice-enabled features.
It gives turn-by-turn directions like a standard GPS while providing access to music streams, audiobooks, news, weather information, and a host of compatible smart home devices.
It’s a clever all-in-one device that takes up far less space on your windshield than a conventional, screen-based GPS, though, you’ll need to tuck the power cables out of the way.
Your Speak connects with your car and smartphone via Bluetooth and responds to requests using your car’s speaker system. Garmin notes that older cars without integrated Bluetooth can connect to Speak using an auxiliary connection, though, that’s one more wire to tuck out of the way.
We tested the Speak search and concluded that the built-in microphone does a decent job at picking up commands, even on a noisy road, but the lack of a dedicated display can make navigating more difficult.

Comments
Post a Comment