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Find the Magellan

Find the Magellan (980654-03) Maps Software with the help of eHow's how to experts. Compare prices from eHow selected online stores, and find the Magellan (980654-03) Maps Software at the cheapest price.

Take your compatable Magellan GPS unit to the next GPS level. Now you can use the same handheld GPS unit for hiking a trail in the Grand Canyon or navigating Lake Michigan on a boat to auto guide you through city streets with turn-by-turn and audio-prompted. The Magellan MapSend DirectRoute software, is the first street-routing software designed specifically for recreational GPS handhelds. Now many Magellan customers who use GPS technology primarily for recreational purposes can gain travel routes to city destinations, street addresses and thousands of points of interest.

So how do I determine which GPS unit is for me? Quite a few options now exist for customers in the GPS marketplace. Whether you need a handheld unit for backpacking or boating, or one for your automobile (they are becoming an attractive choice!) or for one of a countless of uses, there are various reputable manufacturers of quality GPS units out there to help you find your way through the maze of choices. Names like Magellan, Garmin, Rino, Etrex and Meridian lead the market, and are readily available. Take your time, check out the a variety of features each has to offer, and get yourself outfitted with one of the more useful and efficient navigational tools out there today.

The Triton 2000, described here, will retail for $500. Other models with smaller screens, no flashlight, fewer basemaps, etc will retail for as little as $130. Other models in the series are the Triton 1500 at $399, Triton 500 at $249, Triton 400 at $199, Triton 300 at $149, and Triton 200 at $129. All are expected to be available in September.

Magellan announced six new devices, all to be available between September and October. Not too much has changed in features between their similarly numbered siblings… except for the size. Finally the Magellan devices have shed some of their bulk and are now some of the thinnest devices, at .7 inches in thickness. This makes them some of the thinnest GPS devices offered. The new devices will feature combinations of AAA tourbook information, voice recognition (we can only wish it works better than the 4050 but our hopes are not too high) RDS-TMC traffice receivers, and SiRFstarIII chipsets. Press release follows, and we’ll have a full wrap-up (including photos) shortly.

 

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