NewsDude
07-09-2008, 03:20 PM
Doreen Rosimos of Marlborough, N.H., brought along her Rottweiler, Zelda, when she went on an assignment in Kentucky.
When Zelda became sick one day, Rosimos, who heads a firm that funds micro-enterprises, quickly typed "veterinarian" into her car's global-positioning device (GPS), and found one nearby within minutes. The emergency surgery saved Zelda's life. "I never would have found it without the GPS," she says.
Rosimos is one of a growing number of travelers who increasingly rely on GPS and other navigation tools to cope with unfamiliar places and unplanned situations. They're using directions and traffic alerts, scouting pizzerias, comparing prices of nearby gas stations, receiving weather reports and spotting friends who happen to be in the same city.
"The phone is becoming the lifestyle device, and navigation is almost a foundational service. People expect it to be a part of their plan," says Scott Lane of Sprint.
Portable GPS devices are seeing "explosive growth," says Tom Murray of TomTom, a GPS device manufacturer. About 10 million GPS devices were sold in North America last year, vs. 2.5 million in 2006, and the industry is on track to sell 20 million this year, TomTom's Murray says.
But consumers are also accessing navigation tools on their cell phones and smartphones. More than 150 million cell phones have an embedded GPS chip, allowing wireless carriers to introduce services that include map directions and local points of interest.
The sector is also being fueled by other technological enhancements, such as faster wireless networks and improved phone screen graphics, as well as an increased overall familiarity with car GPS devices.
An army of start-up software companies is aggressively pitching products to the wireless carriers in hopes of being able to sell to their customers.
For instance, uLocate sells 70 programs that can be downloaded from its Web site, Where.com. The lineup includes an...
More... (http://www.toptechnews.com/story.xhtml?story_id=60667)
When Zelda became sick one day, Rosimos, who heads a firm that funds micro-enterprises, quickly typed "veterinarian" into her car's global-positioning device (GPS), and found one nearby within minutes. The emergency surgery saved Zelda's life. "I never would have found it without the GPS," she says.
Rosimos is one of a growing number of travelers who increasingly rely on GPS and other navigation tools to cope with unfamiliar places and unplanned situations. They're using directions and traffic alerts, scouting pizzerias, comparing prices of nearby gas stations, receiving weather reports and spotting friends who happen to be in the same city.
"The phone is becoming the lifestyle device, and navigation is almost a foundational service. People expect it to be a part of their plan," says Scott Lane of Sprint.
Portable GPS devices are seeing "explosive growth," says Tom Murray of TomTom, a GPS device manufacturer. About 10 million GPS devices were sold in North America last year, vs. 2.5 million in 2006, and the industry is on track to sell 20 million this year, TomTom's Murray says.
But consumers are also accessing navigation tools on their cell phones and smartphones. More than 150 million cell phones have an embedded GPS chip, allowing wireless carriers to introduce services that include map directions and local points of interest.
The sector is also being fueled by other technological enhancements, such as faster wireless networks and improved phone screen graphics, as well as an increased overall familiarity with car GPS devices.
An army of start-up software companies is aggressively pitching products to the wireless carriers in hopes of being able to sell to their customers.
For instance, uLocate sells 70 programs that can be downloaded from its Web site, Where.com. The lineup includes an...
More... (http://www.toptechnews.com/story.xhtml?story_id=60667)