Loading...
Best Holiday Deals for Any Budget
Subscribe to LAPTOP Magazine
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks

Buying Guides
Shop Dell Notebooks
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks
Best Prices on Dell Notebooks
Home > Reviews > GPS
Find a Review
Netbooks
Browse Netbook Reviews
Most Recent
Find a Netbook Review

Netbook Types
Aspire One
ASUS Eee PC
Dell Inspirion Mini
Shop Dell Mini
HP Netbooks
Lenovo Netbooks
MSI Wind
Samsung Netbooks
Toshiba Netbooks
More Netbook Coverage
Netbook Buying Guide
Netbook Buying Video
Netbook Tips and Hacks
Netbook News

Shop All Netbooks
Shop Dell Netbooks
Best Deals on the Dell Netbooks
Dell Inspiron Mini
Dell Inspiron Mini Coverage
News
Reviews
Tips / How-To
Shop Dell Mini
Save on Dell the Dell Mini
BlackBerry
BlackBerry Coverage
Reviews
Tips
News
Shopping


Resource Centers
Dell Notebooks



Advertisement

DeLorme Earthmate GPS BT-20

The DeLorme Earthmate GPS fails to perform as well as it syncs laptops and cell phones.


    Price as Reviewed: $149.00
Review Contents:  
Print
Pros
Cons
Quick Specs Full Specs

Price as Reviewed: $149.00


by Troy Dreier on February 13, 2008

DeLorme's receiver/software package is easier to use than Microsoft Streets and Trips, but it hasn't caught up to the simplicity and usefulness of standard portable GPS devices.
 

In the Box

This version of Earthmate GPS comes with a yellow 2-ounce GPS receiver that's 3 x 1.9 x .6 inches and connects to your laptop or smart phone wirelessly via Bluetooth, or wired via an included USB cable. The software comes on two DVDs, and includes a 4-million points-of-interest database.
 

Great Features, Troubling Interface

With its multitab interface the Earthmate GPS BT-20 was simpler to use than Microsoft Streets and Trips because routing and navigation controls were easier to find. Still, DeLorme could have done more to make this combo easier to use.
 
You search POIs under the Find tab, but the cumbersome interface makes selecting categories and finding results in a given city difficult. Once you've found an address, you need to right-click it to send it to the routing tab since you can't automatically route to it.
 
On the plus side, Earthmate does offer street name pronunciation and easy rerouting. Unfortunately, this GPS receiver doesn't track positions nearly as often as a standalone navigator does.
 
Once during our testing, 2 minutes went by without a position update. While the maps seem mostly up-to-date, we weren't impressed by the program calling New Jersey's Route 139 "unnamed road," or by directions that told us to turn right "in 28 seconds," instead of "in two-tenths of a mile." Also, Earthmate doesn't offer subscription-based traffic and gas prices, as Streets and Trips does.
 

The Verdict

If you need laptop-based GPS, DeLorme may be the easier alternative, but you'll be happier with a budget-priced, dedicated GPS navigator.
 
 
 
Related Links:
Try as it might, Microsoft's Streets and Trip can't outperform standard GPS.
 
ALK CoPilot Live 7 North America Bluetooth Edition
Don’t feel like springing for a standalone GPS? This smart phone add-on could fill the bill.
 
Mio DigiWalker C220 3.5-Star Review
This low-priced, travel-sized navigator gets the job done.
Loading...

Next Page: Image Gallery
 

Print Reprints

Market Place

Featured Sponsors

ad Dell Laptops Starting at $449
Advertisement
Loading...
Advertisement
Advertisement