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My old cell phone was on its last legs. I had twice given my "free
upgrades" to my kids so they could get the "latest-greatest" music-enabled whiz phones, so my old phone was...just a phone. It looked like a hockey puck after a full season on the ice, with hardly any paint left on it, and the sound quality was starting to go. So, when my "free upgrade" came up again, off to the Verizon store I went. I wanted something with a built-in planner, something WITHOUT a touch screen (my son's experience with his "Chocolate" taught me that lesson), and a decent built-in camera. The LG EnV was the one I settled on. The EnV has all the features of their top-of-the-line "Voyager", but without the problematic touch screen. The feature list is quite impressive, but the ones that are most pertinent to aviators a 1. GPS 2. Internet access. 1. GPS. I had heard that cell phones were GPS enabled, but I didn't know how far they had come. The EnV has two LCD screens. The one on the outside is standard "cell-phone" size, but it opens up to display a much larger internal LCD screen that is actually a bit bigger than the one in my Garmin 496. The navigational interface is easy and intuitive, and all you have to do is enter an address (or point of interest) in and let the phone give you street-by-street driving instructions, complete with a moving map. Cooler yet, with the bluetooth earpiece, the little voice in your ear TELLS YOU "turn left, 300 yards". It's quite remarkable. Better yet, it's NOT really GPS, which requires a clear view of the sky. The phone is actually more like LORAN, using cell towers to triangulate your position against its internal database of the world. Thus, it works indoors, and there's no need to position the thing on the dashboard. No power cords, not antenna wires. Very nice. I presume that it can't be used in the air, but it's sure making finding our way around a strange city easier after we arrive. (Yes, the 496 has turn-by-turn driving capability, too, but in practice we've found that we just don't take it with us when we borrow the courtesy car. The 496 is just too futzy to take out of the panel dock, and we never seem to remember to bring the little bean-bag dashboard mount and the little antenna. And, of course, you can't leave a $3K GPS sitting on the dash of a clapped-out old police cruiser, so we're always trying to lock it in the trunk. The EnV, on the other hand, is always on my belt, so we're using it all the time.) 2. Internet Access. I used to subscribe to a cell phone weather service that gave me access to radar and satellite info, as well as METARS and TAFs. It cost the same per month as full web-access does on this phone -- and now I can get much of the same weather as I can on any computer. When you open the EnV it's got a full QWERTY keyboard that makes entering data easy. That big (relatively speaking) color screen makes viewing easy, and I'm surprised at how quickly the web loads. Verizon has invested heavily in improving the speed of mobile web applications, and it shows. There are a host of other great features (the planner is terrific, the camera is very good, the 2 GB memory card holds lots of pix and video, it can record digital audio for hours, it's a very nice speaker phone) that I use daily, and a bunch I may never use (texting, iPod-like music, etc) but the future really is NOW. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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