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Other PDAs > Hardware Reviews > Review: iPAQ rx5900 Travel Companion Review: iPAQ rx5900 Travel Companion
By Gerry Blackwell
Apps
The software that comes with the product includes the usual Windows Mobile line-up—pocket versions of Outlook calendar, contacts and e-mail that can be synchronized with your desktop or laptop, and pocket versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Windows Media Player. Besides the TomTom software, HP also includes the very cool WorldMate software. It provides a bunch of configurable, and in some cases, updateable modules. You have to install the WorldMate ActiveSync plug-in on your PC so it will update modules when you synch. WorldMate will show you time in different world cities. You can get weather for major cities—and you can add smaller cities which are updated when you synch. The currency converter lets you convert to and from any of three currencies. Key in an amount in one currency and it instantly displays conversion amounts in the other two currencies. Currencies can be updated over a Wi-Fi connection to the Web. (So why not weather too?)
The phone module gives you international country codes and North American area codes. And there's a metric converter, clothing size converter and packing check list. Altogether a useful little tool.
The important piece, though, is the TomTom navigation software. It's like others of its kind, though probably the slickest, in most respects, that I've tested. TomTom shows you a three-dimensional map display and speaks directions in a realistic human voice. There are four American voices from which to choose, including one male. I liked that the program interface is touchscreen. You don't need the stylus, you don't need to tap, only touch with a finger. Even the minimal data input required - to enter a street number, for example - can be done by lightly touching the big onscreen keyboard keys with a finger.
I also liked that the maps show only the detail you need which makes the display simpler and easier to take in at a glance. You can see streets coming up on the 3D horizon, for example, but the program doesn't show street names until you get close.
And I like that the voice reading you directions doesn't jabber continuously, as some other turn-by-turn navigation programs I've tried do. It stays blessedly silent until you're coming up to a turn. When it does speak, it sounded clear and plenty loud coming through the 5900's speaker. I had no problem hearing even in my tin can on wheels with its loose muffler.
The routes TomTom came up with were generally reasonably good, although there was one map glitch. I was driving down a major artery in my home town when TomTom told me to make a turn that didn't make any sense. I ignored it and kept driving. On the map, it looked like I was now driving through a farmer's field and across a river—instead of continuing down a major road over a bridge. A little further along, it suddenly found itself and told me to keep going the way I was. It wasn't until later I remembered that the road I was on did not go through until a few years ago when the city built a new bridge. This is a little troubling. If the TomTom maps are that far out of date in a very populous part of Canada, can you trust them elsewhere? In fairness, I've found similar anomalies in virtually every mapping application I've tried. I did try to update the TomTom maps using a utility I downloaded at the company's site, but it told me no updates were available. The car mounting kit worked very well. It includes a power plug that you attach to the device's USB cable and plug into the car lighter. The custom designed holder mounts very solidly on the windshield using a big suction cup with a locking lever. Then you can adjust the two arms so the device is sitting in an easy-to-see position. Bottom line? Despite the occasionally flaky Wi-Fi connectivity and at least one out-of-date TomTom map, I was generally impressed. If you don't like fat PDA phones but want e-mail and other data applications while traveling, and you could use some help finding your way around in strange places, this little product does it all.
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