nexus 7 as sat nav HELP!
ladyloulou
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we have a nexus 7 which hubby wants to use as sat nav, now when we are in a wifi area and put the destination in it will hold it and work perfectly. But if we are in the middle of town with no wifi signal it will not let you input a destination. What is the idiot doing wrong? please help he is driving me mad!
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I suspect the problem is that the Sat Nav app needs an internet connection to do anything useful. When you are in range of WiFi it can obviously connect to do whatever it is it needs to do. Once you drop out of WiFi range it loses connection and so cannot do the necessary.
But if you had the version with mobile data then it could stay connected via the mobile phone network and that would probably allow it to work.
I could be entirely wrong here (and willing to be corrected by anyone with greater knowledge), but from your description it does sound as if the internet connection could be important.
Hi, i had no idea about mobile data it was bought from google not tied in with any phone contract. But a normal satnav doesnt need a phone/ data contract to work so why should this? i am more confused than ever now lol
There is a possibility that the app you are using does not store any map data on the device but downloads it as needed from the internet. Stand-alone Sat Navs and some mobile device apps do store map data on the device so can work entirely independently of any internet connection.
it will allow you to download a portion of the map for offline use.
there are free apps such as this one:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.navfree.android.OSM.ALL
which have free offline mapping.
You can mitigate this by selecting an area of the map that you want to use, while you're connected to wifi, and the Google Maps app will download and store that data for offline use.
The area saved is quite generous but not enough to get you from one end of the country to the other.
I'm not sure if turn-by-turn directions will work on an offline saved map, but I imagine it will.
For long journeys, a map app that stores *all* its data on your tablet - just like satnavs do - might be your best bet.
We have downloaded this and switched off all the wifi, its looking good, will let you know tomorrow when we have used it on the road. Ironically we will probably only use it once a month or so, but after his tomtom accidentally broke (he dropped it!) he convinced me that he needed the nexus and it would be cheap as he is saving the cost of buying a satnav :rolleyes:
Fair enough indeed. I'm not surprised in the slightest for you thinking the satnav on your tablet should work the same way. It was quite an eye opener you mentioning it tbh.
This was after downloading the Google map to local memory (the whole of Kent in this case).
have used this all morning. works like a dream, many thanks to all who replied x (my 1000th post , only taken me 8 years lol)
Why not just get a bloody satnav. What's the point of using the Nexus as a satnav when there are perfectly good satnavs which would do the trick without having to faff around with wifi connections or pay mobile network data rates. I really can't see it. Big boys and their toys for Lord's sake. Would you really use a toaster to boil water?
Calm down
If anyone is interested in using the Nexus 7 as a sat nav I'd have though one of the Sat Nav apps off the Play store would be worth having a look at.
I would have thought the biggest problem of using a Nexus 7 as a Sat Nav would be the size of the thing in the windscreen!
If you only want an occasional Sat Nav then just use your phone with a dashboard mount.
Which would be a lot cheaper than a new satnav.
As i explained before we dont use a satnav that often but the nexus would be used every day. which is why its useful to do the two things. A satnav would just sit in the cupboard most of the time, so therefore would be a waste of money.
We have a van and it sits on the console perfectly, nowhere near the windscreen,
Welcome to the forums.
Also, welcome to half past four on Monday!!
You can buy the TomTom App which is now compatible with the Nexus 7 according to several comments on forums.
Navfree is great especially being free.
To be fair, it's not obvious from the post that it's that product. Only the link contains the name.
Fair enough. I was in a taxi recently that had a iPad mounted on the dashboard as a Sat Nav. I thought that was a little excessive.