Garmin iQue M4 GPS-Enabled Pocket PC


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Manufacturer: Garmin

List Price: $749.99

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Garmin iQue M4 GPS-Enabled Pocket PC

The iQue M4 is Garmin’s first iQue to come pre-loaded with City Navigator North America NT covering the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico, eliminating the need for downloads from your PC. After using the touchscreen to enter information about the destination?such as the name or street address?the driver will be given detailed, turn-by-turn, voice-prompted directions. Destinations may also be selected through the points of interest (POIs) database, which includes nearly six million POIs such as restaurants, banks, and hotels. This street-smart navigator can remind you of an appointment, show the location on the Map Page, and route you right to the front door. With its POI Loader software, users can augment pre-loaded maps with custom POIs such as school zones and safety cameras. The iQue M4 also features Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition operating system, which includes Pocket Office applications and supports portrait/landscape screen orientation for easy viewing of multimedia content. The built-in Windows Media Player lets users browse music by artist, album, song, and genre. MP3s can be loaded onto an SD card or internal memory for music on-the-go. WAAS enabled; includes MCX-type connector for optional external GPS antenna connection Integrated flip-up GPS patch antenna can be positioned for optimal reception Display - 3.5? diagonal, (89 mm), 240 x 320 pixel, QVGA transflective TFT display, 64K colors Processor - 312 MHz Intel PXA 271 XScale processor Internal 1250 mAh lithium ion rechargeable battery; 5-7 hours of continuous PDA/GPS use Internal memory - 64MB RAM, 32MB ROM Built-in speaker/ Voice recorder / Headphone jack / Interfaces - USB and infrared (IrDA) Unit size - 2.83?W x 5.04?H x. 75?D (72.0 x 128.0 x 19 mm) Weight - 5.9 oz (166 g)

Garmin iQue M4 GPS-Enabled Pocket PC Features:

  • Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC
  • High-sensitivity integrated GPS receiver by SiRF
  • SD/MMC memory card expansion slot for use with other MapSource street mapping products
  • SDIO compatible for optional WiFi, Bluetooth, camera or other peripherals
  • Includes Microsoft Pocket Outlook, Internet Explorer, Word and Excel; Windows Media Player, MSN Messenger Service, Calculator and ActiveSync

Garmin iQue M4 GPS-Enabled Pocket PC Reviews

overall, good product
I bought this product for 2 weeks and I enjoy using it.

The GPS function is great except that it takes about 30 seconds to search for signals at the beginning of each trip. The PDA function is satisfactory. The only weakness is that the built-in memory is slightly small. But I guess it is the standard. The things to improve this product are

1. it should come with a carrying case,

2. it should have a “built-in” wireless internet card, and

3. it should support Skype.

Overall. the product is good and deserves the price.

Nice GPS product
Used it for cross-USA NY-CA, so learned a-lot about it. It performed very well, probably saved me at least 1/2 an hour every day looking at maps, and still getting lost.

As most GPS products, it does Not have “text-to-speech”, i.e. it tells you turn right/left, take exit etc., but the name of street to turn on, or number of exit is only displayed - you have to look to see it.

So far, I only used it as GPS, not as pocket PC.

Honest Review
Pros

——

1.) You can import favorites from your other Garmin GPS straight into the M4 using MapSource software. Very time saving.

2.) Mp3 player quality was outstanding.

3.) Tablet text recognition was outstanding.

4.) Transferring files greater than 50 megs worked unlike the doc described.

5.) WMV and other video formats was playing at a quality far better than I would expect. Fullscreen too.

6.) Voice recorder was real handy.

7.) Your nails will work as good as your stylus pen. Screen sensitivity is fluid and responsive to both.

Cons

——

1.) Satellite reception is enough to get by. I have had to wait 5 minutes to connect at times. And that’s not under the bridge etc.

2.) Compare with Garmin 2720, the interface is just not friendly. Way too many clicks and screens.

3.) Compare with Garmin 2720, route recalc seemed far slower. Far far slower.

4.) Does not come with any case, the freebie screen cover just doesn’t cut it.

5.) Does not come with any SD card. Though some may see it as a pro.

6.) No replacable battery option. Hope you are near a car or wall socket after 5 hours.

7.) File transfer is downright slow.

8.) Does not come with a scientific calculator.

9.) Questionable as to whether this device will properly handle SD cards greater than 2GB.

Garmin Review
I very much like the M4. The calender is easy to use and so is the gps system. The gps system will recalculate your route if you get off course. You can also save specific addresses and delete them later if you want.

M4 almost perfect
I seem to have a GPS for every kind of activity I do and everyone of them excel, and also have weaknesses in one way or another.

I recently parted ways with my BMW 330 that had a build-in Navigational system that was an excellent product once you got past the user interface. My new car doesn’t have a Nav system, and I didn’t want to mount a laptop like I did previously, so I checked into the offerings described at http://gpsinformation.net/. The NuVi looked great and I was all set to buy that one, but it had features, like the MP3 player that I didn’t need. Then I discovered the M4, and after a few days of contemplation, that’s the one I picked.

Now that I’ve had it for a few weeks, I have to say that I’m quite happy with it. Like any new product, the user interface takes some practice to get used to, but after awhile, you can run through the interface quite rapidly.

I went with the M4 over the M5, even though it’s a slower processor because of the SiRF chipset. This is indeed a superior chipset to my Garmin Rino for example. *Most* of the time it picks up satellites almost immediately, however, there are times when it does take a few minutes. I usually experience this when I turn it on when I’m already on the move.

I really love how Garmin inverts the map colors at night time. This way you can still have the display set to bright, yet it doesn’t distract you from night time driving. Handy since there is no auto-dim of the screen based on the ambient lighting.

However, this is not the best screen for full-on day use if the sun is beaming right on it. Compared to the built-in screen on my ex-BMW, there is no comparison. The sun pretty much washes out the screen and makes it difficult to read. It’s readable, but certainly not the best-in-class.

Having said all of that, the only thing that is really annoying is that if you deviate from the plotted course (route), the Garmin will recalculate a new course. Hey, that’s great, but why make the map disappear while that’s happening? With a complex route (or even not so complex really) it can take quite a bit of time to recalculate. An example: There is road construction in downtown Portland that causes me to travel a few blocks out of my way to get home. As I make my first deviation, the M4 recalculates, perhaps to make a turn at the next block. The problem is, I have to pass the next block too, and I pass that block either before, or when the M4 finishes its recalculation. Now it has to recalculate again, and again and again for every block I pass and never catches up. While I travel these 6, 8 or 10 blocks or so, all I see is the “Recalculating Route” dialog, and not the map. Fortunately , I know my way home, but in a new and strange city I can cover quite a distance and perhaps become lost or be needlessly far out of my way by the time I get the map back. I suspect this isn’t specific to the M4, but others as well, like the NuVi. This is the “feature” that keeps me from giving the M4 5 stars.

Otherwise, it’s a Pocket PC device that allows me to run typical Windows CE applications. It can take the Outlook address book and use the addresses as destination for the GPS, that way you don’t have to type in all those addresses again. It’s also easy to put your own addresses in via the M4’s interface. In otherwords, you’re not required to enter data in the PC and transfer it. It’s much more useful to me as a day-to-day tool than the NuVi would have been. BTW, as far as I know, it only imports addresses (contacts, to-do’s, calendars, etc, from Office/Outlook, not Outlook Express) A voucher is included that allows you to purchase Outlook 2003 for $29.99 though. If you’re using Outlook Express, this is a recommended purchase anyway, because Outlook is indeed a superior product.

The windshield mount is superior. You can angle the M4 to any orientation you like and the M4 is very easy to slide in and out of.

The sync cable that comes with the M4 charges the M4 while it’s connected to the PC, but with a separate powersupply - connected into a “Y”. If, like me, you purchase another “travel kit” for the office, you don’t get the same thing - you get a powersupply that plugs in to the M4 and a sync cable that plugs into the M4, but you can’t do both at the same time (no “Y”). In otherwords, when the M4 is plugged in to the PC with the travel kit, it is not charging. When it’s plugged in to charge, you don’t have an extra sync port to connect to the pc. I hope that made sense :-) Why can’t the M4 charge only off of the USB connection? I dunno :-)

I’m also using a 1 GB SD card with no problem in the expansion slot for extra storage. Weirdly enough, this seems to have slowed down the overall performance somewhat. I don’t see the connection. Hmm…

I also lost the stylus already :-( and the closest replacement I found (while I’m waiting for my OEM replacements) is the Tungsten T5 stylus. It’s not a perfect fit, but will fit without falling out. Mostly it’s a little short and you need a thumbnail to get it out of its slot.

If I had to do it all over, I would certainly buy the M4 again. I love it and I use it daily.

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