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 Rating:
  Summary: A Disaster!!
 Review: What an incredible disappointment! Study the other reviwews on this site carefully. They accurately document the failures of this program. It is inconceivable that the company that consistently produced the best (unclassified) mapping product in the world has gone so wrong in so many ways. The program is 10 times slower than predecessors, and frequently cannot be installed properly on standard powerful PCs running Windows XP. The interface went from marvellously simple to draconian. The map display went from clear, comprehensive and well designed to uninterpretable or useless. There are few corrections in street errors or freeway interchanges or street numbering, even when errors were reported. Many simple useful features from the old classic interface and display of Street Atlas 9 (2000) have disappeared. For instance, once you create a map note, you cannot move it! And you cannot import routes saved from earlier versions, except as "drawing objects." The routing algorithm is seriously degraded. Using the same start and finish, with identical speed preferences, SA9 found a much faster and more logical route than SA 2004. Then, manually entering the SA9 route into SA 2004 (using Vias), SA 2004 agreed that the new route was both much faster and much shorter! Duhhh.... Obviously the brilliant former staff at Delorme has been replaced by idiots. Technical support is unable even to understand the problems with installation and operation, let alone solve them. Switch to Microsoft Streets and Trips 2003, and sell your Delorme stock fast.
 
 Rating:
  Summary: Nice try - but awkward and disappointing
 Review: With some repeating of the previous reviews, comparing with MS
 Streets & Trips 2003,
 Pros: 1. A relatively complete database of points of interest. I canfind Walmart, Safeway, Food4less, etc. The advanced find tool
 is powerful. I can find a name or an address in a city or
 a part of the map, etc.
 
 2. Voice instructions and voice commands for GPS. If you drive
 alone with a GPS connecting to a laptop, you will see that
 this function is very important.
 
 3. There are many advanced features if you dig in. For example you
 can specify the road preference to a very detailed level; you
 can create simple road or modify road properties; you can find
 radio station coverage and traffic condition phone number
 information which could be useful if you are stuck in a jam or
 snow storm.
 
 Cons:
 1. It's very slow sometimes! My laptop is an IBM Thinkpad, 1.6G Mobile Pentium 4 with 512M memory, 40G hard disk. I think this computing
 power is pretty good for a laptop. I do not have problem
 with panning/zooming the map or calculating the route. However
 switching between tabs can be slow sometimes. Moreover, at first
 seems the voice functions are, although not perfect, working OK.
 But the only time I seriously used the voice instructions for my travel, it
 lagged so much that it spit out one word or two at a time and by
 the time it reminded me to go on a high way, I was already preparing
 to come off it. I re-installed the text to speech engine as indicated
 on the support webpage and the voice instructions became normal
 again. But how can I depend on such a product to find my directions if
 it can just go "dead" in the middle of the way!
 
 2. It does not work on Windows with languages other than English as the
 default setting! This will slash a great number of users, I believe,
 because a lot of people here are not native English speaker. The default
 language for my Windows 2000 is Chinese. The Find tab just didn't work.
 I have a PC whose default setting is French because I was learning French
 on it. I tried that PC and the Find tab didn't work either. I have to
 convert my laptop back to "pure English". I've never heard of softwares like
 this. Maybe they are still using controls or database engines from the last
 century. Plain lazy.
 
 3. The map is far from good looking. Two main problems are: at a higher level
  most road names are gone, sometimes you can not even see the name for a majorhigh way - very inconvenient; the point of interest icon is only a small pity
 gray dot until you zoom in almost to the last level. In this regard, Micosoft
 Streets & Trips is much much better.
 
 4. It is hard to use! You really need to go through the user's guide to be confident
 using it. Sometimes you have to use tricks. For example when I created a route
 from Davis, CA to a place in Sacramento, the route is supposed to simply follow
 Business 80 mostly, which has a 90 degree turn from east to north at the center
 of Sacramento. However, at the turn the software told me to come off 80, take
 34th street, then turn on to Stockton, and go on to 80 again! I almost pulled my
 hair off. Now I found the trick: you can specify your road preference as: prefer
 limited-access roads; avoid local roads; avoid major connections. Then the software
 will "smartly" follow 80. Don't say there's too much artificial intelligence
 required - Microsoft software did the route effortlessly without me telling it to
 keep on the same high way.
 
 5. The text to speech and speech recognition engines are old and probably outdated technology
 from Microsoft around 1998. The synthetic voice is not very pleasant to listen to.
 In a noisy car you really need a good headset as well as speaking loud to make your voice
 recognized.
 
 6. Seems the map data is mostly accurate but not as accurate as Microsoft Streets & Trips.Mostly my GPS icon is on the road fine but some roads it is really off. Never happened
 with Microsoft software yet.
 
 
 Conclusion: If you are shopping for a nice mapping software and you are not a GPS
 maniac, just wait for a deal and buy Microsoft Streets & Trips 2004 (the two major
 improvements for 2004 over 2003 is: 2004 displays one way; 2004 updates GPS data
 every second. Although maybe a Microsoft trick not to provide them in 2003, these
 are very important features). With a simple serial GPS (~$100) you are in pretty
 good shape and will not feel terrified while lost.
 However if you want to find every Walmart or Fry's in a new place and want to hear
 machine voice reminding you the turns, get Street Atlas 2004 TOO. Only getting
 Street Atlas will drive you nuts. Buy both MS stuff and this can give you a robust
 backup when Street Atlas refuses to work.
 And finally, once you hit the road, rely mostly on the road signs and your own brain.
 Don't get yourself killed just because your computer has made a mistake.
 
 
 
 
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