
Aigo has just lifted the curtain on its latest GPS navigation system known as the GPS-P370. This device comes with fairly standard features, ranging from a 3.5″ touchscreen LCD display to the SiRFStar III GPS chipset. What surprises me would be the brains behind the device - the GPS-P370 is actually powered by an ancient Freescale Dragonball 266MHz processor, something we won’t see in devices these days. Other features include 64MB of internal memory and an SD/MMC memory card slot for maps and storage purposes. The Aigo GPS-P370 measures 120mm x 87mm x 21.5mm and is runs off a 1300mAh battery. There is no word on whether this will make it to the U.S. or Europe.
31 May
Posted by dusanb as GPS System
GPS-enabled software developer Augmentra announced the latest version of ViewRanger off-road mapping, navigation and information software for Symbian S60 based smartphones, that also supports Nokia N95's built-in GPS receiver.
Unlike "regular" navigation apps out there, ViewRanger is specifically designed for the off-road users — such as hill-walkers, mountain bikers, geo-cachers, birdwatchers, or rural tourists — providing […]

If your notebook does not come with a D-Sub or video output and you desperately need to throw in a couple of monitors for work purposes, the I-O Data USB-RGB dongle does the trick, supporting up to WXGA+ and SXGA+ resolutions. Pricing details are currently unknown, but unless your notebook is older than a Pentium II, finding a USB port on it shouldn’t be a problem. My gut instinct tells me that this’ll probably be one of the least popular notebook peripherals to be produced ever.