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Personal navigation assistant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Portable combination positioning and navigation system
Example of a personal navigation assistant.
See also:Satellite navigation device,Automotive navigation system, andSatellite navigation

APersonal Navigation Assistant (PNA) also known asPersonal Navigation Device orPortable Navigation Device (PND) is a portableelectronic product which combines a positioning capability (such asGPS) andnavigation functions.

Some PNA devices arePDAs with limited features and can be unlocked.[1]

History

[edit]

The earliest PNAs were hand-held GPS units (circa mid-1980s) which were capable of displaying the user's location on an electronicmap. These units included simple navigation functions such as course-to-steer and course-made-good. This first generation of PNAs were used by the US military.

Market developments

[edit]
Bicycle navigation on a personal navigation assistant.

According to the analyst firmBerg Insight, there were more than 150 millionturn-by-turn navigation systems worldwide in mid-2009, including about 35 million factory installed and aftermarket in-dash navigation systems, over 90 million Personal Navigation Devices (PNDs) and an estimated 28 million navigation-enabled mobile handsets with GPS.[2]

The term PNA has come into widespread use with the growing popularity ofautomobile navigation systems. Original PNAs provided users with a map layer, real-time-traffic, and a routing engine with audio/visual cues for turn-by-turn guidance. The latest generation of PNA have sophisticated navigation functions such as parking assistance andpersonalization engines that enhance the user experience. To reduce total cost of ownership and time to market, most modern PNA devices such as those made byGarmin Ltd.,Mio Technology Ltd. orTomTom International BV. are running an off-the-shelfembedded operating system such asWindows CE orEmbedded Linux oncommodity hardware with OEM versions of popular PDA Navigation software packages such as TomTom Navigator, I-GO 2006, Netropa IntelliNav iGuidance, or Destinator.

Other manufacturers such asGarmin andMagellan prefer to bundle their own software developed in-house. Because many of these devices use an embedded OS, many technically inclined users find it easy to modify PNAs to run third party software and use them for things other than navigation, such as a low-cost audio-video player orPDA replacement.

GPS equipped mobile phones have now eclipsed the sale of dedicated GPS units.Nokia,Samsung Electronics,Motorola and other handset makers were predicted to sell 162 million GPS equipped phones in 2007, dwarfing the 20 million units Garmin and TomTom have forecast they will sell combined, according to iSuppli, a leading market researcher in California. The inclusion ofGoogle Maps Navigation inAndroid devices such asMotorola Droid andNokia's announcement of freeOvi Maps has led to many people using their smartphones instead of having a separate PNA for trip navigation.

Motorized vehicle navigation

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Systems designed for automobiles are able to calculate routes taking into account the road network, and sometimes in real time: their popularity has led to the wide spread of navigation assistants.

On some devices, the user can define the place of arrival by his postal address (and no longer only by hisgeographical coordinates), and sometimes with the name of the place. Instructions are often given step by step, with directional pictograms commented on by a voice synthesis system.

Thenavigator then gives route suggestions that the driver can follow when they are relevant. Sometimes, these navigation systems use incorrect data (Map not adapted to the vehicle or not updated, canyon effect, etc.) generating erroneous information, and the driver who follows them blindly can cause an accident which can be fatal, in particular for heavy vehicles: coaches and other heavy goodsvehicles. Thus, the systems display alerts warning the user of these possible errors.

Some navigators are specialized for heavy goods vehicles and take into account the size of the vehicles but also their mass and dimensions, in order to only offer itineraries using suitable roads. On the other hand, other applications for the general public, such as Waze or Coyote, are unable to give a route including all the constraints that this type of vehicle must follow (including mass and height) to truck drivers.[3]

Features

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Some versions are very complete, and can offer:

  • three-dimensional maps.
  • entry of the arrivaladdress by voice recognition, and sometimes only with the name of the place.
  • a calculation of the route taking into account constraints in real time (traffic jams,road works,weather conditions, etc.), the data being provided directly by a connection integrated into the vehicle (Renault R-Link for example), or, in the case of a mobile application, by the cellular data of the smartphone;
  • a system can display the current maximum authorized speed, and possibly issue a warning if the driver does not respect it; it can also signal the possible presence of a fixedradar.
  • aGPS service with communication features. Thanks to aSIM card andmobile networks, the user benefits from information updated in real time and very regularly, without any intervention on the part of the user. This feature also makes it possible to alert on the presence of radars (fixed and mobile), police controls, to inform about the state of the traffic, the weather, or even carpooling, etc. The leaders in the field offer connected devices: TomTom LIVE (integrated with Renault R-Link), Garmin 1690, Medion, Navigon LIVE, Goodkap! with Coyote, Avertinoo and Camsam with Munic. Note that mostmobile navigationapplications (Maps,Google Maps,[4]Waze, etc.) offerproprietary systems of this type. So there is a limit to this: a little-usedsystem application will be unable to function properly, and to provideinformation in real time.[5]

References

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  1. ^"See here how to "unlocks" Mio made PNAs". Archived fromthe original on 2008-12-05. Retrieved2008-03-27.
  2. ^"Berg Insight's PND report 2009"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved2009-12-23.
  3. ^"Sécurité des ponts : l'utilisation des GPS par les routiers mise en cause".L'Express (in French). 2019-11-19. Retrieved2023-02-24.
  4. ^zikzak (2023-02-10)."Qu'est-ce que Google Maps".Zik Zak (in French). Archived fromthe original on 2023-02-24. Retrieved2023-02-24.
  5. ^zikzak (2023-02-08)."10 applications GPS pour la navigation [Android et iOS]".Zik Zak (in French). Archived fromthe original on 2023-02-24. Retrieved2023-02-24.

See also

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Systems
Devices
Chipsets
GNSS augmentation
Protocols
Technology
Geographic services
Related topics
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