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| Dash Express Two-Way Internet-Connected Portable GPS Navigator | 
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| Brand: Dash Category: CE
List Price: $299.99 Buy New: $289.99 You Save: $10.00 (3%)
New (2) Used (3) from $209.84
Avg. Customer Rating: 124 reviews Sales Rank: 755
Color: Black Media: Electronics Native Resolution: 480 x 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 2.8 x 4.8 x 4.1
MPN: 99-1000-001 Model: 99-1000-001 UPC: 892437002012 EAN: 0892437002012 ASIN: B0014CIBWC
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
Dash exceeded all my expectations! July 1, 2008 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a great product for someone who wants it all. Here are my favorite features:
Being able to send addresses from my desktop is awesome. When I'm planning a business trip, I review my itnerary, enter the addresses online and they are magically waiting for me when I arrive in an unfamiliar place.
Movies on the fly- it tells you whats playing, time, location everything.
It has yet to fail me and I continue to get updates wirelessly.
I looked at all the competitors and I have yet to see any other Nav device deliver what Dash does.
Dash Express - advanced GPS of the future June 26, 2008 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
I have been using the Dash for 25 days. Having used 2 other GPS units in the past this is one that is far superior in many ways. The DashApps available on their WEB site are extraordinary and though I'm not in real estate an agent shouldn't be without it.
It's a Teenager - Lot of Potential, Not Very Productive June 24, 2008 4 out of 10 found this review helpful
Huge. It may be the wifi antenna or the phone antenna or the GPS receiver inside it. But considering there are wifi enable much smaller devices and smaller phones with good reception, it is kind of hard for me to forgive the size of this. Been big, comes with extra problems. This need a huge arm to hold it and this come with just one of those. Looks like a toy crane. Believe it or not, this GPS comes with its own wrench, just like one of those come with Ikea furnitures. Arm and Unit almost take the complete glove compartment space. So I have to take one star out for the physical appearance. No, not just for been huge, but look of it's too.
It looks good in it is own way, if you mount this next to a cassette player. But if you are a type of guy who has a CD player in your car or iPod in your pocket, you may find this look like an old TV box from your grandparent's house. My $120 secondhand Herman Kardon GPS looks like a supper modal next to this.
This comes with a plastic plate suppose to stick on to your dashboard, so you can mount the GPS unit on the smooth surface of that plastic plate. Brilliant idea, if it works. Keeping a side holding this huge unit, that plastic plate even unable sticks itself on to the dashboard. I don't think it could very expensive for them to add 3M sticker on it and make it actually useable. So I'm going to take a one star out for that.
I used secondhand Herman Kardon GPS unit I bought from Ebay for around $120. The problem I had with it was, it has poor GPS receptions (so I thought) and it is difficult for me to find the exact road to exist in a complex intersection. So I brought this.
This takes extra time to boot up. But once it boot up, it acquire GPS connection relatively faster. It is quite easy to find the house address. Type the house number first, street name halfway, you get the location. I like that.
Yes. You can search for Gas price. But it is not exact or show up for all the stations. Good enough to get a basic idea.
You can install third-party applications in this. So I thought it is cool - until I install one. I install trapster (from trapster.com), and I thought it may display traps (cops :) on the map, so I can take precautions to avoid possible unpleasant encounters when I'm driving. (What a cool idea) But that is not how it works. You stop your car, search for nearest traps under an interface look like the address book, find the nearest trap (in text) and select that as your destination - and the GPS will tell you how to go there. Since I have no intention to drive to the nearest trap, some Saturday evening, I find that utterly useless. It could be nice, if that kind of information show up on the map screen while you driving, like how my cheap Herman Kardon displays Gas stations or shopping malls. But then again, this device even doesn't show those. All other third-party applications work the same way too.
Map looks horrifying compared to my cheap old GPS. Color scheme is dreadful. Some reason this GPS is not very generous with color. Black letters on dark blue background - not easy to read. Active road on White on light brown background (when no traffic info) - hard to understand while you are driving. I found myself listening to spoken street names from the GPS and looking for road signs to find the way, instead of looking at the map, because this map is not the easiest thing to read. In my old GPS, I can clearly see the passing cross roads on the map, in easy to read colors, with zooming too, and I can find my correct turn quite easily, relative to passing roads. Since that is not the case, I apologize, I have to take another star out.
This calculates the road in some strange way. I'm driving on Cross Bronx Expy (from GWB) to Soundview ave. And I have to take exit 4B since it is the closest and that is the exits all other GPS suggest. But this tell me to drive more than a mile further, take exit 5E, come back on Westchester Ave to the same spot, I may jump into from exit 4B. It is two miles extra driving, but I'm willing to forgive that as usual GPS misbehavior. In ZIP 07072, I'm driving north on the Bergen Turnpike toward the Sylvan Ave. My destination is toward GWB, so I have to enter in to the Sylvan Ave from the right side of the road and drive up like a normal person. Quite simple. You enter in to the road from right side and drive up. But this GPS tell me to turn left in to Sylvan Ave and take a u-turn (where allowed) back to right side. That is a kind of direction I may expect from one of my drunken friends at Saturday night. Not only in that location, I found similar behavior quite often. Using new technology is one thing, but driving all around unfamiliar busy roads, taking extra turns is not the safest thing to do. Now I use my old GPS parallel to this one. Hence I think it is fair for me to take out another star for all that trouble.
On the GWB, this shows me as I'm floating on the river quite often. If not, on some other totally deferent road. My old GPS simply say he lost the signal and just give up, and I thought it was bad. But now I know old fellow was just been honest. Still I'm willing to forgive this mischief, until I tried to use multiple route option. Nice function. If you obey the master. But if you been naughty and take the route bit off, just to take a bathroom break or wrong exit (or correct exit, when this GPS tell you to turn left and make a u-turn), it punish you harshly by totally ignoring the route you selected in the first place, and calculating totally deferent route, most possibly the one that you don't wanted to take in the first place. Not only that, if the GPS lost signal, it still calculate a new route. So there we are, nice looking multiple route function, but not practically useable.
Since I cannot practically use the multiple route function, traffic function is utterly useless too. Only time you can make a decision base on the traffic condition is when you use multiple route function in the begging of your trip. It shows you the traffic condition while you driving and so does my windscreen. It does not ask you up ahead "there will be traffic ahead of you and would you like to avoid it" or this don't show you traffic ahead unless you go back to routes screen while you are driving and investigate traffic condition - and I don't recommend you that. Mind you, they charge me around 10$ a month for this function. Now I want to take out another star, but no stars left.
This unit promise regular software update (if you pay them every month). And I'm going to give a star for that. Because this needs those - lot of those - and I'm counting on those. If not, I have to sell this on ebay for cheap and get myself a mature GPS unit.
Not for me, not yet (3 starts for effort) June 23, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I use my GPS on a daily basis for my visits with customers in the greater LA area. I ordered and received my Dash in April '08 and returned it after ca. 1 month. I'm excited about what they're doing and am looking forward to seeing the device evolve: The issues I had were: Non-efficient routing, sometimes outdated or mistaken addresses and, the biggest one, the long start-up times: I normally rely on my GPS to provide me with Yellow-Page data: Most of the Yellow Page data is really only accessible once the Phone connection is established. I can't wait 5-10 minutes for my GPS to start up when I plug it into the car. I did use My Dash to find addresses and transmit to the GPS. The same limitations of having to wait for the Dash to be ready for reception apply. Leaving the Dash connected in the car or carrying it from the house to the car would be alternatives... Not the most exciting ones from a convenience and security point of view. I was looking forward to seeing the traffic data really help me, especially for surface streets. I never got to that point, because too often the routing didn't work for me, because of time constraints, i.e. I'd find the same address quicker in my backup Garmin, or because that route hadn't been "scanned" yet. (Santa Monica BD in Los Angeles) I would be willing to re-consider Dash as an intelligent alternative to the Tom-Toms and Garmins once these issues are resolved. For now it's not ready for heavy use.
This is Smart Driving June 17, 2008 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
I've been waiting a while to get my hands on the Dash Express. I remember first reading about the technology about a year ago and have kept track of their recent updates. This is my first GPS nav system.
I am very pleased with my purchase thus far. I am not bothered by the size of the unit as I don't see myself needing to take it out on walks with me any time soon - just in my car. The one negative that I keep hearing is that it's routing abilities leave a little to be desired... I have found from experience and by hearing others that this unit has proven an ability to learn from mistakes. In time this unit will keep getting better. Initial reviewers target an infancy stage in the product timeline.. where no data has been built yet. If it does send you on the wrong route, it will be able to adapt the next time out. I don't know many other devices on the market that can adapt to traffic patterns and routing times, and make changes. The more Dash devices on the road, the better this connectivity will get - the better the routing gets, the better the traffic reporting gets.
It is an exciting experience to know that the data you create as you drive is being fed back and enhancing the Dash GPS network for the future. This is really the next step in Navigation.
The other really cool feature is that you are connected to yahoo for instant up-to-date search functionality - get instant gas prices around you, new restaurants... etc. You can even download dash apps that have been built for the unit - such as a weather app, twitter, etc. Menu system is very simple and streamlined.
I'm excited by the possibilities with this product.
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