I have been a long term fan of Garmin’s automotive products, right back to the days of the Quest device and MapSource, always using them on my motorcycles, clocking up 100’s of thousands of miles in the relationship,
Of late, Garmin have started to lose the plot. Leaving aside the much heralded disaster of the BMW branded Navigator VI model (we can just accept that as one big screw-up) I am becoming very concerned that you are now focussing way too much on the ‘infotainment’ side and making it all to easy for the ‘Take me from A to B, down twisty roads, the fastest way’ gang, at the expense of more serious users.
Let’s look at the good things:
1. Garmin devices do work excellently for navigating purposes, running routes really well.
2. The XT allows wireless updating of maps and software. It works really well.
3. You make the very good Garmin Drive app available to transfer routes (for instance created by MyRoute on a smart phone or tablet) via Bluetooth.
Why then drop some of the really useful functions? For example:
1. You make wireless updating possible, but then insist on the device being connected to a home computer in order to permanently delete old (unwanted) routes. But then, in the same breath, allow an owner to delete favourites. That makes no sense. Why, if you are stepping away from home computers for updates, do you insist on an owner connecting their device to a computer to delete routes? Why, if we can be trusted to delete all or any of our favourites, without using a home computer, can’t we be trusted to delete routes, too?
2. On the XT you have retained the ability of the owner to set ‘stop over’ or ‘pause’ times at via points, which is good. But you have taken away the calendar function. Again that makes no sense at all. The calendar function was really useful when faced with say a two or three week tour. I understand that on the XT2 the ability to even add ‘stop over’ and ‘pause’ times is deleted, too.
3. You are stepping away from home computers, with BaseCamp becoming increasingly flakey. That is fine and, indeed, useful to most Garmin users. But, you are offering no good, Cloud based alternative instead. Companies like MyRoute are streets ahead on this, offering a very reliable, easy to use, route creation app, useable on any modern smart phone or tablet from anywhere in the world with a wi-fi connection. Why, if home computers are no longer core to the Garmin ‘experience’, don’t you offer ‘BaseCamp for iPad’ or something like that? It makes no sense not to. Or, are we all to be told to give up bespoke route creation of our own and rely instead on an algorithm to do it all for us, rather as something like Kurviger’s app does?
In short, stop pandering quite so often to the sometimes lazy motorcycle rider who just want to be told by their dumb device how to get from A to B down twisties and be ‘entertained’ along the way by their Garmin device, telling them how often they applied their brakes or being told where their friends are.
Suggestions:
1. Look at what made earlier, very simple but very effective devices good. The 550 / 660 series were excellent. The BMW branded Navigator V, likewise. Even the little Quest was very good, given the limitations of its time.
2. Support the doing away with home computers, not least as it saves us dragging a laptop around. But build on the Cloud based ability to create bespoke routes, just as MyRoute does.
3. Bring back the simple but useful functions as mentioned above and allow owners to delete routes as well as favourites.
4. At least offer a realistic alternative to the smart phone. BMW Motorrad have gone down this route and others, like Honda, have embraced CarPlay. The Chinese are latching onto it, too. We all know what happened to BlackBerry…..
I would be interested to hear you comments.
Kind regards,