Let Nokia Maps 2.0 show you the way
Nokia recently announced that the beta version of Nokia Maps 2.0 is ready for everyone to take out for a spin.
Nokia Maps is taking its mapping and navigation experiences to the next level by enhancing its pedestrian navigation, adding multimedia city guides, offering satellite images, and sporting a redesigned user interface.
Nokia Maps 2.0 adds Walk, a pedestrian-focused navigation component to the application, while still offering Drive, a world-class car navigation system.
The pedestrian navigation efficiently walks the user from A to B with visual turn-by-turn guidance. It helps to locate the user by giving information about the surrounding buildings, streets and parks (including pathways through the park) and in newer handsets, like the Nokia 6210 Navigator, points the direction in which the user walking, using the handset’s built-in compass for orientation.
The new Nokia Maps 2.0 update also adds the option to purchase first-class multimedia guides that feature photos, videos and audio streams to enlighten the user’s journey even more.
As with the previous version of Nokia Maps, map users will receive a free three-day Navigation trial, for Walk and Drive, plus an additional free 10-minute City Guide trial.
“By taking navigation services out of the car and onto the sidewalk, Nokia is enabling people to explore and discover what’s around them with the confidence of a local,” said Chris Carr, Nokia vice president for sales in Southeast Asia-Pacific.
“By combining the integrated compass of the Nokia 6210 Navigator, with the speed and accuracy of assisted GPS, Nokia Maps 2.0 provides a unique experience with which other less accurate mobile navigation applications cannot compete,” Carr added.
Upgrading to the GPS navigation option enables the user’s mobile to become a powerful connected personal navigation device that provides clear, turn-by-turn visual and voice guidance.
If one’s Nokia device doesn’t have built-in GPS, he can also use an external GPS module with a compatible device.
Nokia Maps 2.0 will also have, for an optional fee, real-time traffic feeds with dynamic re-routing in 18 European countries. With vector maps provided by TeleAtlas and Navteq, it now has maps covering over 200 countries, with over 70 of them navigable.
Nokia Maps 2.0 can also lead the user to the nearest transit station using localized icons in 17 cities. While the user is on riding the Metro he can discover and explore new places using the hybrid satellite views or by purchasing one of the new multimedia city guides from companies like Berlitz.
The expert advice on where to go and what to do, combined with the integrated Nokia mobile search, helps Nokia fulfill its goal of bringing people context-aware Internet services forward.
Nokia also announced that it is planning to bring Nokia Maps to the mass market with a Series 40 version of Nokia Maps, which will be ready during the first half of 2008.
Devices based on the Series 40 platform accounted for a large portion of the more than 437 million devices Nokia estimates it had cumulatively shipped by the end of 2007.
The new version of Nokia Maps 2.0 for selected devices is available on the Nokia Beta Labs website http://www.nokia.com/betalabs.
Beta Labs shares some of the exciting new ideas that Nokia is working on and let users help shape their future development.
A strong online community has developed around Beta Labs, attracting especially technology-savvy, early-adopter mobile enthusiasts.
The current version of Nokia Maps and the Nokia Map Loader are freely available for download for selected devices at http://www.maps.nokia.com.
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