how accurate are these maps with regard to addresses? does it vary from
city to city?
I bought a Magellan 1470 gps, a very nice machine. I've been playing
with it this weekend, learning how to use it. I'm a pizza delivery driver.
I'm disappointed in the models accuracy. It got me to the right street,
but as for pinpoint accuracy, it leaves much to be desired.
I'm also finding its choice of routing strange/odd.
I'm playing with the same (new) model also - no major complaint (yet),
but it tells me I'm home maybe a 100 feet away or so - OK for me, maybe
not close enough for you. There are also options you may have already
noted, fastest route, no or as much as possible major/toll highways, or
shortest route, your choice.
also in another experiment, ended up close to 4 to 6 houses down which
is not bad, but then I'm I'm already looking for the address.
are you sure this is an issue with the GPS tracking, not the map data?
It's been a few years since I worked in a mapping company, but what I see
in the current GPS devices makes me think nothing has changed.
The maps do not have exact addresses. They have addresses associated with
the ends of segments - usually intersections. In between, they just do
linear interpolation.
That means if the corners are at, say, 1200 X St and 1300 X St, and you
give 1251 X St, it will put it in the middle of the block, even though the
actual house might be a few dozens of few from there.
They are supposed to know which side is odd and which side is even,
however.
--
Gene E. Bloch letters0x40blochg0x2Ecom
well, that explains it. Guess they don't want to work too hard. :)
There is that :-)
But also, the storage requirements would be immense. You would need a
latitude and longitude and house number for every house on the street, and
you'd have to update that info every time a house is built or razed.
Someone would think of a better way, though - like just house number and
distance from the reference corner (and one bit for side of street).