Date:18/05/2008 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/05/18/stories/2008051855421200.htm 
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Front Page 

GPS, to lead us home and quickly 

Anand Parthasarathy 

Desi players launch plethora of navigation products for lay customers 
 
Navigation for the rest of us. A choice of solutions is now available - and 
affordable - in India. 

Bangalore: The images being beamed hourly from Cartosat-2A and the Indian Mini 
Satellite (IMS-1), launched last month, may soon help us get from here to
there by the shortest, best route.

The week that saw these geographic images coming in also saw India's two 
leading players in the growing niche of global positioning satellite (GPS)-based
navigation tools announce compelling extensions to their product range: between 
them, they have extended the reach and affordability of such solutions
so that the rest of us - not just owners of pricey cars - can say, "GPS, lead 
me home!"

Map offerings 

The Hyderabad-based SatNav Technologies has launched voice prompts in nine 
languages - Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi, Oriya, Tamil
and Telugu - to augment its Satguide map offerings. These work with laptops, 
desktop PCs, hand-held computers and mobile phones which are GPS-enabled.

The cost of mag guides ranges from about Rs. 1,200 for one city to Rs. 4,300 
for 30 cities in India. If you don't have the GPS receiver, it can be had for
around Rs. 5,000 ( 
www.satguide.in). 

MapmyIndia, based in Delhi, has extended its solutions to the GPS-enabled 
mobile phone, with the launch of iNav. 

It covers 18 major cities with detailed street-by-street maps, and helps to set 
up routes to 55,000 towns and villages. 

Buyers have the choice of paying a monthly Rs. 249 for the service or uploading 
the full map data to their phones for Rs. 1,200 (one State) or Rs. 4,500
for all India. 

Monthly subscribers would need an Internet connection with their phones to 
access the service ( 
www.mapmyindia.com
). The solution already comes preloaded on some Blackberry or Sony Ericsson 
phones in India.

Handset makers like Nokia also offer dedicated navigation phones such as 6110 
which come preloaded with navigation solutions for India. 

The latest 6210 Navigator, soon to be launched, includes a compass for 
pedestrian users.
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