Skip to main content

Will the iPhone Kill Standalone GPS Navigators?

iPhone GPS
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The iPhone comes as close as you can get to a universal, do-everything device. It’s as much a personal media player, translator, Internet tablet, notepad, alarm clock and a dozen other things as it is a cell phone. But with the introduction of the very first turn-by-turn GPS apps from companies like TomTom and Navigon, I think we’re finally seeing the miracle device stretched a little thin.

I’m as much a believer in convergence as any died-in-the-wool nerd, and I take no particular pride in owning a box full of gadgets that do different things when one can fulfill them all. But as more and more functions get packed into the same little rectangle, the specialization that makes every individual device so good at what it does starts to fade. Having played with Navigon’s new iPhone GPS app, and some of its most sophisticated standalone units, I’m now even more convinced. Here’s why the iPhone will never replace the standalone GPS:


Screen Size

As a smartphone, the iPhone’s 3.5-inch screen represents one spacious acre – a roomy residential lot you wouldn’t have much problem planting a nice homestead on. Using it as a GPS navigator is like trying to use the same acre for raising cows. Same space, not really so spacious anymore.

TomTom iPhone App

Every manufacturer offers budget navigators in the 3.5-inch class, but that’s really considered the bare minimum for a navigation unit, and after deducting the iPhone’s top status bar from the usable screen area, it gets even smaller. Dedicated navigation units tend to get comfortable at 4.3 inches, downright spacious at 5 inches, and if you’re really looking for a birds-eye lay of the land, they can stretch even larger. Navman offers a massive 7-inch navigator, and in-dash DVD players that come with built-in GPS also routinely reach that size. Not only do directions and maps look crystal clear and easy to use at that size, interacting with the touch screens gets much easier, too.

Plant the iPhone in your windshield, and you’re looking at one tiny navigator.


Price

The companies releasing GPS iPhone apps, like TomTom and Navigon, are the same ones that stand to lose money if you don’t buy standalone navigators. And they’ve priced the apps to ensure they still line their coffers adequately.

Currently, TomTom sells its North American navigation app for $100, and the Western European version for $140. Navigon’s respective apps go for $90 and $140. Of course, in order to comfortably use either one, you’ll need to drop another $60 for Navigon’s iPhone mount. TomTom hasn’t yet priced its own mount, but considering it will include both an upgraded GPS chip and speaker, it will likely cost even more. Even using Navigon’s $90 North American app and the $60 for a conservative estimate, that’s at least a $150 investment to simply add GPS functionality to a device you already paid for.

TomTom iPhone Mount

Call me crazy, but why would I spend that kind of money when I could get a standalone TomTom One Third Edition – a reliable unit that I used to drive 2,700 miles across the country last year – for $82? Or, perhaps more realistically, TomTom’s more up-to-date One 125 runs for $120. And if I wanted to splurge and get a nice spacious 4.3-inch screen, TomTom’s ONE XL 330 goes for $180. For nearly the same price, I get a dedicated screen, speaker, suction cup mount, and charger, and even a USB data cable.


Convenience

After I stash my standalone GPS navigator in my glove box, I have my trusty never-get-lost device with me everywhere, all the time. It lends some piece of mind, the same way a spare tire and a jack in the trunk do. Although I try to my best to do the same with my iPhone, which is well on its way to becoming an extra appendage, it doesn’t always work that way. Sometimes I forget it. Sometimes I don’t want it, like when I’m heading out for a run. Sometimes the battery is just tapped out and it needs to stay at home to charge. When I end up taking a wrong turn into the middle of nowhere on what was supposed to be an easy two-hour car ride, the iPhone in the pocket is a gamble, the GPS in the glove box is a sure bet.


Theft Potential

Having had my car window smashed in and a review GPS system whisked away after I left the mount visible in the car, I do my best to hide GPS systems when I park my now. They’re theft magnets. But if I forget, I would rather have a GPS system perilously hanging in my window attracting thieves, than my iPhone, which has everything from photos to phone numbers, addresses and e-mails in it.

Even if I garaged my car every night and parked in only the yuppiest of neighborhoods under security cameras, the possibility of forgetting my phone in my car because I last used it for navigating stands out as recurring headache for me. Even taking it out of the window at every stop on a long car trip – to go use the bathroom at a gas station for instance – strikes me as a hassle. And if I’m too lazy to hook it up to a charger while it’s in use, I can look forward to a dead phone battery when I get back, too.


No Multitasking

If I’m in the car, I have plenty of other uses for my iPhone, especially on a long ride. I might, for instance want to play some music through an FM transmitter, which I can’t attach if I’m already using a GPS dock. And although I can’t quite bust out a game of Chopper behind the wheel or read the New York Times, passengers always seem to appreciate borrowing the iPhone for a little entertainment on those 10-hour hauls – the same kind you typically use a GPS for.


Conclusion

The old saying about being everything to everyone hold’s true: You can’t do it, and the iPhone’s turn-by-turn GPS apps prove it. Sorry Apple, you can’t win ’em all.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
Best iPhone 14 deals: Unlocked and refurbished
The Apple iPhone 14 Pro's camera module

Some of the best Apple deals and best iPhone deals come from the iPhone 14 lineup. While it has been around a couple of years now, the iPhone 14 is still only one generation old as iPhone releases go. This means it still has a lot to offer, including much of what can be found in the newer iPhone 15, but it will often see some impressive price drops. Many of the best iPhone 14 deals we’re seeing right now are on refurbished models, but both new and refurbished models are out there, and each makes for some of the best phone deals going on at the moment. You’ll find all of the information you need to save on an iPhone 14 below, but if you’d like to land yourself the latest and greatest you should also check out the current iPhone 15 deals, Samsung Galaxy S24 deals, and Google Pixel 8 deals.
Apple iPhone 14 -- from $491, was $699

With the Apple iPhone 14 you’re getting what is still one of the most popular smartphones on the market. This is the iPhone 14 model that’s meant for everyone. It holds back a few features you can only get on the Pro model, but it still has an impressive 6.1-inch display, an impressive camera, and dozens of ways to personalize your iOS experience with widgets and fonts. The phone can reach up to 26 hours of battery life on a single charge, and it’s powered by Apple’s A15 Bionic chip. Face ID, emergency SOS via satellite, and super fast 5G cellular connectivity round out the top features of the Apple iPhone 14.
Buy Refurbished at Amazon — from $491

Read more
Here’s how iOS 18 could change the way you use your iPhone
The lock screen on the Apple iPhone 15 Plus.

It seems the long-overdue Siri overhaul will finally arrive at WWDC in just over a week from now, and the digital assistant will embrace AI trickery in all its forms. According to Bloomberg, Apple’s planned upgrades for Siri will deeply integrate with on-device functions at the OS level and with the installed apps, too.

“The new system will allow Siri to take command of all the features within apps for the first time,” the report says. The most notable capability is that Siri will only require voice prompts to interact with apps, thanks to a major change in the AI architecture powering it and putting large language models in command, just the way Gemini or ChatGPT draw their own skills from such models.

Read more
Become an iPhone video master with this powerful new app
Screenshots from the Kino app.

Avid iPhone photographers will already know the excellent Halide camera app and how it can help transform the stills you take. But they will also know it does not support video, a point the company itself has been well aware of too. That’s why it has launched Kino, a video app for the iPhone that aims to bring similar Halide-style benefits to video instead of stills.

Kino is described as a video app for beginners and experts alike, but to get the most from it, you’ll likely need to be familiar with the iPhone’s video recording modes. For example, one of the main features that makes Kino stand out is Instant Grade, which uses the Log video recording mode, which was introduced on the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Read more