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ViewRanger On Nokia 5800 Review

Turn your touchscreen smartphone into the best OS-compatible GPS out there.


Posted: 25 August 2009
by Jon

ViewRanger / Nokia 5800 - Review

Viewranger on Nokia 5800

Price: £146.80 (whole of GB 1:50,000 and ViewRanger software) -  lots of alternative options

Weight: 114 grammes (Nokia 5800 touchscreen phone)

Features: GPS Smartphone-compatible mapping software, OS mapping downloadable or buy on DVD or microSDHC memory card,  maps delivered with ViewRanger software,  mapping also available for many European countries and the USA,  software allows route planning, tracking, panoramic views, tracking 'buddies',  trip, upload and download GPX files from your phone to your computer.

What's It For?

ViewRanger is downloadable software which transforms your Nokia smartphone into an OS-mapping compatible GPS navigation unit and gives you the ability to select and download mapping either direct to your phone or via your computer, or on DVD. It allows you to download routes in the universal GPX format and follow them on your phone or to track the route you do take then transfer the data to your computer or a routes site, so you can share your route with others.

If you already own a compatible phone, then it's the easiest and most economical way to acquire a GPS unit that's compatible with Ordnance Survey mapping. 

The Techy Bits

We're more interested in how ViewRanger works as a navigational tool than in listing huge amounts of technical specifications. The most important thing is that ViewRanger is compatible with most Nokia Smartphone built on the  Symbian S60 platform - list here - and has been re-written to work with touch screen phones like the Nokia 5800 Xpress Music with its internal GPS, which is the phone we've been using with version 2.7 of the software.

ViewRanger doesn't need mobile coverage to work - simply GPS access - but it does need an internet connection to download new mapping and software updates.

Viewranger on Nokia 5800

The software itself is a bit like a multi-layered onion. You can use it in quite a basic way simply to see where you are on a map, or you can access more complicated features like a panorama feature that lets you view the skyline from your position with the main geographic features named.

There's a search facility that works with place names or, by connecting to the ViewRanger server, you can search for post codes as well.

How It Performed

It says something that it's taken us ages to review ViewRanger on the XpressMusic touchphone, the bottom line is that we simply didn't want to give it back, the combination of compact size, light weight and smooth, easy to use software makes it arguably the best OS mapping GPS solution out there.

ViewRanger OS screen grabs

Our test phone came loaded with the entire UK in 1:50,000 scale OS mapping in a package weighing just 114 grammes making it incredibly easy to carry about, particularly as you're likely to be carrying a phone anyway.

On a day to day basis we mostly used it on quite a straightforward level and it excelled. The phone locks onto your location reasonably quickly, the mapping is displayed with admirable clarity and is readable even in sunny conditions and using the touchscreen  you can pan and zoom in and out smoothly and quickly.

The screen on the Nokia 5800 is large enough to be useable too and the touchscreen interface works well, even when carried in a suitable protective case. A stylus or plectrum made for precise selections and made the tiny on-screen keyboard useable.

Viewranger on Nokia 5800

The crucial bit is that ViewRanger does the basics brilliantly - it shows you exactly where you are, displays your position and direction of travel clearly, leaves a customisable snail trail behind you and has an easy to access trip computer that tells you how fast you're going, time elapsed and so on. You can also check your elevation data on the fly.

The interface is mostly straightforward and easy to use via the touch screen, though occasionally it felt like we were having to burrow through one too many menus. All good, then at the end of the day you can convert the track to a route and download or share it.

Alternatively you can either plan a route on the phone itself by clicking between points or download one in GPX form and follow it. If you choose to do that, you can pre-set alarms to go off at target waypoints and simply follow handy arrows on the screen.

All this is as good or better than anything else we've tried, but there are lots of additional pluses. Downloadable mapping, for example, is a real boon if - say - you're on a road trip, you can simply select and buy relevant mapping as you go.

Viewranger on Nokia 5800

Then there's the neat panoramic view feature. Select it and the phone will draw the skyline and label the peaks for you, so no more wondering what the big, rounded peak on the right is, ViewRanger will tell you. Or you can add Waypoints. Or take pics and connect them to their location.

The Buddy location facility which will let you track your friends on your handset and could work brilliantly for centres and clubs on the hill.

One point to be aware of is that GPS use on phones is battery hungry and even with parsimonious power saving, we found the phone was good for a day's use on foot or bike, but needed a recharge to cope with a further day.

You also need to bear in mind that phones aren't generally designed for robust outdoors use, so you need to be careful and almost certainly invest in a protective case to keep it in one piece.

Verdict


Everyone who used ViewRanger on the Nokia 5800 phone was blown away by it, to the point where our test unit spent some time on tour all over the UK. It has an unbeatable combination of compact size and low weight, a clear and readable screen with beautifully rendered mapping - take note Garmin - and a reasonably intuitive menu that allows you to use it in a basic but effective way or to take advantages of its more advanced features.

Viewranger on Nokia 5800

The bottom line is that the basics are excellent, the unit runs fast and smoothly and whenever we wondered if it was capable of doing something more, it almost always was. And then you can download mapping direct when you're on the road, which could be a real lifesaver.

If you already own a smartphone then ViewRanger is a no-brainer in our opinion and works really well with a touchscreen interface too - watch for news on the iPhone front as well - and even if you don't, it's a massive incentive to switch. 

Buy if you own or are considering buying a Smartphone and want a versatile, rapid-computing, OS-mapping compatible GPS option.

 Versatile, easy to use, quick and powerful, downloadable mapping. Advanced features.

  Not as robust as purpose-built GPS units, battery life good for a day depending on phone.

Performance

Value


ViewRanger web site


Know more or want to?

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Discuss this story

Having used Viewranger on a Nokia E61i with a bluetooth GPS receiver for over 18 months I chose the 5800 as a replacement mainly because of the 640*360 display: I haven't been disappointed.

Also I can now have the whole of GB present on the phone at once: at 1:50000 the whole of GB requires 2.72GB of space on the memory card; the E61 could only use a 2GB card so I was always having to choose which bits of the country I didn't need. The 5800 comes with a 8GB card so there's no problem having the lot.


Posted: 25/08/2009 18:04

It's really good. I like the รก la carte mapping. Tile by tile purchasing is very good value for money in my view. When it comes to iPhone, my dream smartphone will be fulfilled.
Posted: 27/08/2009 01:03

I was fortunate to be given both the whole UK 1:50000 and a selected 1:25000 Viewranger mapping for my birthday last year.  I think it is great.  We invested in some Swiss topo tiles for a trip this summer, and they are equally good.  If only we could get a robust waterproof phone with a long lasting battery, there really would be no competition!
Posted: 01/09/2009 10:19

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