When the GPS position is lost, the arrow turns grey, but the journey continues on the recommended route for a short period of time with the speed last detected before the GPS position was lost. When the next route event is reached, or after 40 seconds, the arrow stops, and remains grey until GPS reception returns. This way short tunnels can be crossed without losing the position.
Selected map point, also known as the CursorIf you tap the map somewhere and tap again or select a specific item in Go to, it becomes the selected point on the map, marked with a small red dot and permanently radiating red circles to make it conspicuous at all zoom levels, even when it is in the background of a 3D map view. You can use this point as starting point, Via point, or destination of your route, you can search for a POI near to it, or save it as a POI, a Favorite or the location of a road safety camera. The cursor, when visible, is also the reference point for map scaling.
NOTE: When your GPS position is available, and
Your Travel Companion comes with thousands of
POIs are represented by icons on the map. For a
These icons are large enough to recognize the symbol, and
When the map is zoomed out, the icons are not displayed. As you zoom in, icons appear based on their visibility settings.
Road safety camerasRoad safety cameras, such as speed cameras and red light cameras are special POI types in the Travel Companion.
ContactsA different type of special POIs is Contacts. When the Travel Companion is started, it attempts to recognize the addresses in your Travel Companion’s Contact database. All contacts with the address recognized are displayed as POIs in a group named Contacts.
If they exist, the Home, Work, and Other addresses of a contact are imported. For example if you have the home and office addresses of John Smith, you have two POIs, one called ‘John Smith (Home)’, and another one as ‘John Smith (Work)’.
Elements of the active RouteYour Travel Companion uses a
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