I’m using Waze, more and more, in the car, mostly for the voice input. Tap the screen and tell it where you want to go. It also allows input from drivers for speed traps, disabled vehicles in the road, congestion and objects in the roadway. Evidently, lots of people use it, as I see quite a few of these alerts popping up. If the hazard has moved, there is a way to clear the alert from the system. The phone needs to stay on the charger because 30 minutes of use will consume
all your battery. Another reason I like it, is that on the Wing, it will show on the dashboard screen, using Apple CarPlay. Waze runs from the GPS chip for navigation, but requires phone service for the alerts. It doesn’t seem to use a lot of phone data, for those with limited data plans. One feature that came in handy is its ability to reroute around congestion. On a trip home from N GA, it routed me around a backup on I-40. It routed me around the accident, before I even got to the backed up traffic.
Another App is Sygic. It’s a little different from Waze, as it uses downloaded maps. But, unlike most map sets, you only have to download the states, where you’re traveling. After your trip, you can delete the map areas that you don’t need in order to free up phone memory. It uses the GPS chip in the phone and doesn’t require phone service. I’ve tried this app, and it works great where there’s no phone service, but it doesn’t always know the best route. I know that all GPS will often take a less than perfect route, but Sygic is worse than most.
I believe that Google maps is the only one that updates gas, food, and lodging. Nearly all the rest use the data on the downloaded map set for these features.
Right now I have Apple maps, Google maps, Waze, and Sygic on the phone so I have a choice. Plus, I keep the Zumo on the bars. I hate getting lost.
John