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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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Chapter 14: Other Cool Things You Can Network<br />

These <strong>of</strong>ferings from TomTom are great, but they still require you to lug the<br />

GPS system into your home to sync things, and they require you to think<br />

about your navigation needs ahead <strong>of</strong> time rather than as events occur.<br />

A new startup company in Silicon Valley called Dash Navigation<br />

(www.dash.net) is bringing to market a two-way Internet connected navigation<br />

system called the Dash Express. Dash Express uses a combination <strong>of</strong> Wi-Fi<br />

and GPRS (a slightly slower but widely available cellular data system) to<br />

create a navigation system that’s always up-to-date wherever you are. With<br />

the two-way wireless Internet connection, the Dash Express can<br />

� Always be up-to-date: The system constantly receives updated map and<br />

POI information over the Internet connection (Wi-Fi when at home, GPRS<br />

on the road).<br />

� Tap into the gigantic database <strong>of</strong> maps and address that Yahoo! provides<br />

on the Internet: Dash Express lets you do live searches <strong>of</strong> Yahoo!’s<br />

Local Search (local.yahoo.com) from the nav unit itself. You can find<br />

POIs based on keyword searches, and even search for people’s<br />

addresses and phone numbers.<br />

� Get real-time traffic data from “feet on the street”: This is perhaps<br />

the most far-out aspect <strong>of</strong> Dash Express. Dash Express systems automatically<br />

tap into a real-time traffic network that feeds your own and all<br />

other Dash users’ current location and speed information into an anonymous<br />

system that combines user data with other traffic data sources<br />

to send updated traffic info back to your nav system. Ever hear an<br />

announcer on the radio say, “the I-5 is clear throughout the county”<br />

while you’re on the I-5 stopped dead? Dash uses this real-world driver<br />

data to improve the traffic reports and keeps this from happening. (If<br />

only they could just get rid <strong>of</strong> the traffic for us!)<br />

� E-mail your nav system: Because your Dash Express is on the Internet, it<br />

has an e-mail address. Have somewhere you need to be this afternoon?<br />

Shoot your Dash an e-mail before you get in the car, and that destination<br />

will be loaded in the system waiting for you. You can even give out<br />

the e-mail address to friends, so if your buddies change the restaurant<br />

where you’re meeting them, they can send you the location while you’re<br />

on the road heading there!<br />

As we write, Dash Express isn’t on the market, but it’s on the way. You can<br />

preorder the unit from Dash’s Web site for $599. The network subscription<br />

will add another $12.95 per month, but we think that’s a bargain considering<br />

the convenience the system will provide. (You can use Dash Express as a<br />

stand-alone, non-networked nav system without the subscription, but the<br />

real magic here is in the network connectivity.)<br />

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