TomTom joins a growing list of navigation apps available through Apple's App Store for the iPhone. The app lists for $99.99, placing it at the high-end of navigation applications.
TomTom, the Dutch maker of
automotive navigation systems, debuted a navigation application on Apple’s
popular iPhone application store on Saturday, but it’s not for the
budget-conscious: The U.S. and Canada edition (versions for New Zealand and
Australia and Western Europe are also available) retails fro $99.99 at the App
Store, putting it up there with the more expensive practical applications
consumers can download.
The TomTom navigation app
employs the iPhones touch screen technology to allow users to tap their way
from starting point to destination, including the ability to scroll through
menus and pinch to zoom in or out of maps. The app also lets users plan their
route in portrait or landscape mode just by tilting the iPhone. Other features
include the ability to meet with friends via the iPhone contacts menu and the
ability to find restaurants and call and reserve a table. TomTom also includes
a route deviation feature, which automatically re-routes users when road
closures or other impediments to travel are detected.
The application also includes
TomTom IQ Routes, which calculates the most efficient route based on the
experiences of drivers and actual road speed data and the latest maps from Tele
Atlas. The announcement of a TomTom iPhone application first made headlines
during Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) this June, when
Peter-Frans Pauwels, TomTom’s co-founder and CTO, demonstrated TomTom’s
navigation software in combination with a specially designed car kit on the
iPhone.
On the company’s Web site,
TomTom also lists a car kit that offers secure docking, “enhanced” GPS
performance, voice instructions and hands-free calling, while charging your
iPhone at the same time. The IQ Routes feature, developed by TomTom, uses
anonymous data accumulated by users of TomTom satellite navigation (satnav)
devices. This is fed back into the new devices that use algorithms that take
this data into account when calculating the optimal driving route.
TomTom faces competition from
much less expensive navigation applications currently available on the App
Store, however. Navigon MobileNavigator, available for $69.99 (through August
31) offers similar features such as voice announcements, portrait and landscape
modes and speed assistant. The application also offers 3D map displays for a
bird’s eye view of the area, a Take Me Home one-click function and Lane
Assistant Pro and Speed View.
iPhone owners have another
option in ALK Technologies’ CoPilot Live North America, which lists for $34.99
on the App Store. This application features a route optimizer, day/night mode
(automatic) and live weather updates for a user’s location and destination. There
are currently more than 30 GPS applications available from Apple’s App Store,
including a free navigation application from AT&T (currently the exclusive
carrier for the iPhone), although a $9.99 monthly subscription charge is added
to the user’s wireless bill.