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Leave the cables behind! Use the Pharos Bluetooth Dock to turn your GPS-360 into a wireless Bluetooth GPS Receiver. This product is made to work with the Microsoft Streets & Trips 2005 GPS Locator and any Notebook computer with Bluetooth Technology!
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I have a Dell Axim X50v (PDA) which has build-in Bluetooth. I originally was hooking up the GPS-360 to the X50v using the included cable. I was concern that the Bluetooth would not provide a reliable connection. However, the cable connection is cumbersome, so I decided to try Bluetooth. This dock allowed me to connect the GPS-360 to my X50v wirelessly. And the connection is reliable. The X50v needed to be reconfigured to access the GPS-360 via Bluetooth before first use. The reconfiguration process is not easy. I rate it medium difficult for average users. But you only need to configure it once. Once it is configured then connecting it to the GPS-360 is easy. Now I am (mostly) WIRELESS. (PDA still needs wire to keep it charged.)
I used this to replace the cable of a Microsoft Streets & Trips 2007 GPS sensor (Pharos GPS-500 SIRF III module) which itself snaps onto a dongle. The dongle, which is a Serial-to-USB convertor, went bad on me, but the GPS sensor module itself was still good (it outputs a RS-232 serial signal).
I found this bluetooth dock on sale cheaper than a new adapter cable. It was designed for the older and larger GPS module, but the newer, smaller one I have easily fit & snapped onto the same electric connector to work fine.
The bluetooth connects to my laptop OK, but I had to add an extra (free) software program, "GpsGate" as a go-between to buffer the output for MS Streets & Trips, else it would not always reconnect after short "standby" break periods with the laptop lid down.
On the whole it works fine, but it seems like a rather odd, unecessary thing limited to about 4 hours battery time compared to using a wired cable. I have no need to place the GPS sensor anywhere away from my laptop that can't be reached with a cable wire, but if you need to then this should do the trick wirelessly for a short distance through a glass window or other surface.
It comes with a rechargeable lithium battery in an easy to open battery compartment. It has an on-off switch and glows solid blue when in use. It came with a USB recharger cable that has a indicator light for a full-charge, and it can run while also charging. But then, tethered to a USB cable for power, why would you need the bluetooth? Anyway, it works.
The unit works well but it states is comes with a DC charger. My mistake was assuming this was a cigarette lighter charger. No, it is an adapter to be used with a PDA. I don't use this with a PDA, I use it with a laptop. It can be charged with a USB but then what is the point of having it connected to the computer, I wanted wireless.
I used cable version of Pharos GPS. It worked well. Due to change my pda phone, I purchased bluetooth dock. It has some connection problem. The connection keeps disconnected after around 1 minutes. I'm not sure where the problem is located at. It may be on my pda phone, my setting, or the product. I'm not experter about this technology. I just want to help new buyer's decision.
Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2005
Easy to setup, hooks up with my iPaq HX4705 very easily. I am using Microsoft Pocket Streets and Trips 2005, iNav iGuidance 2.1, both works pretty well with it.
This unit works great. Connected it to my 2125 smartphone quickly. The only problem I really had was that it does not come with a power supply to charge it. It depends completely on your PDA adapter to charge it. Yes I said PDA and I want to use it with my smartphone. Luckily I also had a compatible PDA charger. The unit actually comes with a splitter that plugs into your PDA and the Bluetooth Dock, then you plug your existing transformer into the spliter. Good idea but to include a transformer as well would have been nice. Also as noted in other reviews the blue light is a little too bright when driving at night.