Mio
MOOV
310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit with Traffic and Text to Speech

Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like Electronics : Mio MOOV 310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit with Traffic and Text to Speech along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.

Electronics: Mio MOOV 310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit  with Traffic and Text to Speech

Mio MOOV 310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit with Traffic and Text to Speech

Normal Price:$249.95
Our Price:Too low to display
Click on the "Buy from Amazon" button to see the price. You can remove it later.

Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...


Manufacturer: Mio
Model: MOOV310
Binding: Electronics
Publisher: Mio
Label: Mio

NEW!!
Enjoy drawing this product with our drawing board.
Drawing Activity for this product
Features for Mio MOOV 310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit with Traffic and Text to Speech:

Small Picture
Medium Picture

Editorial Review
Mio Moov 310 features a 4.3-inch widescreen window to the world of navigation, which allows for more on-screen information. The devices also incorporate text-to-speech functionality to call out actual street names when making turns, to help drivers keep their eyes on the road. These features, paired with a redesigned interface and more than 3.5 million points of interest - including restaurants, hotels and gas stations - help users find new hot spots in their neighborhoods and beyond, turning everyday driving into a daily adventure.
Cached date: AWS Called=true
Similar Products
Customer Reviews

Mio Moov 310 -- So far, so good :-) 2008-05-08
True, I have only had this item for a little over a week, but am finding it to be very easy to learn and use. The only "down" side is that much of the time it initially takes what seems to be lengthy time (2-3 minutes) to find the satellites. Once it has locked on to the satellites it works very quickly. It configures routes quickly and accurately. I can use it in the house to set up routes, etc., with no problem. (It doesn't always note the exact house address as the locale from which I am working, but is usually within a door or two.)

On the road the speech is clear,and the map in motion is wonderful to watch as the car is moving. Occasionally Samantha will cut it pretty close before telling me to turn, but she has warned of the upcoming turn far enough in advance for me to deal with it. I do wish it would routinely warn which lane to stay in when coming to a "y", etc. At this point I have used it for trips to places I know. I will be taking a 12 hour trip to unknown areas, and will report back about how it works for me then.

Before buying I researched the Garvin and the TomTom. I ran across the Mio Moov accidentally and liked what I saw. I was a little leary because of the extremely limited number of reviews available, but it is a new model. I had settled on the TomTom XL S before I decided to take a chance on this "new, unknown" model. So far, I am very happy with my choice. It is a great value for the money with all that it offers. (Let's see what I say six months down the road!)

JUNE 1, 2008:
I have now had the product for just over a month and I still love it! It has worked beautifully on two lengthy trips to unknown areas and on several trips to known areas. My husband has tested it by repeatedly taking his own out-of-the-way route and has been amused by Samantha's persistence in rerouting us. He said they should make one that says, "Look, Dummy, I keep telling you where to go!" She kindly and quickly reconfigures and gets it right every time.

It still takes two to three minutes to find satellites when it has been "rebooted" or often when I fire it up while in the house....but that is not an issue. Once on and running, there is no delay in routing. I still find the advance warning of upcoming turns to be adequate, even on the occasions when Samantha doesn't actually say "turn" until we are nearly on the turn. Also, remember...the visual is constantly in front of me. I know by looking at the arrow on the upper left if I will be turning left or right LONG before the turn comes.

My 32 year old daughter is directionally challenged and used my Mio Moov 310 for an extended day trip out of state. She and my granddaughter were sold! My granddaughter couldn't believe when Samantha said to turn right, my daughter didn't have to ask "driver's side or passenger side?" The visual was right in front to complement the verbals. She does a great deal of traveling to out of the way places and uses map quest constantly. She is thrilled with this GPS, and we have now purchased one for her for a college graduation present. The only thing I REALLY DON'T LIKE is the fact that my battery does not last ever over 1 hour.

My sister just purchased a TomTom 720go for significantly more than my Mio. When reading the "improvements" of the TomTom 720go over the TomTOm XL, I was pleased to see that my Mio Moov 310 has many of the features that the TomTom 720go considers "improvements".

I still rate this as a four (4) star item, and would recommend it to anybody.


not very good, returned it and buy mio c230 2008-05-03
TMC is good, however, the speed is too slow, some times it asks me to turn on the street I just pass.
mio c230 is good.


GPS 2008-07-21
Pro: very satisfied with this product. Initial startup went well over the internet setting it up. Scrren is large and clear, voice is clear and on the money with directions so far.
Price purchased at was good. Recommend

con: initial startup when being used to locate signal seems a little slow



MOOV to a Garmin unit if you want GPS 2008-07-09
The Mio MOOV unit was compact, with a bright screen and would be easy for travel. Unfortunately, that's where it left off. The touch screen cannot be calibrated and on the unit I had it required me to touch to the left and below the icon I needed. Try spelling when you can't tap the key properly! Once I did enter anything, it took quite a while to calculate the route, although it seemed accurate once it did. The response time after clicking an icon was very long, so I clicked multiple times on the icon, but the system thought I had clicked on subsequent screens and took me there so I could never figure out where I was in the menu. Garmin's NUVI unit is more resposive overall and is what I'm sticking with.


My husband LOVES his! 2008-07-04
I researched GPS systems for hours before choosing this unit as a Father's Day gift for my husband. It is his 1st tracking device, but he has repeatedly commented on how much he loves it. He travels approximately 4 days per week, making stops along the way to see customers on a daily basis. A large portion of his territory is new for him, and he is unfamiliar with the locations of his customers' offices, so he is delighted not to have to pull over to consult a map, or sit in a client's parking lot mapping out his next stop. He found programming it simplistic, and it only took a few hours to put in his entire customer base. He loves that he can find Hooters along the way, as well as his hotel locations easily. He thought he could live without one, but now, he doesn't how he managed with only a map. I am just tickled I found a gift that not only surprised him, but one he actually likes! I plan to buy another for our son, and possibly one for myself.

I was concerned that this model had only 3.5 million POI's (points of interests), as opposed to 6 million which seemed to be more common among the other brands, but thus far, everything he was looking for has been stored within the unit. (Knock wood.)

If your husband/boyfriend has large hands, the 4.3" screen is a must. He barely has room to type as it is. (He wears a size 13 ring.)

We live in Florida, and he has no problem seeing the screen in the bright light. He does take it out of the vehicle when he's not in it, though, to prevent theft, so I cannot say how well it withstands heat. It does fit in his pocket. If you have never owned a GPS before, this one is a great one to try. It has only misled him 3 times out of perhaps 250-300, and it does have a "mind of its own". It thinks he should take an entirely different route home from certain locations than he prefers, and he said it does get quite insistent when you don't follow directions and turn around!

And one other feature it has that he really likes: It knows ALL of the breaks in the highway. It down't know which ones are illegal U-turns, but it alerts you to a break before you drive up on it, in order to double back, should a U-turn be allowed and needed.


Didn't have to open the instruction manual! 2008-06-13
My daughter and I just completed a cross country road trip from Los Angeles to Connecticut. We took the Mio Moov out of the box and started using it right away. No manual needed! Neither of us had ever used a GPS, so it was fun finding out all the things it could do. We named it "Tom" after the voice we chose to use, and Tom helped us find good places to eat in little towns across the country just by typing in Main St in the town we were coming to. Usually, Main St was only 4-6 miles from the highway and the strip malls and fast food joints. We always found a great place to eat and enjoyed some local "color" too. The only minor flaw: several times, Tom told us the destination was on the right, when it was actually on the left. No biggie. All in all, a nice addition to our trip!


Adequate entry level GPS 2008-06-04
I have had two Garmin Streetpilots and I was so fed up with the last one that I threw it away a few weeks ago.

It was anything EXCEPT Garmin, for obvious reasons. I do not tolerate any blinking/flashing/scrolling/etc. on displays so I went to Circuit City to check out what they have. The Garmins and the Sonys were inaccessible whereas this Mio was accessible.

First impression is that the unit is of cheap quality. Second impression, the same. The Garmin is built like the proverbially brick sh**house. It is ( almost ) indestructible ( the thrown away unit tolerated an amazing amount of physical abuse as I decommissioned it prior to the trash heap ). The Mio looks like it will shatter if it falls off of the windshield. ( it does fall off of the windshield, repeatedly; but it is still in one piece )

This is a small unit ( maybe 25% the volume of the Garmin ). It has a HUGE cigarette lighter plug. It is so large and bulky that it gets in the way of the gearshift. You would think that this plug was designed for a welding machine, not a GPS unit?

The Garmins come with a very nice bean bag mount. ( the unit clips to the bean bag and you position the bean bag on the dashboard ). The Mio has a mickey-mouse suction cup mount that is worthless. After cleaning the windshield, etc. it was only with a lot of effort that the Mio would remain in place without falling off ( comment: in my state windshield mounts are illegal. thanks, Mio. second, it doesn't attach to dashboard ). Since GPS units are designed to be stolen, it is necessary to remove ( and hide ) the Mio whenever you get out of your car. This means that you have to remove it from the windshield. Then, of course, you have to go through the unecstatic agony of trying to reattach it. ( I have to use the glue to the windshield base to even get it to stay attached at all ). All in all, this is just a total pain in the rear end.

Unit takes a while to acquire satellites. Once, after initial acquisition, unit display comes up immediately without the long delays of Garmin units ( gps position may be incorrect until a new fix is obtained ).

Options and features are limited. Menus are quite straightforward, however, and very easy to use. ( no manual ). Response to menu entries is somewhat slow. You can select from a qwerty style keypad or an a-z keypad which is nice.

Address entry is relatively straightforward although the unit lists every street in the state that matches the street you enter. ( armageddon way, las vegas, nv; armageddon way, reno; etc so you pick street and city from list matching name ). There is no blinking cursor as there is with the Sony units.

After you select the street/city, a very easy to use numeric keypad with BIG keys comes up and you enter the street number. You then select the address from a list, preview it, and then go to it ( routing ).

Database searching for street addresses and routing calculations are relatively painless. There are no idiot animations, etc. ( the garmins have these and that is why I gave up on them. as well as bugs, bugs and bugs )

Another reviewer said that this unit gives clear directions? That was definitely NOT by experience. Garmins typically have a speeth imphediment and this unit does, too; only much worse. Pronunciations are often grossly incorrect or incomprehensible. It is often difficult to understand them when you are driving. The Garmins are very predictable about advance turn notification ( say 30-60 seconds in advance contingent upon how fast you are driving ); the Mio is somewhat unpredictable. With the Garmin, you can rely exclusively on the voice directions; with the Mio, the voice directions are inadequate and you have to look at the screen display, too. The main advantage of the Garmin StreetPilots is that they have the "speak" button. You push it and it repeats the directions. That is perfect for a brain dead idiot like me who forgets the directions five seconds after I hear them.

The Garmin units ( which have MAJOR bugs in the routing software ) generally route better. The Mio repeatedly misrouted me and chose obscure routes. One time, it did not recognize that a road had been blocked. ( ie: to prevent through traffic; this was an old blockage so this should not have been a problem. sometimes Garmins do NOT recognize dead end roads and route you off the freeway down the embankment or other dangerous maneuvers. ( this is why I through away the StreetPilot - it was too unreliable and it let me down all too many times ).

I was suprised that the Mio showed some very rural, not really roads ( more like driveways to multiple residences ). I was not routing then so I don't know if the Mio would misroute me out into the poppies the way Garmin units do. ( you have to be very careful with the Garmin units; misrouting onto dirt/dead end/ incorrect roads is very common. another reason I threw the Garmin away )

The Mio is little more than an entry level - trainer GPS. I have no choice so I have to use it. If you have a choice, look somewhere else, maybe.

GPS units definitely need to be tried in the store so you can understand the interface. Unfortunately, you have to drive 500-1000 miles in urban, suburban and rural environments to properly evaluate them. Then, it has been too long to return the unit if it is not acceptable.

... For more information from Amazon.com about Mio MOOV 310 4.3 Inch Touchscreen GPS Unit with Traffic and Text to Speech...

Home Entertainment Products and Books

Home Theater for Dummies Home Theater for Dummies
Excerpt: "... Typically, direct-view (tube) displays and projector systems that use CRTs have the highest contrast rations, whereas systems using plasma or LCD technologies have the lowest. When it comes to contrast ratio, a higher ratio is better. "
Panasonic SC-HT920 5-Disc DVD Home Theater System Panasonic SC-HT920 5-Disc DVD Home Theater System
Review: "The performance of the system is amazing and at the price I got it for, you CAN"T go wrong. The DVD player is quick when changing discs and quiet. There are also a lot of setup options."
Audiovox D1710 7" Slim Line Portable DVD Player Audiovox D1710 7" Slim Line Portable DVD Player
Editorial Review: Kick back with your favorite DVDs anywhere! Sleek, portable player features IR wireless remote. Plays DVDs, CDs, MP3s and Kodak Picture CDs. Includes 12V power source adapter and Li-Ion Battery Pack. Model D1710. 90-day limited warranty.

Newnes Guide to Digital TVNewnes Guide to Digital TV

The second edition has been updated with all the key developments of the past three years, and includes new and expanded sections on digital video interfaces, DSP, DVD, video servers, automation systems, HDTV, 8-VSB modulation and the ATSC system.

* A uniquely concise and readable guide to the technology of digital television
* New edition includes more information on HDTV (high definition) and ATSC (Advanced Television Systems Committe) - the body that drew up the standards for Digital Television in the U.S.
* Written by an engineer for engineers, technicians and technical staff

     
     
   
   
In association with Amazon.com. Please support our site by doing your online shopping here.
Search