Not surprised they didn't pursue it.......because my answer to GPS version is if you don't know where you are going don't bl**dy drive.
My final comment was: The questions are faked and distorted. The most obvious options are deliberately omitted, so the user is forced to choose an option which is not really applicable. This is extremely bad practice, and makes the whole exercise useless and invalid.
Thanks for all your inputs so far. I don't think she got to choose the age icons. I think they are default to that site. I have sent her a link to this page so she can read your comments as a guest. Cheers
Done Personally I think that GPS devices are only useful for the last few miles of a time-critical journey. Anyone who relies on them for the whole journey is either way too stressed about something else to plan a route, too lazy to plan a route, or incapable of planning a route which means I would question their suitability to be in charge of a motor vehicle in the first place.
Couldn't disagree more. I've gone from a bloke who wouldn't be seen dead using a sat nav, to never being without one. Sat nav has thouroughly enhanced my touring holidays and helped me to see much more of the continent than I would otherwise have noticed. You, Sir, are a luddite.
I guess I come into the category " incapable of planning a route" or at least "incapable of remembering the route I planned", but that might be because I am female :wink:
Fair point but for the benefit of the questionnaire designer who is obviously trying to do research for a particular project, can you give a couple of examples?
I can't stand the bloody things I find them distracting I plan my route before I leave and write it down in my short hand and I follow signs. If I happen to go wrong usually when I'm nearly at my destination I call whoever I'm visiting to help out, I have only used sat nav once and I got lost with that!! I have even stopped to ask directions if I'm stuck