30 January 2007 16:15 GMT / By Amber Maitland
Garmin's latest two satnavs, the nüvi 370 and 670, are impressive devices that come with street maps of over 30 countries.The map coverage extends across Europe as well as the US, Canada, and Puerto Rico.
In addition, both models incorporate traffic receivers, and in the UK the Total Traffic Network is included for free.
The nüvi 370 is the lesser of the two, with a 3.5-inch screen. The nüvi 670 features a 4.3-inch touchscreen as well as an FM transmitter so that you can stream instructions, handsfree calls, and stored MP3 files over your car stereo.
In addition, the 670 has 1.25GB that can be devoted to storing music files and integrated Bluetooth functionality.
Both nüvi's support SD cards so that you can expand their storage capacity, and they both provide speed camera alerts in the UK and some other cameras. They let out a beep to let you know if you're travelling too fast through camera hotspots. This functionality to get updated camera locations is free for the first 3 months.
They're both going on sale next month. Car And GPS, GPS, Garmin






HTC PlayStation certification devices coming 2012, time to get your Crash Bandicoot skills up to scratch EXCLUSIVE: Game on
Samsung not worried by Apple iTV threat EXCLUSIVE: AV boss not concerned
Best iPhone utilities apps Resistance is futilities?
Mattel Hover Board - Back to the Future becomes reality Great Scott!
Samsung O table is for the kitchen of the future Flexible hob
More leaked iPad 3 parts help form bigger picture - including Sharp Retina display iPad 3, in kit form
Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 (7.0) pictures and hands-on Up close with the ICS tablet
Sony bringing Google TV to Europe in 2012 Excited yet?
New Apple TV leaked in software update? iOS 5.1 says so
Forget the iPad 3, we want a MacPad Brilliant concept design
Best iPad apps to turn your tablet into a TV Goggleslate
BlackBerry OS 10 images leaked Widgets galore
Nokia Lumia 610 to be company's cheapest WP7 handset yet? Watch out Android
BAE Systems promising battery revolution Military tech meets consumers
Fujifilm X-S1 The shining star of the superzoom world?
Panasonic Lumix GX1 review
The one?
Sony PlayStation Vita review
Curriculum Vita
Nokia Lumia 710 review
WP7 on a budget
HTC Explorer review
A phone for people who make calls
GoPro HD Hero2 review
Amazing things come in small packages
BlackBerry Torch 9810 review
Middle of the road
Sony Alpha A65 review
Affordable SLT. But is it a DSLR-beater?
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
To boldly go where we've already been before
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Two-cylinder beast
Motorola MotoACTV review
Just add exercise
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 review
For the fast lane
Motorola Xoom 2 Media Edition review
Mini Xoom
Sennheiser IE80 review
Tune that bass
Kingston Wi-Drive review
Expand your storage
Huawei Ideos X3 review
Cheap but imperfect