User manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- About this guide
- Your phone and accessories
- Android basics
- Starting Android for the first time
- Getting to know the Home screen
- Using the touchscreen
- Using the phone’s buttons
- Using the trackball
- Using the onscreen keyboard
- Entering text by speaking
- Editing text
- Opening and switching applications
- Working with menus
- Monitoring your phone’s status
- Managing notifications
- Searching your phone and the web
- Locking your screen
- Customizing the Home screen
- Connecting quickly with your contacts
- Optimizing battery life
- Connecting to networks and devices
- Placing and receiving calls
- Contacts
- Accounts
- Gmail
- Gmail is different
- Opening Gmail and your Inbox
- Reading your messages
- Composing and sending a message
- Replying to or forwarding a message
- Working with conversations in batches
- Labeling a conversation
- Starring a message
- Viewing conversations by label
- Reporting spam
- Searching for messages
- Archiving conversations
- Synchronizing your messages
- Appending a signature to your messages
- Changing Gmail settings
- Calendar
- Viewing your calendar and events
- Working in Agenda view
- Working in Day view
- Working in Week view
- Working in Month view
- Viewing event details
- Creating an event
- Editing or deleting an event
- Setting an event reminder
- Responding to an event reminder
- Displaying and synchronizing calendars
- Changing Calendar settings
- Google Voice
- Google Talk
- Messaging
- Browser
- Maps
- Opening Maps and viewing your location
- Obtaining details about a location
- Starring a location
- Changing map layers
- Searching for locations and places
- Getting directions
- Navigating with spoken, turn-by-turn directions
- To navigate with turn-by-turn directions
- To view turn-by-turn directions in a list
- To return to Navigation View
- To change views of your route
- To search for locations along your route
- To preview your route
- To view traffic conditions on your route
- To get an alternate route to your destination
- To exit navigation
- Finding your friends with Google Latitude
- Camera
- Gallery
- Goggles
- YouTube
- Music
- News & Weather
- Clock
- Car Home
- Calculator
- Market
- Settings
- Opening Settings
- Wireless & networks
- Call settings
- Sound & display settings
- Location & security settings
- Applications settings
- Accounts & sync settings
- Privacy settings
- SD card & phone storage settings
- Search settings
- Language & keyboard settings
- Accessibility settings
- Text-to-speech settings
- Date & time settings
- About phone
- Specifications
Maps 228
NOUG-2.1-update1-105 Nexus One User’s Guide
Changing map layers
Initially, Google Maps opens with a street map. You can also view a satellite image of a
location, check on traffic, and even look at a location as if you were standing on the
street. And you can view maps that you’ve created in Google Maps on the web. These
and many other layers are available in Google Maps.
To view map, satellite, or traffic layers
S Press Menu , touch Layers, and touch Traffic, Satellite, Latitude, or
another layer.
Map layer is the default. It displays a street map with the names of streets, rivers,
lakes, mountains, parks, and other features.
Satellite layer uses the same satellite data as Google Earth. Satellite images are
not real time. Google Earth acquires the best imagery available, most of which is
between 1 and 3 years old.
Traffic layer offers real-time traffic conditions, displayed over roads as color-coded
lines, from green through black.
For information about Latitude, see “Finding your friends with Google Latitude” on
page 238.
For information about the other features of Google Maps, visit Google Maps on the
web.
Map layer Satellite layer Traffic layer