User Manual MioMap™ v3.2 Navigation software for Mio DigiWalker C710 UK English August, 2006 (v1.
Copyright note The product and the information contained herein may be changed at any time without prior notification. This manual nor any parts thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form either electronically or mechanically, including photocopying and recording, without the express written consent of Mio Technology Limited. © 2006 Mio Technology Limited © 2006 Nav N Go Kft. Whereis® map data is © 2006 Telstra Corporation Limited and its licensors Data Source © 2006 Tele Atlas N.V.
Thank you for choosing MioMap as your door-to-door in-car navigator. Read the Quick Start Guide first and start using MioMap right away. This document is the detailed description of the software. Although MioMap can easily be discovered by experience, it is still recommended that you read through this manual to clearly understand the exact function of each button and icon.
Table of Contents 1 2 3 Warnings and safety information......................................................................... 8 General information............................................................................................. 9 Operating MioMap (Controls) ............................................................................ 10 3.1.1 Power on/off........................................................................................ 10 3.1.2 Main menu ..............................
4.2.11 Bluetooth or Phone call status (No. 13) .............................................. 25 4.2.12 Track Log recording/playback indicator (No. 14) ................................ 25 4.2.13 Cursor menu (No. 15) ......................................................................... 26 4.2.14 Current street (No. 16) ........................................................................ 28 4.2.15 Travel and Route data (No. 17) .......................................................... 28 4.2.
4.6.5 Change the settings of the camera warning........................................ 48 4.7 TMC (Traffic Message Channel) ................................................................ 49 4.7.1 List of TMC messages ........................................................................ 49 4.7.2 TMC control centre ............................................................................. 50 4.7.2.1 Selected FM radio station................................................................ 50 4.7.2.
6.3.2 Vehicle ................................................................................................ 70 6.3.3 Road types to include/exclude ............................................................ 70 6.3.3.1 Unpaved Roads .............................................................................. 70 6.3.3.2 Motorways....................................................................................... 70 6.3.3.3 Ferries ......................................................................
1 Warnings and safety information MioMap is a navigation system that helps you find your way to your selected destination. It will determine your exact location with the help of an attached GPS device. The position information obtained from the GPS receiver will not be transmitted anywhere, so others will not be able to track you by the help of this program. If you are the driver of the vehicle, we recommend that you operate MioMap before beginning your journey.
2 General information MioMap is a navigation system optimised for in-car use. It provides door-to-door navigation for both single and multi-point routes using adaptable route parameters. MioMap is capable of planning routes throughout the whole map region installed on the memory card. Unlike some other products, MioMap does not require that you change maps or switch to a poorly detailed general map to navigate between map segments or countries. You always have complete freedom to go wherever you wish.
3 Operating MioMap (Controls) MioMap is designed for easy operation. All controls are operable by fingertips. Wherever possible, pushbuttons and lists are provided to make accessing functions or changing settings as easy as possible. 3.1.1 Power on/off Use this button to turn the power of the Mio DigiWalker C710 on or off any time.
3.2 Screen buttons and controls The primary input channel of MioMap is the touch screen. If you read on, you will realise that most parts of the screen are not only used to display information but also to initiate functions by tapping. Below you will find a list of the most frequently used controls in the program. 3.2.1 Direct selectors Some of the settings can be chosen from a short list of possible values. If the values can be described graphically, all values are available on the screen.
If the value limits are not displayed at the ends of the slider, the leftmost position means the minimum value, while the rightmost position represents the maximum value. With most sliders you can check the current value on the left. This control can be operated in two ways. Either drag the handle to move the slider to its new position, or tap the slider where you want the handle to appear (the thumb jumps there immediately). As with the list selectors, there is no need to confirm your selection.
The alphabetic keyboards in MioMap do not contain special characters, because you do not need to enter accents when searching for a destination. Type only the base letters (the letter most similar to the accented one) and MioMap will search for all their combinations in the database (e.g. for the French street ‘Cité Bergère ’ you only need to type ‘Cite Bergere’, and the rest is done by the program).
4 Discovering the program through the screens The best way to discover MioMap is to explore each screen in detail, and to find out how to move from one to another. Read this chapter for a guided tour. 4.1 The map The most important and most frequently used screens of MioMap are the two screens with the map (Map screen and Cockpit screen). They are similar in look and in possible controls but are optimised for different uses. The map they display is common. The elements of the map are described here.
4.1.2 Zoom levels MioMap uses high quality vector maps that let you see the map at various zoom levels, always with optimised content. Street names and other text objects are always displayed with the same font size, never upside down, and you only see as many streets and objects as needed to find your way around the map. Zoom in and out to see how the map changes in either the 2D or 3D view. Changing the scale of the map is very easy.
when the sky has already turned bright, and a few minutes after sunset before it gets dark. Tip: There are several daytime and night colour schemes included with MioMap. To select the one that suits your needs the best, make your selection in Settings (Page 76). Tip: To further enhance the effect of the night colour scheme, you can instruct MioMap to decrease the display backlight when the night colours are used. Set the desired backlight levels for both daylight and night modes. Page 73.
Note: The automatic switching is on even when using Smart Zoom. At first you may find it odd, but later you will discover how it adjusts the displayed information to the current view of the map. It is important, as the driver must be able to read the map at a glance. Tip: If you do not want to be bothered by street names during navigation, turn them off in Map Options (Page 76). 4.1.
4.1.8.1 The start point, via points and the destination These points are represented by flags. 4.1.8.2 Animated turn guidance Animated arrows represent all route events other than the above-mentioned special points. These arrows show the direction in which you need to continue your journey. 4.1.8.3 The route line The line representing the planned route is displayed in orange with both daylight and night colours.
4.2 Screens with map Having explained the contents of the map, the description of the other parts of the map screens follows. There are two map screens: the Map screen and the Cockpit screen. The way they show the map is the same but their look and controls are optimised for different purposes. The Map screen is to be used mainly without a GPS, to browse the map, create user POI items, or to plan your route based on map points. The Map screen is designed to give you the maximum map area.
No.
4.2.1 Turn preview (No. 1) On the Cockpit screen this field shows a graphic illustration of the next manoeuvre. For example when you approach a turn, an arrow will show whether it is a slight, normal or sharp turn. When showing a roundabout, the number of the exit is also given in the picture. This field also serves as a button. Tap it to get to the Route menu (Page 41). The Map screen will show a button called Route here if there is an active route. This also leads to the Route menu. 4.2.
This function modifies the vertical viewing angle of the map in 3D mode. You can change the angle in a wide range starting from a top down view (2D view is seamlessly integrated) all the way to a flat view that lets you see far ahead. The automatic Smart Zoom function will do the necessary tilting for you when navigating (gives a flat view if the next turn is at a distance to let you see far ahead and raises the angle when approaching a turn to give you a better view of the upcoming manoeuvre).
on the map, marked with a small red dot and radiating red circles to make it conspicuous. You can use this point as starting point, via point or destination for your route, you can search for a POI near it, mark it with a pin, or save it as a POI. Note: When GPS position is available, the Lock button will appear indicating that you have disabled Lock-to-Position. Tapping the Lock button will re-enable the position lock and move the cursor back to the current GPS position.
time, this will not cause the Lock button to appear, but when entering Overview mode later, the default zoom level will be restored. The arrow representing your position will be fixed in the middle of the screen. When you move the map in Overview mode, the Lock button will appear, and when pushed, it will move the map to have your current position in the middle of the map again. You can set up MioMap so that it will switch to Overview mode during navigation when the next turn is far away.
4.2.10 Battery status (No. 12) The status of the battery is also shown by MioMap. You can estimate the available power reserve from the length of the bar inside. Some examples: • The thunderbolt in the battery shows the battery is being charged. • Battery is not charging, but it is at full capacity. • Battery in not full, but there is sufficient reserve capacity. • When the inside of the battery turns red, the battery needs recharging. 4.2.11 Bluetooth or Phone call status (No.
During track log playback a green icon will blink. Tapping this icon (in fact, tapping the screen anywhere) stops the simulation. 4.2.13 Cursor menu (No. 15) The Cursor is the selected point on the map (marked by a red dot and radiating red circles around it), or the current GPS position when it is available and Lock-toPosition is enabled. When you tap the screen to place the Cursor, the Cursor menu pops up automatically to give you the list of possible functions you can use the Cursor for.
• Continue: add a new destination to be reached after the previous destination. The new destination replaces the old one, which is now demoted to a via point. This is the way to build your multi-point route in straight order (when you wish to visit several destinations ‘go to A then to B’). This menu point is available only if a route is already active. • Add Cam: this button will place a speed camera at the position of the Cursor.
4.2.14 Current street (No. 16) This field of the Cockpit screen shows the name or number (as available) of the current street or road you are driving on. 4.2.15 Travel and Route data (No. 17) The contents of these three fields are different when cruising (without an active route) or navigating (following an active route). While cruising, the fields show the present speed, and the time of day.
appear next to the name of settlements to help you tell them apart from street names. This field is only displayed when navigating a route. 4.2.18 Approaching next turn (No. 20) This bar is only visible when approaching the next route event. It appears on the screen to visualise the distance when you get closer than 300 meters (1000 feet) to the next turn, and it remains visible till you reach the turn. This field is displayed only when navigating a route. 4.2.19 Current speed limit (No.
Additional pieces of information on this screen are: current position in latitude/longitude format, elevation, speed, date, time and calculated accuracy. Note: Accuracy can be affected by several factors the GPS cannot take into account. Use this accuracy information only as estimation. There are two icons on the left to show the status of the GPS connection and the quality of reception. 4.3.2 GPS connection indicator In the middle to the left there is a lamp similar to the ones used for switches.
4.3.4 Time synchronization In the top right corner of the screen you have another button that leads to a new screen where you can synchronize the clock of your PNA to the very accurate time provided by the connected GPS. Turn on the Auto Correction switch to let MioMap frequently check and correct the PNA time with the GPS time. Below that button you will see the current values of the GPS and the PNA clocks. You can check here whether any correction is needed.
4.4.1.1 Route line The upper part of this screen shows your planned route as a horizontal line. Its leftmost point is the start of the route, the rightmost one is the final destination, and you can see your via point flags along the line, spaced in proportion to their distance. The blue (yellow at night) arrow representing your position will travel from the left to the right, giving you visual feedback of your journey.
4.4.1.5 Estimated Arrival This is an estimated value that can also be displayed in one of the Route data fields on the Cockpit screen as ‘ETA to destination’. It shows the estimated arrival time at the final destination of the route based on information available for the remaining segments of the route. The calculation cannot take into account traffic jams and other possible delays. If via points exist, tap and tap again any of the fields to see the estimated arrival at the first, second, etc. via point. 4.
• This icon warns you that MioMap had to recommend a route that does not match all your preferences given at the Route Parameters settings. • The recommended route contains areas only accessible to pedestrians. • The recommended route contains unpaved roads. • The recommended route contains roads that require a permit or permission to enter. • Information – any other piece of relevant but not categorised information. Tap the icon to see the content.
4.5.2 Quick tab This provides quick access to some configurable options. Remember that symbols on the buttons show the state of the function they are switching to, and not the one the program is currently in. For example with daylight colours you see the moon, while with night colours the sun is depicted on the button that switches between the two colour modes. 4.5.2.1 Zoom & Tilt (switch) This button makes additional map controls available.
Note: Using this option turns off the Automatic Night Colours feature. You need to reenable it at the General settings screen (Page 63) to have the colours change automatically again. 4.5.2.3 Manage POI (Points of Interest) Here you can set all the parameters of POIs that you have created and the visibility of the built-in POIs that come with the map. Manage built-in POI visibility The maps in MioMap come with a huge number of POIs.
Manage My POI By highlighting then tapping again the My POI switch on the Manage POI main screen you can manage the POI groups and items that you have created. Note: The group Unnamed only appears if you have previously saved a POI item without creating a new POI group for it. Note: If there are valid entries in the Contacts application of your Mio DigiWalker C710, the ones MioMap can recognise the address in will be imported as My POIs, added to a new group named Contacts.
necessarily need to create POI groups in advance. You can do it while saving a new POI. • Delete: you can delete any of your previously saved My POI groups. This will delete all POIs in that group. MioMap will ask you to confirm this action. • Edit: you can edit the attributes (name, icon, visibility level) of a previously created My POI group. • Left/right arrows: if your groups fill several pages, these buttons will let you browse through them.
• Delete: you can delete any of your previously saved POIs. MioMap will ask you to confirm this action. 4.5.2.4 Popup Information (switch) This button enables or disables the popup information of the Cursor on the map screens. The states of this button are: When this feature is enabled, tapping the screen (activating the Cursor, a radiating red dot) on either of the map screens also opens a pop-up box with the selected street name, house number and the name of the nearby POIs, if any.
When a track log is being recorded, a new line appears in this list with an underscore, as newly recorded track logs are not shown in the map normally. Tip: If you wish to see the track log currently being recorded, tap on it twice to make it visible. In this screen you have the following options: • Record: this will initiate track log recording. A new line appears in the list, and GPS position data will be saved until you stop the recording or exit MioMap.
4.5.3 Route tab This menu contains options to manage different settings in the program. 4.5.3.1 Recalculate This menu point is only available if an active route exists and GPS position is present. It brings up a menu with four options. Using one of these functions you can modify the current route. Recalculate This function repeats the route calculation based on the same settings as used to calculate previously. This possibility is typically used when automatic off-route recalculation is disabled.
allowed to rejoin the original route. Select the one you feel appropriate for the traffic difficulty you face. Note: This function is to give you an alternative for the next section of the recommended route. To change later parts of the route or to avoid specific streets or turns, use the Avoid function in Itinerary instead (Page 42). Note: When you use this feature, MioMap will keep on excluding the same part of the map from later routes until you manually delete the route (Page 42), or restart MioMap.
Display modes are different only in the number of events displayed in the list. List items are always shown with all information available including pictograms of the needed action and distance of the event from the previous list item. The Itinerary is live and constantly updated when navigating a route. The list item coming next in navigation is the highlighted one until you highlight another one by tapping. After that, the highlight remains on the item you have selected.
Note: You need not open Itinerary if you run into a roadblock or traffic jam. To get an immediate alternative route use the Bypass function of Recalculate (Page 41). Note: When you use this feature, MioMap will keep on excluding the same part of the map from later routes until you manually delete the route (Page 42), or restart MioMap. 4.5.3.4 Fly Over This feature has no navigation function, it merely provides a quick view of the route.
Use the arrows on the right to browse through the list and tap any line to highlight it. You can perform the following operations: • Add: you can add a new route point (or a new final destination if the highlighted item is the last one in the list) after the selected point. The Find menu opens automatically to let you search for an address, POI, coordinates, one of your favourite destinations, or select a point from the History list.
4.6 Speed cameras There is a built-in database of fixed and mobile speed cameras. It is also possible to add new cameras to enhance this database. MioMap can warn you when you approach one of these cameras. You can fine-tune this warning in General settings (Page 63). Speed cameras are displayed with small camera symbols on the map. 4.6.1 Camera types There are four types of speed cameras: 4.6.1.
4.6.1.3 Built-in cameras Some cameras are built in traffic lights. They work like fixed cameras, but they are difficult to spot. The warning for proximity and speeding is the same as for the fixed cameras. These cameras are displayed with the following symbol: 4.6.1.4 Section control cameras These cameras work in pairs, and do not measure your current speed but your average speed between the two cameras. Both will identify your car, and record the exact time you pass them.
4.6.3 Speed limit checked As additional information, the speed limit checked by the camera is given for fixed, built-in and section control cameras. When you save a camera location using the Add Cam button in the Cursor menu (Page 26), the speed limit of the road is used by default, but you can change the value from 30 km/h to 130 km/h with the given control: 4.6.
4.7 TMC (Traffic Message Channel) MioMap can provide you with even better routes if Traffic Message Channel (TMC) information is available. The TMC is a specific application of the FM Radio Data System (RDS) used for broadcasting real-time traffic and weather information. Note: TMC is not a global service. It may not be available in your country or region. Ask your local dealer for coverage details. You need a TMC receiver attached to your PNA to receive TMC information.
4.7.2 TMC control centre This screen shows the selected TMC source and allows you to change the TMC settings. 4.7.2.1 Selected FM radio station The name and frequency of the selected radio station will appear at the top of this window, together with signal strength information indicated by a bar similar to the GPS satellite signal strength bars on the GPS Data screen. If there aren’t any radio stations broadcasting TMC data in your area, the receiver keeps on searching.
4.7.2.5 Use traffic information This button is enabled by default, which means that TMC messages are used in route planning. Tap this button to have MioMap ignore real-time traffic information when planning routes. Tip: If you make a route planning for a future journey, it may be better to turn off TMC corrected route planning. 4.7.2.6 Recalculate to avoid traffic This setting is similar to the previous one.
5 Find One of the most frequently used functions of MioMap is selecting the destination. Once you have the destination, you can start navigating. Getting to this point should be as fast as possible. MioMap provides you with a versatile search engine designed to find your chosen destination after only a few taps on the screen.
automatically. When you open it manually, it will remain until you close it or switch to another screen. Tip: If you want the selected point shown in the centre of the map, close and reopen the menu or wait until it closes and open it again. By opening the Cursor menu manually, the map will be moved to have the selected location in the centre. 5.3 Using the Find menu The Find menu is accessible by the Menu buttons of the map screens (Main menu).
You enter the module at Level 3. From this point you can go forward (down) to give the name of the street, then the house number or intersection, or backward (up) to change the city, state or country to search. 5.3.1.1 Selecting the city, state and country to search in The first screen of the address-search module is the list of recently used cities (and states in Australia). The first line of the list is always the city you are in or near to (Europe, Asia and USA), or state you are in (Australia).
some digits of its postcode, then select from the list of results automatically given by the program if the matching items can be displayed on one page, or displayed on more pages if you tap Done after entering some letters. Note: Postcodes may not be available for the selected country. In this case you need to enter the name of the settlement. You can accomplish this by using an alphabetic input screen (either an ABC- or a QWERTY-type).
Note: If any of the settlements listed has named suburbs or numbered districts that also appear separately in the map, a Show districts button will appear in the bottom left corner. Tap this button to list the suburbs together with the main settlements. Now the button turns to Hide districts, and tapping it will return to the original, shorter result list. Once you have selected the city, you can continue by entering the street name as described here: Selecting a street or the centre of the settlement.
If your destination is in another country, tap the Change Country button in the top right corner of the state selection screen (Australia and USA), or the city selection screen (Europe and Asia), and select the country from the list. 5.3.1.2 Selecting a house number or the midpoint of the street Once the country, the city and the street name are selected, you are asked to give the house number using the numeric keypad.
5.3.1.4 An example for a full address search This is an example for the most complex address search, finding an address from abroad. In this example your current position is not in France, and you are looking for an address in Paris, France, the address ’17 rue d’Uzès’. The following steps shall be taken after entering the Find Address section: • You see the list of recently used cities. Paris does not appear in the list. • Tap Other City in the top right corner.
5.3.3 Find Coordinates MioMap also lets you enter your destination by map coordinates. The coordinates need to be in latitude/longitude format and, based on the WGS84 earth model (the one used by most GPS devices). When you enter this page, the coordinates of the current GPS position (or the selected map point, the Cursor, if Lock-to-Position is inactive) are shown at the top of the display.
screen you can see the first page of the top level POI categories. There are three levels altogether. The search will be carried out around a certain reference point. Always look at the current reference point shown in the green field above the POI category buttons and confirm that it matches what you want. To change the reference, tap the Change ref. button in the top right corner. Once you tap the Change ref.
• Filter from all the POIs of that level: tapping the Filter button will bring up a text input screen to let you narrow the list of POIs. If you tap Filter in the list of subgroups, you will only search in the group you are already in. • See all POIs of the current group in a list: tapping the All button opens the list of all points in the group or subgroup you are already in. Use the Next and Previous buttons to browse through the list.
Using the Favourites function at the Main menu it is only two taps to start navigating. Note: If you try to access a favourite destination that you have not yet set up, MioMap will lead you to the setup page.
6 Settings MioMap provides several settings in order to let you customise the functions of the program. The Settings screen can be accessed directly from the Main menu screen (Main menu) and from the map screens by using the battery icon (Page 25), while some of its sub-screens are accessible from other parts of the program. 6.1 General settings These are the basic settings of MioMap. 6.1.1 Safety Mode Safety mode will disable the touch-screen above 10 km/h (6 mph) to keep your attention on the road.
6.1.2 Automatic Night Colours Using the automatic night mode, MioMap will change between the daylight and night colour schemes a few minutes before sunrise and a few minutes after sunset based on the time and location information provided by your GPS. Once you set a permanent colour scheme in the Quick menu (Page 35), this automatic mode turns off. If you need MioMap to switch between colours for you again, you need to reenable this feature. 6.1.
Example: to let you better understand how this feature works, here is an example. If you use the setting on the left (portrait) screen example (+10 km/h – 100 km/h – +5%), MioMap will warn you when driving at the following speeds: Speed limit Warning at 40 km/h 50 km/h (=40 km/h + 10 km/h) 60 km/h 70 km/h (=60 km/h + 10 km/h) 90 km/h 100 km/h (=90 km/h + 10 km/h) 100 km/h 105 km/h (=100 km/h + 5%) 120 km/h 126 km/h (=120 km/h + 5%) 160 km/h 168 km/h (=160 km/h + 5%) 6.1.
You are warned well in advance. The distance MioMap starts warning you before reaching the camera depends on your speed. The higher the speed, the earlier the warning starts. 6.1.5.2 Visible Warning Besides this, MioMap can pop up a visual warning with only the symbol of the camera above the speed limit sign on the Cockpit screen, or you can ask for details as described below.
You can rename them and specify their locations. To determine the location you can use the same Find menu options (Page 53) as for a route destination, and depending on that choice and the information available, the location will be shown here as a street address, a latitude/longitude position, or both. Note: If you tap either of your favourite destinations in the Find menu (Page 61) before defining it, MioMap will offer to take you to this screen to set it up. 6.1.
6.2.1 Master sound volume/switch The loudness of MioMap is independent of your PNA settings. When you run MioMap, the position of this fader determines the device volume level. When you exit the program, the device settings return. The left part of this control works as a mute button. Tap to mute all MioMap sounds. 6.2.2 Voice guidance volume/switch The switch on the left can turn on or mute MioMap's audible guidance (voice instructions and speed camera warning).
6.2.5 Attention Tone If this is set to Disabled, the voice guidance will sound without a preceding attention tone. Setting it to Single Tone will initiate a single attention tone before the instructions, while Double Tone will use a double tone. 6.3 Route parameter settings This is a very important page. Settings here determine how routes will be calculated. This screen is directly accessible from the Route Information screen (Page 31). 6.3.1 Route Here you can choose from three different route types. 6.
distance compared to the fastest one, MioMap will choose this one instead to save fuel. 6.3.2 Vehicle You can set the type of the vehicle that you will use to navigate the route. Based upon this setting, some of the road types will be excluded from the route (e.g. motorways for pedestrians), or some of the restrictions may not be taken into account (e.g. emergency vehicles have no restrictions). Available values: • Car • Taxi • Bus • Lorry • Emergency • Bicycle • Pedestrian 6.3.
6.3.3.4 U-turns Although displayed amongst road types, this is a type of action. Most drivers prefer to replace them with a few normal left and/or right turns in the next few junctions, so it is disabled by default. Turning back on dual carriageways is not considered as a u-turn. Note: Via points are handled as stopovers with regards to u-turns.
restarted if you change this setting. MioMap will ask for confirmation before it restarts. 6.4.2 Voice language This button shows the current language of the voice guidance. By tapping the button you can select from a list of available languages and speakers. Tap any of these to hear a sample voice prompt. Just tap OK when you have selected the new spoken language. 6.4.3 Units You can set the distance units to be used by the program.
Tap on any button to set the corresponding parameters. .All but the last one will open new windows where you can make your desired changes. 6.5.1 Cockpit settings These settings determine how MioMap displays different content elements of the Cockpit screen. 6.5.1.1 3D in Cockpit mode (and track-up orientation) The normal use of the Cockpit mode is cruising or navigating, when the road lying in front of the driver is the most important part of the map.
6.5.2.1 Power management At the top of the screen you can set how the backlight will behave when the screen has not been touched for a while. Backlight always on You can choose to have the lights always on. Smart powersave You can also initiate this special feature of MioMap. When running on battery Smart Powersave will light up the screen only when you press or tap a button, or if MioMap has something to show you.
Tap this button to copy all user data and settings on the SD card. The backup is always created with the same file name; so backing up data will always overwrite previous backups. Tip: If you wish to keep more versions of the user database, or you wish to save one particular state (e.g. saved POIs and track logs of your holiday), look for the backup file on the SD card, rename it, or save it to your PC.
6.5.4.1 Daylight / Night colour profile MioMap comes with different colour schemes for both daylight and night use. There is always one selected daytime scheme and one selected night-time scheme. MioMap uses these when switching from day to night and back. Tap the appropriate button and select a new scheme from the list. 6.5.4.2 Show Street Labels You can set whether or not to see the names of the streets and the POI icons on the map when driving.
6.5.5.1 Enable Smart Zoom Use this switch to enable or disable Smart Zoom. When disabled, the zoom and tilt levels on map screens during navigation are fixed, and you can set them manually using screen buttons (Page 21 and Page 21). Turn this feature on to let MioMap zoom and tilt the map automatically to always show you the best view for your navigation needs. 6.5.5.2 Enable Overview mode You can configure how the Overview mode is triggered when the next turn is at a distance.
7 Troubleshooting guide Thank you again for purchasing our product. We hope you will enjoy every minute of using it. However you may face difficulties before you get really accustomed to MioMap. In such cases, please, refer to this table of frequently encountered problematic situations. I cannot find the Greenarrow that would show my location. Navigation does not start. Check the GPS status icon on any of the map screens (Page 24) or the GPS Data screen (Page 29).
The ‘Route To’ button is for starting a new route only. For a single route you tap this when the destination is selected. Multi-point routes can be created after you have established a single route. Add points to the single route by using the ‘Add Via’ and ‘Continue’ buttons. Applying ‘Route To’ again will delete the whole route. In your case only single routes existed before, so they were deleted without a warning message.
8 Glossary The manual may contain many technical terms. Please look below for an explanation if you are unfamiliar with some of them. 2D/3D GPS reception: The GPS receiver uses satellite signals to calculate its (your) position. Depending on the current positions of the ever moving satellites in the sky, and the objects in your environment, the signal that your GPS device receives may be weaker or stronger.
Automatic day/night colours: Based on the time and position given by the GPS device, MioMap is able to calculate when the sun rises and sets at your current location on this particular day. Using that information MioMap can change between the day and the night colour schemes a few minutes before sunrise and a few minutes after sunset (Page 64).
Lock button appears on the screen. Tapping it will re-enable Lock-to-Position. See also Page 22. Map Orientation:MioMap is able to rotate the map for your convenience. If you choose Track-up mode, the map will be rotated to look in the direction of your heading. Selecting North-up, the map remains oriented to have North toward the top. Use the left and right hardware buttons to turn your map in the direction you wish. This will immediately turn off the automatic rotation.
Zoom In and Out: The Zoom function is used to change the scale of the map. Use Zoom In to scale down the map to see less of it but in more detail, and use Zoom Out to scale the map up to have a broader view of that part of the map with fewer details. See also Page 15 and Page 21.