You forget that that Civic Si gets the 2.4 shoehorned into it from the Accord as well. But keep in mind the Si's engine is tuned compared to the Accord.
You forget that that Civic Si gets the 2.4 shoehorned into it from the Accord as well. But keep in mind the Si's engine is tuned compared to the Accord.
4.2.2 did a lot to improve the phone's battery use. Might want to revisit now. :-)
Acura's apparent love of the tall/skinny SUV, similar to the new RDX, is sad. The previous MDX looked aggressive. This one just looks meh.
That was my thoughts exactly! Like the TSX was made of clay and someone pulled the edges down toward the wheels.
Thanks for the link!
Awww, poor Apple - getting sued by frivolous patents. MUAHAHAHAHA
It definitely is cleaner. That's what happens when a lot of features go missing compared to the Android version.
I don't think it's better at all. It lacks a majority of the functionality that Google Maps for Android has. And that hovering search bar taking up all that space on the tiny iPhone screen? No thanks.
Your statement that this app is perhaps the best mapping app on any platform shows how little you really tinker with Android or its apps. This version has about 30% of the functionality that Android's Maps app has, and is no more or less intuitive to use, given the operating standards for each platform.
You can throw a match into jet fuel and it will just extinguish it. Pretty hard to ignite, really.
I currently have Monthly 4G on T-Mobile with my Nexus 4. Love the price and quality of T-Mobile's network in Austin. Only thing missing for me is data roaming when I'm not on T-Mobile's network. It's really annoying to have a full signal for voice and text, but not data - and there's no $10 add-on for the option. …
It's more the title and every point they argue minus that one statement.
Their decision was such a bad idea that the guy behind it, Scott Forstall, got fired.
Navigation aside, I don't believe it was Google that kept iOS maps from being vector based, having 3D buildings or offline caching.
There's more to this than the voice-directions. Android Maps has evolved eons beyond Apple Maps before they removed it. Vector graphics, 3D buildings, Zagat reviews, map caching, offline mode. Google decided not to allow navigation, but Maps staying shitty in most other ways was Apple's decision. Just like the…
The several times I've tried to use it on my iPad or a friend's iPhone it has failed compared to my Galaxy Nexus with Google Maps.
Nokia Maps is missing giant things when I look at it, like the Formula One racetrack in Austin that's being held this weekend with 120,000 visitors. Might be kind of hard for all those users to navigate or even get directions there if it's completely missing.
It didn't on iOS, just Android. It does all of this actually. You have to remember that Giz writes their articles from an iOS perspective - and sometimes forgets to mention that.