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AutoRoute 2002
Whether you take the low road or the high
road, Dave Cook should still get there afore ye - with a little help
from Microsoft’s latest route-planning software.
Imagine, for moment, it’s the rush hour. You’re in a
strange neighbourhood a hundred miles from home. Visibility is poor,
and yet everyone seems to know exactly where they’re going.
Everyone, that is, except you, because you’re as lost as a penguin
searching the North Pole for its mate.
The fact is, if you’ve been driving for any length
of time then you’re bound to have lost your way on numerous
occasions. Fear not, though, because a solution is available via
Microsoft’s AutoRoute 2002.
Actually, AutoRoute has been a around in one shape
or form for quite some time. Most old hands appreciate that
AutoRoute is arguably not the most detailed route-planning software
available for the PC. It is, however, one of the most
fully-featured. Thus, it comes as no surprise to discover that
AutoRoute 2002 provides a veritable bus-load of features, all
designed to assist the typical traveller or tourist.
Easier To Use
Finding
a place in AutoRoute is now easier than ever. Once launched, you
would simply type in the name of a street, town, or postcode, for
example, and AutoRoute will locate it quickly on its map. If more
than one place exists with the same name, then AutoRoute will ask
you to narrow the search. You can then select your entry from a
list, enter a postcode, latitude/longitude numbers, or an OS grid
reference. In addition, a Find Nearby feature allows you to see any
points of interest in the designated area.
While AutoRoute 2002 allows you to locate cities and
towns all over the world, globe trotters should note that the
program’s route-planning engine only covers Western Europe.
Street-level mapping is included, although this is narrowed down to
only 11 countries.
The program’s level of detail is somewhat patchy.
Major cities in the UK and abroad are covered fairly
comprehensively, with points of interest as diverse as listings of
restaurants, museums and hotels, to police stations, shopping malls,
sports facilities, railway stations, ferry terminals, airports, and
ski resorts. Other areas fair not so well, though, especially areas
that are not so well populated. But if you’re planning to leave the
UK, then additional features such as a Euro converter and
11-language phrasebook will no doubt come in handy.
Changing Plans
Planning
a route is a doddle. You simply click the Toolbar icon, and enter
start and end points, including any stop off points you wish to make
during the journey. Pushpins can also be used as waypoints. Altering
the journey is just as easy, and you can manually or automatically
optimise the order of places to be visited.
With the route planned to your satisfaction, you can
print the map in a choice of five different styles. This includes
turn-by-turn maps, maps showing key junctions, and strip maps, which
prints your route map alongside text directions.
Users of handheld PCs, meanwhile, are catered for
via the supplied Pocket Streets application. So assuming you’re
handheld is running Windows CE 2.0 or later, you can download maps
from the computer onto your handheld for convenient access to
directions and local information.
Verdict
With our public transport system in a right old
mess, it’s hardly surprising that the majority of us still rate the
car as the most convenient form of transport. Thanks to some key
features, though, it’s not just motorists that will benefit from
AutoRoute 2002 - far from it! So whether you’re touring this
country, or further afield, AutoRoute 2002 should make an ideal
travelling companion.
^top
Dave Cook
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