NIP arrived. 990Following up to Mark Foster yes :-) No, dangerous does apply to inanimate objects.The dictionary says so. They do not! They are saying it has a larger than average number of hazards which require...
and Things
No, the opposite is true.
I no longer have to wory about direction signs. Complex junctions can be seen before being negotiated. I have my SatNav placed just to the left of the offside mirror, so I can check it at the same time I check my offside mirror.
Voice commands also take away some of the stress of driving. For example, the voice may tell me to "turn left then stay in the right lane", this being confirmed when I check the offside mirror and see the junction in full colour.
I use the TOMTOM GO and it zooms in when approaching a junction, but zooms out on the open road.
A SatNav will always get you there but will of course be out of date on the day its published - the same as a papaer map. A SatNav will also need far less attention and make fewer mistakes than trying to use a paper map.
What SatNav were you using?
Well then the mistake was yours in asking the SatNav to take you the fastest route somewhere! In anycase, the TomTom will generate a new route as soon as you go off course, making it very usefull for the scenario you give.
-- MrBitsy
NIP arrived. uU|G*dfHK8Zr48 989Correct. I am sure there are those that would argue that Cape Horn is not inanimate. :-) Yes. Not so. When people call a road dangerous they are implying that it is has some kind...