POI searches on the magellan are nearly useless.
Look for chinese food "near current location" and it won't find jack shit.
Ask it to find the same thing near a particular city and it'll find two that you've already driven past
At home it can't find my local walmart, but can find two that are twenty miles away and built later....
It couldn't find my favorite local watering hole (Platz's), but displays a resturant icon
in the proper location and then identifies it when you poke the icon...
(not that I need a GPS to find my favorite bar/steakhouse)
I can safely say that if you want to actually find a walmart in the middle of iowa
(to buy a pack of flashlight batteries, a bottle of aspirin or a fuel filter)
you are best off using the Rand-McNally road atlas that walmart sells because it has a national index of walmart stores in the front of the atlas
The other "glitch" that the 1200 has is that it sometimes takes a couple seconds too long to recognize that you've turned (particularly in slow moving urban traffic)
and that can result in a misleading map display.
I am looking for a handheld topo GPS, but it's going to have to be one that is intended for "crossover use" because the normal hiking ones don't adjust well to moving at interstate speeds.
I think one of the coolest features that could be included in a street navigation unit is a terrain avoidance mode, basically the ability to choose routes based not only on time, distance, use of freeways or avoidance of toll roads, but to facilitate avoiding steep grades when you are towing something....
Or avoiding potentially deadly steep grades when driving in winter weather.
AD