SF trip gone bad

I park my car in Davis. $300 in parking tickets in the first 6 weeks of living here. I hate the DPT.

Having said that the BART is insanely perfect if you happen to be lucky enough to live and work near a station. Big if.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9944411#post9944411 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Kinetic
kinda OT, but now-a-days verizon phones and probably other carriers have built in navigation for $10 / month. If you use it often it may be worth it?

Never used them but I would have to say crappy.

You can get a hand held unit for ~$200 that works better.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9946853#post9946853 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by dannieboiz
Never used them but I would have to say crappy.

You can get a hand held unit for ~$200 that works better.

I've used one for about 2 years now, and it's fantastic. Sure it doesn't have all the nifty doodads that the nicer ones have, but it always has satellite reception, moreso than my garmin nuvi, it has local search, proximity points of interest, and always gets me to where I want.

It's actually quite powerful. Small screens, yes, hard to push phone buttons, yes, but it's really useful as a take everywhere navigation system.

I have some garmin nuvi, that's pretty small, but I don't stick that in my pocket everywhere. In the car it's great, and taking it with me on other trips has been awesome, but in a pinch my cell phone's navi always comes in.

I wouldn't say it's crappy at all, but if you pay $10 / month for two years, that's already $240 for a nice navi system. So it's up to you what you'd like to do, but the in phone navi's are definitely not crappy in my experience with them.

I use my navi every weekend, business meetings in different places, photoshoots in different locations, etc.
 
See there's you're problem, you use technology to help you get unlost. Half of learning how to navigate around big cities is to get lost a few times, then you really get to know back streets and short cuts!
 
I love living in SF, traffic doesn't bother me. Just post where you are staying and we can guide you. On the last tank tour we were drivining all around, it wasn't too bad if you know the city. Can be tough for visitors.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9947008#post9947008 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by sfsuphysics
See there's you're problem, you use technology to help you get unlost. Half of learning how to navigate around big cities is to get lost a few times, then you really get to know back streets and short cuts!

technology is the end of us =( without it we're totally screwed now a days
 
Some phones don't use "real gps" (iel they don't use the sattelites), rather they use cell towers to triangulate. Or thats what some random person once told me.

V
 
vince: My phone actually uses satellites, so it works even when I don't have cell phone reception. I guess the rule of thumb is to make sure it's a satellite gps one.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9947294#post9947294 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Kinetic
vince: My phone actually uses satellites, so it works even when I don't have cell phone reception. I guess the rule of thumb is to make sure it's a satellite gps one.

All GPS reciever relies on Satellite one way or another.


When I choose a GPS reciever, the first thing I look @ is TTFF and accuracy. Current reciever should have a 3m accuracy, that's pretty much the best you can go as far as consumer GPS.

Also play around with the different software that each have to offer. I like Iguidance or TomTom, the new Navman stuff is supposed to be decent but I haven't used one in years.
 
... the beauty of living in a CITY (sorry, san jose doesn't count, it's a giant suburb) is that you don't actually HAVE to use your car as often. I'll often leave my car parked for days and walk to the stores, bike to the gym, and walk or cab it to the bars/restaurants. I never have had an issue parking @ Ocean's Treasures (meters on valencia, always parking on duboce), or any other SF LFS for that matter. Unless you're really downtown, or out in a touristy area like N. beach, parking isn't that bad. I have no garage, have lived by dolores park and now by the panhandle (near the haight) for 10 years and rarely have had issues with it.
If you're visiting LFSs, check out alameda aquatics if you happen to be in the eastbay. One of the area's best.
 
... yeah and about 200 square miles. It's a city in the same way that San Diego is a city. SF is a city in the way that NYC, Chicago, or London are cities. You have to drive everywhere in SJ. Not that one is necessarily better. It's a matter of taste. Those w/ good taste prefer SF ;)
 
So true, but it's much more spread out. Our downtown area is dinky compared to other states or cities.

The problem is SF is compact and we fit a ton more "stuff" into the city :D.
 
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