Only 5.25oz with a 2.25 x 3” color screen, a joystick and shortcut buttons on the front make this unit look like a normal Pocket PC. The front-mounted speaker and microphone are not out of place either, and on top lie the IR port, SD/MMS slot and telescoping stylus. The GPS antenna that folds out from the back with the mouse antenna jack is different, however. Pocket PC apps include the standards Word, Excel, Outlook, ActiveSync, Messenger, an image viewer, MP3 player and a backup program. Bundle contains a car charger, A/C charger, and an SD card reader for loading maps, as well as an unusually large 256MB bundled SD card, which is fine for local or most inter-state mapping jobs, but GPS map files can be quite a bit larger than would fit on even a 256MB card. Trip planning is not tied to a GPS satellite connection, making layout easier; load the map, tell it where you'd like to end up, and it does the math. The reviewer noted an ease of use with the navigation software, easily picking waypoints and segments of the trip, as well as effective alternate route determination. Screen was reported as non glare with good contrasting colors in the program, but screen is lower-resolutionthan would be preferred. Main drawback was the CPU, which at 300MHz strained in high-intensity moments.