57
screen). The crossing of the two streets will
be the selected point.
An Example For A Full Address Search
This is an example for the most complex
address search, fi nding an address from
abroad. In this example your current posi-
tion is not in France, and you are looking
for an address in Paris, France, the ad-
dress ’17 rue d’Uzès’. The following steps
shall be taken after entering the Find Ad-
dress section:
• Touch France in the list.
• Now select the city in France. Enter ‘Par-
is’ using the virtual keyboard.
• As several cities have Paris in their name,
the list of cities is not shown automatically.
Touch Done to get the list of cities contain-
ing ‘Paris’.
• The fi rst city in the list is Paris, as it is the
exact match. Touch it.
• Now you need to enter the name of the
street.
• You need not enter accents, the apostro-
phe, and you can enter more of the words
in any order separated by spaces. Enter ‘R
D Uz’, ‘D Uz’, ‘Uz’, and ‘rue d’Uzès’ auto-
matically appears; or enter ‘R D U’, ‘U R
D’, ‘Ru U’, and touch Done to get the list of
matching street names.
• Either way you get the list, touch ‘rue
d’Uzès’ to select the street.
• Now you see the numeric keypad, where
you need to enter ‘17’ and touch Done to
fi nish the process: ’17 rue d’Uzès, Paris,
France’ is selected.
Find in History
If you have used Find before, or saved map
points as POIs, marked points with a pin,
or picked and used points of the map be-
fore, they all appear in the History list.
This list is ordered by the time the points
were last used. The most recently used lo-
cations are always at the beginning of the
list.
Just pick any of the recent locations as
your destination. Here you have no possi-
bility to reorder the list or fi lter it by name,
but the Next and Previous buttons let you
browse through the complete list to fi nd
your preferred point.
TIP: If you will need a location later but you
do not want to save it as a POI, just mark it
with a pin, and remember its color to fi nd it
easily in the History list.
Find Coordinates
Cydle also lets you enter your destina-
tion by map coordinates. The coordinates
need to be in latitude/longitude format and,
based on the WGS84 earth model (the one
used by most GPS devices).
When you enter this page, the coordinates
of the current GPS position (or the selected
map point, the Cursor, if Lock-to-Position is
inactive) are shown at the top of the display.
The coordinates are always shown in the
format confi gured in Advanced settings-
Display options, but you can enter the co-
ordinates in any of the three formats. You
can even enter the latitude and longitude in
different formats.
Entering a latitude/longitude pair is easy.
The left fi eld contains the latitude. It starts
with an ‘N’ (North) or ‘S’ (South) letter.
This tells Cydle whether the point is in the
Northern or the Southern hemisphere.
Enter numbers for the latitude. Use the
decimal point if the degrees, minutes or
seconds are not integers. Use the / /
button (the label depends on the current
cursor position inside the latitude) to start
entering minutes after degrees or seconds
after minutes.
Navigation System