Garmin Ique 3600 Drivers

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Garmin Ique 3600 Drivers 9,8/10 3308 reviews

This is an exact copy of the original CD that came with the Garmin iQue 3600 unit. This can be used for either Windows or Mac installation. For information on how to install the Palm Desktop on Windows 7/Vista 64 Bit OS, see the link below; Windows 7 64 Bit USB Drivers. Garmin have two utilities bundled in the iQue 3600, these are Que Trip and Que GPS. Que Trip basically is a glorified trip meter giving you the distance traveled, stop time, driving time, total time and various speed readouts. Ique 3600 driver download Posted on April 2, 2019 by admin If the user uses the ir head, realizes that it does have errors and does not blindly follow everything the unit tells you to, it is a useful tool.

Supported Models

Manufacturers

Supported Operating Systems

Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows NT4, Windows ME, Windows 98

File Name

PalmDesktopforGarmin-ItalianVersion_41.exe (13.0 MB)

Versions

4.1 (9-Jul-2004)

Find Related Drivers

Uploader Notes

Language: Italian

iQue 3600

Instructions for using this software

Click on 'Download' and choose to save the file to your computer.

Choose a location where you can easily locate the file by saving it to a location such as the 'My Documents' folder or to 'C:'.

Once the download is complete, go to the location where you saved the file.

Garmin Ique 3600 Drivers

Locate the Palm Desktop for Garmin - English file and double-click on it.

Garmin Ique 3600 Drivers

The InstallShield program will run, installing the English version of the Palm Desktop for Garmin and English MapInstall software on your computer.

System requirements

IBM-compatible PC running Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows 2000, Windows NT 4.0, or Windows XP operating system and an available USB or Com 1,

Uploaded By

Purushothaman (DG Staff Member) on 5-Feb-2006

Driver Related Resources

In stark contrast to the powerful mapping tools, the iQue's other Palm programs are sparse. Aside from a decent audio application/MP3 player and the PowerOne calculator, the software CD contains little more than Palm Desktop 4.1, Palm Reader, and some third-party demos.

The iQue has a speedy 200MHz processor to handle the resource-intensive tasks of map zooming and redrawing. Nevertheless, the device paused occasionally while redrawing some complex urban areas. Palm OS 5.2.1 enables support for more system RAM; we suggest you supplement the internal 32MB with a 128MB SD card to make sure you have room for your maps.

Like Sony's larger CLIEs, the iQue has a spacious 320x480-pixel transflective screen that can produce 65,536 colors. We thought the display looked great indoors with the backlight on; map detail was crisp and clear down to the smallest icons. Viewing in direct sunlight with the backlight off returned similarly pleasing results and saved some juice--just don't blind yourself by holding the iQue at the wrong angle. Sound was also good and loud enough for listening to tunes comfortably even in the noisiest environments.

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Looking good: Though slightly less colorful than a CLIE's screen, the iQue's display is bright and sharp.

The iQue was a bit poky getting its first satellite fix, taking about four minutes. Reconnecting was substantially faster at a minute or less when our location was open to the sky. The unit clung tenaciously to its signal as we schlepped around the San Francisco Bay Area, disconnecting only when we tarried too long under an overpass or between skyscrapers.

The iQue is also adept at calculating and giving directions. A smooth female voice announces how many miles you are from an upcoming turn, then repeats the turn command when you get within a few hundred feet. Though the screen tells you street names, the voice understandably doesn't: imagine a computer trying to pronounce Gough, Duboce, and Guerrero. If you stray off course, the iQue quickly finds a new route with which to guide you.

Garmin Ique 3600 Parts

Unfortunately, the iQue has a glaring weakness: battery life. The gluttonous display and GPS receiver quickly sap power. For our test, we ran a movie in Kinoma Player with the screen brightness at 50 percent. After 2 hours, 11 minutes, the low-battery warning appeared, and the backlight automatically dimmed to about 10 percent. The device completely ran out of steam at the 3-hour mark. Performance will be a bit better with the GPS receiver as long as you minimize backlight use: one charge got us approximately 3 hours, 45 minutes of intermittent GPS activity. The iQue also has a battery-saving mode, in which the unit syncs with satellites as little as possible.