Magellan eXplorist 510 Topo Edition
BEST FOR: Outdoorsmen, Geocachers, and 国产吃瓜黑料 Racers
If your outing requires serious backcountry navigation, there鈥檚 no substitute for a traditional, dedicated GPS unit. It has more user-friendly features and will find more satellites when you鈥檙e in a canyon or forest. Magellan鈥檚 up-armored, waterproof lets you 颅attach photos and voice memos to your waypoints and comes bundled with full-color National Geographic topo maps that you download via (Windows-only) computer.
Suunto Ambit

BEST FOR: Workouts
While the is a fully functioning GPS device, it isn鈥檛 going to help you in the car (no streets or directions), and its face is a bit small for intensive route finding. Instead, the easy-to-use Ambit is all about tracking your movements (running, cycling, and hiking) and calculating pace and vertical gain while integrating heart rate and calorie-burn estimates. Plus it can lead you home and comes with free upgrades: simply plug it into your PC to download new features.
Garmin Nuvi 3597 LMTHD

BEST FOR: Drivers
While smartphone mapping apps get the job done, they also burn through data plans, run down your battery, and cause havoc when your boss calls. For seeking out new locations, exploring unfamiliar towns, and traffic-clogged commutes, a windshield-mounted PND (personal navigation device) with a colorful, responsive touchscreen is still your best bet. Commuters will love the HD Digital Traffic feature, which pings you with updates every 30 seconds, allowing for quick, hands-free rerouting if an accident occurs up ahead.
Trimble Outdoors Navigator App

BEST FOR: Fast-and-Light Missions
Trimble Outdoors鈥 free (available for all Android and iOS devices) taps into your phone鈥檚 built-in GPS to let you navigate even when you don鈥檛 have cell service. It doesn鈥檛 have as many bells and whistles as a dedicated GPS, and you鈥檒l run out of juice sooner, but it turns your phone into a legitimate, reliable, backcountry-worthy route finder.