Digitizers

I’ve been planning on upgrading the maps on our range of listings sites but hunting around the various places providing maps for websites quickly made me realise that it would cost far, far too much to buy the maps that I’d need. In that market, $100 per map is a typical price and I need something like 5 to 10 maps per country that I extend into.

In that paper maps are more like $5 a country I figured that going down the digitizer route was the way to go. Not only would this be substantially cheaper but I’d be able to add features to the various maps reasonably easily eg tourist attractions or specific towns and villages.

So, I started looking for a digitizer. Although these have been around for quite a while, it’s a fairly specialised device so you need to search in a reasonably large computer shop to find even one of them and that one is usually at the toy end of the range. Online, it is naturally different but the prices are something else or at least the range certainly is.

You can get an A4 tablet for anything from $75 or so through to $1000 for a start. Now, in practice although A4 sounds like what you’d want an A4 surface makes for a very large digitizer and it would appear most people go for the A5 size and for the most part the Wacom brand. However, even that’s not a whole lot of narrowing down as Wacom produce a whole heap of the things, many of which are very close in price.

In this particular market you don’t always seem to get what you pay for in that the price ranges of products aimed at the home and professional markets overlap considerably. So, for example, of the Wacom Graphire Wireless A5 Tablet and the Wacom Intuos3 A5 Tablet, either one can be the most expensive depending on the store yet reading the specs, the Intuos is clearly the one to go for.

Now, all I need to do is save up for it ‘cos I figured that it would be more like $50 than $300!

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