Child-friendly sat navs
Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008 by JoIt’s half term next week which means many of us will be carting the kids around for days out, going to visit relatives and possibly getting stuck trying to find things to do. Well, while you’re in the car, a little something called Sat-Nanny may be able to help when you need to stop-off somewhere with the kids or if you’re just trying to find fun things to do.
Sat-Nanny is a joint initiative from the folks over at www.childfriendly.co.uk and RoadTour. It’s a programme that works on most sat navs that will let parents know where the nearest child-friendly stops and activities for little tykes are.
Here are a couple of examples of some of the places it will pull up and the info it will give parents:
The Crown- Twickenham: This pub boasts a huge enclosed beer garden, with two fenced off play areas for children of different age groups, making it easy for adults to relax in the knowledge kids are happy and safe. There is plenty of space for families to eat inside as well, and car parking available. There is a children’s menu, but the food is limited to the stock options (pizza, fish fingers & macaroni cheese). Food for adults is typical gastro pub fare - nothing extraordinary, but well priced. There are baby-changing facilities.
The Mohair Centre- East Sussex: This is definitely a children’s farm with angora goats all ready to be stroked by the kids and other farm animals such as pigs, cows and chickens. In Spring, you’ll be able to watch the lambing and kidding. No kidding! There are also spinning and weaving demonstrations and a nature trail to help the kids, yours not theirs, explore life on the farm.
Hmmm, who was all up for getting it until they read that?!
Well, regardless of the strange lingo, it will help parents find some nice places to take their children. It only costs a one-off fee of £9.95 so it may be worth it. You can download it here: www.roadtour.co.uk.
You can also see a demo here: Sat-Nanny demo
If you’re still relying on traditional methods of navigation that force you to stop every so often to mess around with a big book of roads, treat yourself and get your hands on a nice, shiny satellite navigation system.



well as Samsung, Sony Ericsson and Motorola handsets.


