I was told by someone who works for Motorola that they don't actually contain a GPS, but instead use triangulation with the local cells (using signal strength) to identify your 2-dimensional location - this is supposedly done at the cell stations, not on your cell phone itself, BUT have not been able to verify that.

By the way, another GPS product that does similar displays of maps & photos is http://www.expertgps.com . I use this mostly to store/manage my waypoints and to get quick on-line topo maps. For good topo maps I much prefer National Geographics' Topo! software, which is also GPS compatible.

For those interested I just got a new Garmin Geko 201 yesterday. REALLY nice little GPS. I read a bunch of complaints about slow starts or accidental on-button pressings, but it starts up even faster than my Garmin GPS III+, and the on-button has a raised guard now. The software is very "natural" to use.

Ken