Verizon 8830’s GPS fixed?

VerizonWe just got a tip about a new software patch for the Verizon BlackBerry 8830 which will enable GPS for their Navigator service, which will cost you $9.99 monthly or $2.99 per day. According to our source it doesn’t look like a full unlocking, but if you want to interpret “App Based Tracking Implementation” as a full-blown GPS unlock, feel free. I guess your 8830 isn’t as closed as it used to be, eh Lowell? The patch (4.2.2 release 339) also includes some audio quality and spell check fixes, but who cares about that, right?

Verizon 8830 patch

Verizon 8830 patch 2

Posted by Simon Sage in News, Rumors

Comments [14 Responses]

Verizon Finds A Way To Charge For GPS On 8830 | BerryReview
November 20th, 2007 at 3:40 pm

[...] down on the Verizon 8830 there is finally a way to use Verizon’s Navigator service on your 8830. A new patch that Simon at BBCool caught opens up the door for Verizon 8830’s to work with the Veri…. If you remember Verizon blocked GPS in the first place since they could not charge for it but I [...]

Dave Hughes
November 21st, 2007 at 11:28 am

I’m a Verizon Customer and an considering moving to a new carrier in March when my contract is up.
My question is:
Which carriers are the most “open” in the respect of giving the customer the most of what the Blackberry was built to do?

Steven Murray
November 30th, 2007 at 10:13 pm

The new google maps has a locator that serves as a gps. It’s kinda nice. Check it out.

Joe
December 23rd, 2007 at 7:23 pm

Hi, I have had every service out there in the past 3 years. I have had 900.00 gps units as well as Telenav on my bb 8800 on AT$T now i have the Verizon 8830 and used the navigator and in my opinion it beats the Telenav service hands down. It too cost 9.99 per month and having used both I would much prefer the vzw over any of them. Google maps is nice, I would like to have that unlocked as well but the point is so many people complain about vzw’s cost for navigation and I don’t believe it is warranted. Just my opinion.

James Steele
January 22nd, 2008 at 10:27 am

Joe,
You do not see that it is warranted? Lets look at it in this light. Say it is not a GPS but the actural car. You buy this car say a mustang. It come from the factory with built in head lights. Then at the dealer they disable those headlights to and tell you that if you wish to use them then that will be $10 every month. The electricity that powers those headlights does not come from the dealer. All the dealer did was place in an additional switch that they use to control the headlights that only they can use.

Now aply that to the 8830 from blackberry and there dealer Verizon.

James

Robert
May 12th, 2008 at 6:27 pm

There are several free downloads for any RIM blackberry that would use the internal GPS if it wern’t disabled:
BLACKBERRY MAPS
GOOGLE MAPS
YAHOO! GO?
BLACKBERRY 411
NAV4ALL
BLIP

Some but not all Blackberries are now capable of executing the VZNavigator which apparently is exceptional. I will be switching from Verizon at some point if they don’t enable the GPS although I know I will miss the good reception I get in buildings. I understand however the competition will be catching up and are already providing faster internet access as well via 3G and 4G.

The last excuse I heard is that the problem has to do with Blackberrie’s security. I don’t think this is actually a lie, rather that RIM provides a security switch which enables Verizon to disable access to GPS.

I have heard and have found instructions which make it possible to load in a competitor’s Blackberry OS and the GPS will be enabled but of course it won’t work with VZNavigator.

DavidB
July 9th, 2008 at 9:47 am

@Robert:
If you’re still following this thread, can you advise what “competitor’s OS” you loaded and the GPS became functional? I have Sprint’s device software for the 8830 but have not yet tried installing it, and since Sprint does not block GPS location access by applications I guess that might do it? What “instructions” did you find and use?

@Jason:
There already IS a class action lawsuit about this in US District Court. Unfortunately the first action won’t be until some mandatory preliminary settlement conference in January 2009!

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