Raymarine E-Wide hands-on #1, & money talk
href="http://www.ibinews.com/ibinews/newsdesk/20091020152519ibinews.html">as IBI puts it
November 23, 2009
Raymarine product manager Mark Garland and marketing manager Jim McGowan kindly came to Maine last Thursday and swapped a new E140 Widescreen for the C140W I used for radar comparisons all summer. They were lucky in terms of testing-on-the-Bay weather, but not so lucky in terms of dire sounding Raymarine financial news that I felt compelled to drill them about. I'll save that for last, though, as the E Wide is definitely worth top billing...
Of course the big deal about E Wides is the "hybridTouch" interface, which I took to fairly easily. I don't mind that a few functions, like zooming, can only be done with keys (and hence you don't have to constantly see Garmin-like + and - keys overlaid on the screen). But I did quite naturally adopt touch for picking an active screen, selecting a MARPA target, laying down waypoints, and querying POI data. And I suppose if it had been really rough, I could have gone back to the keys for those tasks.
This screen shot of Gizmo entering the harbor -- pretending to be a sailboat, icon wise -- illustrates a few things. For one, the 3D implementation is much better than it used to be, and I think it will be used a lot more. Raymarine does need to let users move the boat icon down the 3D screen, or put it there permanently a la Garmin, but it does let you tap POIs for info, which Garmin doesn't. This E Widescreen can not overlay radar on 3D, and Raymarine's making no promises in that regard, but I saw it demoed on an apparently rogue beta unit Lauderdale, so I think we can hope. The reason the radar shown on this screen looks somewhat messy is that I have it set in "Bird Mode", which I found surprisingly useful in the outer harbor and Bay. It picked up some mooring bouys that other presets didn't, but declared its uncertainty with that light blue "may be noise" color.
Further screen note, and credit to Navionics: At least for Camden, its latest P+ color photo maps are a few years fresher, and appear slightly higher res, than Furuno's, which I thought to be the best. But that may vary up and down the coast and elsewhere, and both photos -- the "latest" available -- show Gizmo sitting on a granite wall that was taken down during the winter of 2006-2007. You've been warned!
violated, plus the rumored buy out by Garmin has not materialized. The
London Times seems to have a thorough overview of the situation, but it's Reuters that quotes a British analyst saying, "Insolvency is the most likely course, if I were a betting
man." Ouch! But let's note that the analyst has a sell rating on Raymarine stock, and may even be making money as the stock plummets. At any rate, his focus is stock value, when in fact stock value and actual business value are two separate things. Observe the history of Iridium Satellite and many other companies that have come back to life fine though their original stock did not.
The people I know at Raymarine, like Mark and Jim, don't seem to know much more about this situation than we do -- which is how it's supposed to work at public companies -- but they point out that the banks have extended their possible loans another 15 million pounds, which Raymarine has not exercised but does not seem like what a smart banker would do if a company was close to "collapse", as IBI puts it. Heck, even the "sell" analyst who's quoted everywhere added, "If you strip off the debt, this is quite a good company. It should be chucking off cash." And, while I'm no business analyst, 92 million pounds of debt does not seem that big a negative given Raymarine's place in the marine electronics market, and its current product assets. When Raymarine visited last week, all six boats still afloat where Gizmo is tied up at Wayfarer -- a very diverse little fleet -- are Raymarine equipped, and Garland told me that about 1,000 E Widescreens are already on order.
So I find it quite hard to believe that Raymarine will collapse as in no products being sold or serviced. Change likely, stock holders screwed probably, but collapse like that I doubt. But if I was Raymarine I'd sure be worried that potential customers are passing them by because they're worried about such a collapse. I don't know what British security laws allow -- have you ever heard of a U.S. company board having to tell its stockholders that it's unlikely they'll realize any value? -- but this would be a good time for whatever assurance is possible.