It's just not clear if a stylus should be used with a PND - I would think PNDs should exclusively be operated by your fingers. The stylus is retractable, and is certainly usable. On the left side you have the compartment for the stylus. The power plug is slightly smaller than the one normally used in the older GPS devices and Pocket PCs. On the right side of the device you have the SD card slot, the headphone socket (2.5mm unfortunately) and the power connector. The black inverted T is the receiver for the camera, doubling as an adapter for the windscreen mount (note the typical Arkon prongs)
If you only use the software on/off at the top then the device will go into standby, and still drain the battery, albeit at a reduced rate. The advantage of such a solution is that you can store the device longer between uses because switching the device off with the slider will really disconnect the battery. This has the potential to confuse even more since it's not just the GPS that you need to switch on - it's the complete PND that won't do a thing unless you flip this switch. Since some consumers seem to have been confused by the two switches Nextar have added a "Please switch on the GPS device" sticker. However this is the master switch, and similar to a hard reset button. The back shows the external MMCX antenna connector, the speaker grille, and another on/off switch. The case has a pleasant white/silver theme, a welcome departure from all the black you see on other devices. The front of the device shows the display (surprise, surprise). Rechargeable Li-Polymer battery (1400mAH) Wide screen PND with wireless rear view camera
As you may have seen from Maft's review that is not a big loss since Bluetooth did not work properly on the Binatone anyhow. Different from the Binatone the Nextar device came with Bluetooth disabled. The table below shows the specifications.