I've had the AnywhereMap ATC for a year and a half, upgraded it with the XM Wx receiver last summer, and love it. Touch screen beats hell out of buttons and rocker switches any day. It's much lighter than the 696. And vastly cheaper to buy ($600 to $1,300 depending upon options vs. three grand) and to keep current with downloadable database updates ($115 per year for everything vs. close to a grand per year if you get everything Garmin sells as subscriptions). "Everything" includes facilities database, obstructions, terrain, taxi diagrams, and sectional maps (MaxNav).
AnywhereMap also offers features you can't get on a Garmin for any price, such as MaxNav, which provides downloadable current FAA sectional maps on which you view your position in real time as you fly.
They came out with a newer unit this year ("Quadra") that is more capable than my ATC (more internal memory so handles MaxNav better; and it has a Wi-Fi to update independently of your computer). Sells for $600, or $800 for the MaxNav version. About $1,300 with XM WX and MaxNav. Much cheaper than the "equivalent" Garmin Aera (two grand).
No complaints so far in over 300 hours of use.
I have a Garmin 150XL in my panel, and have used a G430W in rental aircraft and a G696 in a friend's plane ... as far as user-friendliness, functionality, reliability, ease of updating, and bottom line cost go, my AnywhereMap beats the hell out of any Garmin product I've ever used. As long as you don't need a certified IFR enroute and approach GPS - in which case, you need a G430W or G530W - then you can't go wrong with the AnywhereMap. Even if you had a G430W or G530W, and if you also have the Anywhere Map on your yolk, you'll probably end up using the AnywhereMap over the Garmin most of the time, except for doing approved WAAS approaches in actual IMC.