Jun
18
Posted in Garmin Gps, Mac on June 18 2013

Up cocklpit schwarz copy2
There are many reasons why the compact car segment is gaining momentum, most importantly better fuel-efficiency. But you might be wondering how smaller cars stack up against their bigger siblings when it comes to infotainment. The new Volkswagen up! is a great example, showing that you don't have to sacrifice your infotainment options when opting for a smaller car: The next-generation maps + more portable infotainment
device from Garmin provides a comprehensive
infotainment package, including navigation, a media player, vehicle information
and Bluetooth hands-free capabilities. maps + more live  adds connected services, such as real-time traffic and
weather information, local search provided by Yelp as well as safety camera
warnings. Users simply connect their smartphone to the device via Bluetooth to
enable the services[1], utilizing their existing data
plan. The portable device features a five-inch touchscreen and is fully
integrated into the vehicle. maps + more live is available now as a factory-installed
option for Volkswagen up! vehicles in Australia and Europe. 

“maps + more live packs the features of a fully integrated
infotainment system into a portable device that is connected, can easily be
updated and provides excellent value,” said Peter Schubert, vice president
automotive OEM at Garmin Würzburg GmbH. “We’re thrilled to partner with
Volkswagen on such an innovative project and look forward to delivering our
leading infotainment technology to Volkswagen up! customers.”

To learn more, read the full press release here.


[1] Garmin’s live services are available free for the first four weeks and
available for a one-time fee of 29.95 Euros afterwards. Restrictions
apply.  Not available in all areas. Subscriptions required. Contact your
mobile service provider for more information about your service plan's data and
roaming rates.  See http://static.garmincdn.com/pumac/Premium_Content_EN.htm for terms, conditions and
limitations.

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Garmin Portable Device for VW up! Redefines Infotainment for Compact Cars



 
Jun
14
Posted in GPS MANUFACTURERS, Mac on June 14 2013

IMG_4980

Congratulations to our Team
Papotanic
for recently winning the 19th Annual
Sarasota Sertoma Kingfish Tournament
 in Serasota, Florida!

The Houston-based team of Bill Platt, Jose
Reyes, Ernie Pyle Jr., Ozzie Fischer and Gill Strelec caught this 49.76 lb
Kingfish nearly 100 miles southwest of Sarasota. 

On board, Team Papotanic had dual GPSMAP 7215 and a GSD 26 with 3 kW CHIRP transducer.

"Garmin helps us win with
user-friendly touchscreen units.  We are always in a rush for time, so
easy, fast and reliable devices mean more fishing time for us," said Captain Bill Platt.  "That's why
Garmin keeps me and Team Papotanic in the winner's circle."

What a great way to start the season!  Congratulations Team Papotanic!

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Team Papotanic Wins Sertoma with a 49.76 lb. Kingfish



 
Jun
11
Posted in Garmin Gps, Mac on June 11 2013

Blog
With summer travel season in full swing, we today announced our first navigator designed for the RV lifestyle. Now, you can enjoy the freedom of the open road plus the convenience of traveling with a friendly guide. RV 760LMT offers RV-friendly features that are advanced though easy-to-use. 

Garmin RV760LMT_small
The 7-inch GPS device
is packed with signature Garmin navigation features as well as RV-friendly
functions to guide RV drivers with confidence. Preloaded with detailed maps, the
RV 760LMT creates custom routes based on the size and weight of an RV[1].
It is the only navigation device that features America’s RV Parks &
Services Directory, making it easy to find repairs, RV parks and campgrounds. Navigation
features include voice-activated navigation, Garmin Real Directions™, free lifetime traffic[2]
as well as Active Lane Guidance with voice prompts. To make sure
RV drivers have access to the latest weather and other real-time trip
information, Garmin Smartphone Link provides access to live services[3].
Completing the package, the free BaseCamp™ software allows users to plan
trips ahead of time and transfer them to the RV 760LMT for directions.

To learn more and see the RV 760LMT in action, check out the video below or go to garmin.com/rv.
 

[1]Not available in all areas. Entering your
vehicle’s profile characteristics does not guarantee that your vehicle’s
characteristics will be accounted for in all route suggestions. Always defer to
all posted road signs and road conditions.

[2]Lifetime traffic extends
for the useful life of your Garmin traffic receiver or as long as Garmin
receives traffic data from its traffic supplier, whichever is shorter. A
traffic

receiver’s “useful life”
means the period during which the receiver (a) has the required technical
capabilities to utilize current traffic data service and (b) is capable of
operating

as intended without major repairs. Traffic content not available in all
areas.

[3]Restrictions apply. 
Not available in all areas. Subscriptions required. Contact your mobile service
provider for more information about your service plan's data and roaming rates. 
See http://static.garmincdn.com/pumac/Premium_Content_EN.htm for terms, conditions and
limitations.

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Garmin RV 760LMT, a New Navigator Made for the RV Lifestyle



 
May
29
Posted in Aviation Gps, Garmin Gps, Mac, WINDOWS on May 29 2013

SafeTaxiWith the unofficial beginning of summer behind us, it’s officially time to break out the sunscreen, fill the inflatable pools, and finish those dreaded spring cleaning chores. But if I may, might I suggest adding to your list for spring-related chores?

This time of year is a great time to update your avionics, both certified and portable. Our flyGarmin website offers a whole host of supplemental databases that complement your flying needs, whether they include regularly flying for business or attending the occasional weekend fly-in.

Jeppesen’s navigation database is available on flyGarmin for our entire aviation product line. NavData is the database utilized when inputting your flight plan into your Garmin GPS. Information such as airport identifiers, navigational aids, intersections, and airspace information are all included in this important database.

Garmin FliteCharts are also available for purchase and download on flyGarmin.  FliteCharts allow pilots to display the government instrument procedure charts right on their Garmin avionics. An updated charts database also has the technology to geo-reference your aircraft position right on the approach chart, enhancing situational awareness in unfamiliar environments. It is important to note that depending on the size and display of your Garmin navigator, FliteCharts are not available for every unit.

An obstacle database is available as an optional download for many of our aviation products. Simply put, the obstacle database may be loaded to your GPS and will display man-made obstacles 200 feet AGL (above ground level) or greater.


AOPATerrain
is also available and enhances the safety of any flight. The terrain database consists of all non-man made features such as mountains. Alerts may be set up on many of our aviation products, which notify pilots of potential threats as they relate to either obstacle or terrain.

Airport Directory may be uploaded to many of our avionics which is just as good as having the Airport Facility Directory on board! The airport directory database offers information such as ATC tower hours of operation, traffic pattern altitudes, pertinent communication and navigation frequencies, as well as names and phone numbers of thousands of FBO’s at airports around the world.

SafeTaxi features a geo-referenced airport diagram right on many of our Garmin aviation GPS devices. This is helpful at busy and unusual airport layouts, as SafeTaxi will aid in your awareness and offer an additional level of safety.

Just in time for the summer flying season, these updates may be performed on any PC operating Windows 2000, XP, Vista, 7 or 8. Adding to the convenience of the database update process, flyGarmin has also been Mac compatible for over three years! The latest database pricing is listed by product on our database price sheet along with the database cycle, which can both be found on flyGarmin.

While I hate to add to your list of spring-cleaning chores, you’ll be thankful you have a fresh update in your avionics next time you receive an odd departure procedure or taxi clearance. And when you do, don’t forget to thank Lucy!

 

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Lucy’s Logbook: How to freshen up your avionics



 
Apr
27
Posted in GPS MANUFACTURERS, Mac on April 27 2013

D + ScottFor Bring Your Child to
Work Day, my 11-year-old son had a chance to see what’s it like on the inside
of the Garmin marketing communciations and blog team. He shared some thoughts from last
Saturday’s Garmin Marathon, where he ran the 5k to knock out a 7:31 min/mile average pace, placing 3rd in the 18 & under group. Well done, son.

Peg: What kind of training did you do for this race?
D: Well, I'm in baseball now, so I really only ran two training runs.
The first one was…um, how many miles? Let’s just look in my history [checks his Forerunner 10]. We ran 2.14 miles in
19:39. And then I ran 3.01 miles in 26:25.

Peg: What was you goal pace for this race?
D: On race day, I had my
Virtual Pacer set for an 8:45 pace. I only got behind it for a couple of times
during the race, but it wasn’t for very long, and then I was back, either on pace or
ahead. I was behind mostly at the start because there was quite a bit of
people, so I had to make my way in between them.

Peg: So what was your race strategy?
D: I would pick out one person who was a pretty good distance ahead of me and I thought “okay, I’m gonna go up
and pass that person” and that’s pretty much what I did the whole race.

Peg: How did you feel when you saw the finish line?
D: I just felt like I had to finish the race, but I didn’t get as good of a
kick as I wanted. I could hear you cheering for me at the finish line.


Mac and cheesePeg:
What did you do after you finished?
D: I got a water
bottle and I started to untie my chip, then someone came with cutters and just
pulled it off. And then I went and got a banana and some Shatto chocolate milk
and my legs started coming back to life. Then I went and picked up my race
results, which showed I was 3rd in my age group. Ultramax (the
company that did the timing) is good because they print out results really fast.
Then I went over and got some awesome macaroni and cheese from Noodles &
Company
. I went back again…and again. I had 3.25 bowls of that stuff. And 3
shots of Shatto.[PS: and look what was for lunch the day D visited Garmin headquarters--bacon mac & cheese! Our head chef must know us well.]

Peg: You were feeling pretty good by then, right?
D: Yeah, I didn't want to leave. So then I hung
around the finish line and cheered on the runners and handed out thunder stix
to the crowd so they could make some noise. Jake was on the microphone saying
all the runners' names as they crossed. I thought he had to be getting thirsty
and hungry, so I brought him some water and macaroni & cheese.


Tin man
D and DesiPeg:
And you got an award, right?
D: Yes, I got an award for being third in my age group. It was a cool Tin Man bobble head. Then I got to meet some of the pros at the race, like Desi Davila, who made the Olympic team for the marathon. I showed her my new Brooks beanie because she runs on the Brooks-Hansons team. I also met Scott Jurek. I'd never seen him before, but my mom told me about all the races he has won. I think it's kinda crazy he can run all those miles as a vegan. No cheeseburgers? No mac & cheese? That would be tough. He just seemed like a regular guy though and he told me good job on my race and he signed my award.


Gm-4Peg:
What were some of the best costumes you saw?
D: One lady was dressed as a yellow brick road and then there was a lady
dressed as a “wicked fast witch” and she was the masters winner in the half marathon.

Peg: Will you do this race
again?
D: Probably so. Plus I want to do the Susan G Komen 5k because my 5th
grade teacher had breast cancer. I also want to do a kids triathlon because I like swimming and biking.

 

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Peg’s prodigy racaps his 5k race at the Garmin Marathon



 
Apr
12
Posted in Garmin Gps, Mac on April 12 2013

Mjohnson_20130411_0116During the Spring Classics, the day after a race is a calm one for
riders. They sleep in, have breakfast and then head out for a recovery ride. That is followed by eating lunch, having a massage and their day is done.

For the Garmin-Sharp team staff, however, the day is
anything but leisurely. That’s when all the team’s support materials — cars,
bikes, trucks, clothes, food — is made ship-shape after chaotic race days. The
day
Mjohnson_20130411_0085after Belgium’s De Brabantse Pijl we spent the morning with the team staff and
watched it all take place.

In the mechanics’ truck, Juan Lujan and Joerge Wohlleben
methodically dismantled freewheels.

Mjohnson_20130411_0053After pulling the cassette cluster from a Mavic wheel with a
chain whip, Lujan inspected the sprockets for damaged teeth. Using a rag, he
polished the sprockets to gleaming silver. He then dismantled the wheel’s
freewheel spindle mechanism, cleaned and greased it, then put the entire
mechanism back together. In a tightly orchestrated show of wrenching, Luhan and
Wohlleben repeated the process for 24 wheels.
Mjohnson_20130411_0038

Wohlleben said the carbon-fiber Mavics they were overhauling
came from the Tour of the Basque Country. “It was raining every day,” the
German mechanic observed. Because water wreaks havoc with bike components, Wohlleben
said the mechanics repeat this wheel cleaning and greasing process after every
rainy event or training ride.

In addition to the freewheel overhaul, Lujan said after
every race “We check the freewheels, the bottom bracket bearings, the headset,
the chain, the brake cables and especially the tires.”

Mjohnson_20130411_0150After placing the reconditioned wheels on wall-mounted fork
racks inside the mechanics truck, Lujan slowly spun each wheel and inspected
for cuts and abrasions on the Mavic tubular tires. He pulled wheels with
damaged tires from the rack; later he would begin the process of gluing on new
tires.

Lujan moved wheels with good-condition tires to one end of
the long line of racks. For the next race, the Amstel Gold Race in Holland, the
mechanics will mount the wheels with new tires on the rider’s race bikes and
reserve the previously-ridden tires for their backup bikes. However, used is in
the eye of the beholder; none of the tires that made the inspection cut showed
even minimal wear.
Mjohnson_20130411_0007

Next to the mechanic’s truck British soigneur Garry Becket
was attacking the inside of a team caravan car with a vacuum.

This car was used at Paris-Roubaix and had just been returned
from a Belgian mechanic. Beckett explained that for Roubaix, the caravan cars
are fitted with different steel rims and higher profile tires to help them
straddle the race’s heavily-crowned cobblestone roads. Along with replacing the
high-profile wheels with standard car tires, the mechanic had also removed a
special undercarriage plate temporarily installed to protect the drive train
from scraping when the car
Mjohnson_20130411_0163slammed into dips on the Roubaix cobbles. Without
the plate and the special wheels, the cars would quickly leave a trail of oil
and differential parts across the pavé.

This was the vehicle’s first deep cleaning since Roubaix. With
a rag, Beckett cleaned fine, tan-colored Roubaix dust that had caked on the
rear hatch hinges. Under the hood, the engine was encased in an even thicker
shell of the same grime. “It’s incredible where it penetrates,” Beckett said as
he set about cleaning the engine surfaces.
Mjohnson_20130411_0132

The team normally washes the cars every day. “It’s our
livery,” Becket said with his rumbly British accent. “We don’t want to be seen in
dirty old motors.”

While vacuuming the car insides, Beckett also took time to
stuff the driver’s side door pocket with Clif bars, Clif Shots, and Clif Bloks.
During Sunday’s race in Holland, the director driving the car will be ready to
hand these items to riders. 

Mjohnson_20130411_002030 feet away, French bus driver Matthiew Rompion scrubbed
the side of the team bus with a long-handled brush. This home away from home for the riders also gets an inside and out scouring
before and after every race.

Rompion said races in Belgium this time of year demand a lot
of aggressive vacuuming. Riders finish caked with mud and grime and it ends up inside
the bus when they flop down on couches or peel off soaked clothing.

After washing the bus, Rompion pulled a hose to its side and
begin filling the water tanks. “It takes a long
Mjohnson_20130411_0109
time,” he said. Along with
supplying water to a small kitchen, these tanks run two on-board showers. As
part of his bus-cleaning regime, Rompion also restocks the refrigerator with
drinks for the riders on their way to and from races. The morning of races he
adds bottles of recovery drink as well.

The bus has trays of Clif products on a counter, and when
those run low, Rompion restocks them from boxes of Clif products stored under
the
Mjohnson_20130411_0127bus’s bench seats.

Rompion said one of his most critical tasks is replacing a
box of coffee capsules next to the bus espresso machine. How often does he have
to replenish it? “Every day!” Rompion said with a laugh. A hot-water kettle shares
the counter with the coffee machine. “For English people,” Rompion pointed out.
British physiotherapist Matt Rabin and Irish rider Dan Martin are two Rompion
says prefer tea over coffee.

The truck that houses the bikes and mechanics’ shop also has
a small
Mjohnson_20130411_0100 kitchen and laundry room. Inside, American soigneur Alyssa Morahan
opened a Sharp refrigerator she had stocked with food from a grocery run
earlier in the day. Packed with yoghurt, fruit and sandwich makings, the
refrigerator is used at races — along with another refrigerator in the bus — to
prepare food for both staff and riders.

This truck had also come from the Tour of the Basque
Country. Morahan had given the kitchen a thorough scrubbing earlier in the day.
She good-naturedly added that while the staff cleans the kitchen when at the
races, it was hard to keep up at the soaking race in Northern Spain:
“Everything was wet every day—you can only clean the floor so many time while
you are tracking in dirt!” 

Mjohnson_20130411_0021
Mjohnson_20130411_0046
Mjohnson_20130411_0071
Mjohnson_20130411_0078
Mjohnson_20130411_0080
Mjohnson_20130411_0110
Mjohnson_20130411_0001
Mjohnson_20130411_0030
Mjohnson_20130411_0097

Source: Garmin
Read more here:
Team Garmin-Sharp: The Deep Clean, The Day After



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