[GeoStL] Re: cool online scavanger hunt

  • From: "tnsl" <sydstyr@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2008 13:08:30 -0500

Someone here once talked about their use of a "hand held" GPS while in the 
military in the Gulf War.  They talked about it being about the size of a shoe 
box and maybe there were two pieces?  I thought that same person, or someone 
else said they even still had one somewhere in their basement, garage etc.  But 
I also thought it was not a Garmin.

How's that for help?

Nancy


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: tnsl 
  To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 1:00 PM
  Subject: [GeoStL] Re: cool online scavanger hunt


  The "hint" on the game goes to the Garmin website.

  Nancy


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Libby Morehead 
    To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 12:55 PM
    Subject: [GeoStL] Re: cool online scavanger hunt


    So how about this one

    http://www.lowrance.com/en/About/History/

    (We must not have enough to do.)

    Libby

     ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Kat 
      To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
      Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 12:41 PM
      Subject: [GeoStL] Re: cool online scavanger hunt


      Yeah but 
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thales_Navigation
      1989 Magellan NAV 1000 introduced as the world's first commercial 
handheld GPS receiver.

      And I can't get either to work
      Stew E

      Libby Morehead wrote: 
        - 
        
http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Garmin-Ltd-Company-History.html
 


        Key Dates: 
        1990: Garmin Corporation is formed in Taiwan. 
        1991: The company's first product, GPS 100AVD, debuts. 
        1996: Garmin moves to new headquarters building. 
        1997: GPS III, Garmin's first automotive product, is introduced. 
        1998: StreetPilot, an auto navigation product, is introduced. 
        2000: The company goes public, and Garmin Ltd. is formed. 
        2003: Palm OS-based iQue 3600 is unveiled.Aviation products accounted 
for 20 percent of revenues. Garmin continued to bring forth innovations, 
combining several flight instruments in its integrated avionics systems, which 
were selected for use in Cessna Aircraft Co. business jets and piston-engine 
aircraft from Diamond Aircraft Co. 
        Garmin International acquired UPS Aviation Technologies, Inc. from 
United Parcel Service, Inc. in August 2003 for $38 million. The unit, which 
employed 150 people producing general aviation and air cargo products, was 
renamed Garmin AT, Inc. 
        A mandate from the FCC for mobile phone companies to offer enhanced 911 
service to help dispatchers locate callers--along with penetration of GPS 
technology into new fields, such as golf--suggested the market for GPS-related 
devices was still relatively untapped. The Kansas facility was slated for 
another expansion to be completed in 2004. 


        Company History: 
        Garmin Ltd. is a leader in Global Positioning System (GPS) navigation 
products. Once found mostly in specialized equipment for aircraft and boats, 
GPS technology has been adapted for use in a variety of handheld and wristwatch 
units for users such as hikers, athletes, sportsmen, and automobile drivers. 
Garmin has sold five million units in its first dozen years. Its product line 
has proliferated into 50 different items marketed through a network of 2,500 
dealers, distributors, and partners in 100 countries around the world. While 
the parent company is registered in the Cayman Islands, Garmin has 
manufacturing and sales operations in the United States (Kansas) and Taiwan and 
a marketing office in the United Kingdom. 

        Origins 

        The U.S. Department of Defense began developing the Global Positioning 
System (GPS) in the mid-1970s, eventually spending $15 billion to put two dozen 
satellites into orbit. GPS receivers could determine their coordinates by 
comparing signals from different satellites. Like the first computers, the 
first commercially available GPS units were large and expensive, costing up to 
$10,000. 

        Garmin Corporation was formed in Taiwan in January 1990 by two 
electrical engineers, Gary Burrell and Dr. Min Kao. (The company's name is 
derived from the first names of the founders.) Burrell and Kao had been 
employed by Kansas-based King Radio Corporation, a maker of radios and aircraft 
navigation equipment, which was acquired by Allied Corp. (later Allied Signal) 
in 1985. Burrell displayed in interest in integration early on and is credited 
with designing the first combination navigation/communications radio for 
general aviation while at King Radio. 

        Garmin introduced its first product, the GPS 100AVD, in January 1991. 
Aimed at boaters and pilots of small planes, it was about the size of a 
paperback book and sold for about $1,000. By 1992, GPS devices were a $100 
million-a-year market. 

        Garmin subsequently introduced another GPS unit for pilots called the 
GPS 95. This one, which sold for $1,795, incorporated a display of the plane's 
position on a moving map, as well as nearby airports and radio beacons. It 
could also backup the aircraft's built-in instrumentation with groundspeed, 
heading, and altitude readings. 

        Sales reached $102 million in 1995, producing net income of $23 
million. Garmin International, the U.S. unit, moved to a new $8 million, 
100,000-square-foot headquarters in early 1996. Its offices had previously been 
housed in four separate buildings. 

        Locating Drivers in the Late 1990s 

        Garmin turned its attention to the automotive market in the late 1990s 
with two hand-held units. GPS III, introduced in late 1997, incorporated a map 
of major roads in the Americas. This device displayed the position of the 
driver and destination on the map. Garmin brought out the StreetPilot in March 
1998. It retailed for $700 and replaced more detailed mapping programs 
requiring a laptop computer. 

        Garmin's next project was a waterproof mobile phone with a GPS receiver 
and map display built in called NavTalk. The company also expanded beyond GPS 
products in its aviation-related products, introducing a Mode C transponder (a 
device for communicating a plane's position to air traffic controllers) and an 
intercom. Sales were $232.6 million in 1999. The company soon doubled the size 
of its Kansas plant to 240,000 square feet. It also had manufacturing 
operations in Taiwan and a sales office in England. 


        ----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Senger" <asenger@xxxxxxxxx> 
        To: <geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> 
        Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 9:42 AM 
        Subject: [GeoStL] Re: cool online scavanger hunt 



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