Bree-Z Box Garmin Marine Network Port Compatibility

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bree-Z Box Garmin Marine Network Port Compatibility Bree-Z Box Garmin Marine Network Port Compatibility Some Garmin devices have the ability to share data, sonar, radar, and mapping with one another using the Garmin Marine Network. The Bree-Z Box is a direct replacent for the GMS 10 Network Port Expanding Hub. Marine Network Compatible Chartplotters 1. 1. GPSMAP 10x2 series (two standard network ports) . GPSMAP 12x2 series (two standard network ports) . GPSMAP 3xxx series (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 4xxx series (three standard network ports) . GPSMAP 5xxx series (three standard network ports) . GPSMAP 6xxx series (three standard network ports) . GPSMAP 7x2 series (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 70xx/72xx series (three standard network ports) . GPSMAP 74xx/76xx series (two standard network ports) . GPSMAP 8xxx MFD series (four standard network ports) . GPSMAP 85xx Black Box series (four standard network ports) . GPSMAP 9x2 series (one standard network port) Marine Network Compatible Chartplotters with Limited Support 1. 1. GPSMAP 8xx series (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 10x0 series (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 721 (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 741 (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 547 (one standard network port) . GPSMAP 547xs (one standard network port) . echoMAP 70s (one standard network port) . echoMAP 70dv (one standard network port) . echoMAP CHIRP 7x series (one dedicated Panoptix port) . echoMAP CHIRP 9x series (one dedicated Panoptix port) . ECHOMAP Plus 7x series (one dedicated Panoptix port)* . ECHOMAP Plus 9x series (one dedicated Panoptix port)* . ECHOMAP UHD 7x series (one dedicated Panoptix port)* . ECHOMAP UHD 9x series (one dedicated Panoptix port)* *The ECHOMAP Plus 7x and 9x series and the ECHOMAP UHD 7x and 9x series also have the capability to share sonar with other ECHOMAP Plus 7x and 9x series and ECHOMAP UHD 7x and 9x series units. Chartplotters that Include a Marine Network Port Designed for Dedicated Radar Use¹ 1. 1. GPSMAP 720/740 (one dedicated Radar port) . GPSMAP 720s/740s (one dedicated Radar port) . GPSMAP 721xs (one dedicated Radar port and one standard network port) . GPSMAP 741xs (one dedicated Radar port and one standard network port) 1 Dedicated Radar ports are designed for use with a Garmin Radar only, other Marine Network devices are not supported. Marine Network Compatible Accessories 1. 1. GMR series Radars . GDL 30/30A XM Antenna . GMS 10 Network Port Expander (five standard network ports) . GSD 22 Remote Sounder Box . GSD 24 Remote Sounder Box . GSD 25 Remote Sounder Box . GSD 26 Remote Sounder Box . GCV 10 Scanning Sonar Module (three standard network ports) . GXM 53/54 . Marine Wi-Fi Adapter Kit . Panoptix Transducers .
Recommended publications
  • Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics
    Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics The eighth-century revolution Version 1.0 December 2005 Ian Morris Stanford University Abstract: Through most of the 20th century classicists saw the 8th century BC as a period of major changes, which they characterized as “revolutionary,” but in the 1990s critics proposed more gradualist interpretations. In this paper I argue that while 30 years of fieldwork and new analyses inevitably require us to modify the framework established by Snodgrass in the 1970s (a profound social and economic depression in the Aegean c. 1100-800 BC; major population growth in the 8th century; social and cultural transformations that established the parameters of classical society), it nevertheless remains the most convincing interpretation of the evidence, and that the idea of an 8th-century revolution remains useful © Ian Morris. [email protected] 1 THE EIGHTH-CENTURY REVOLUTION Ian Morris Introduction In the eighth century BC the communities of central Aegean Greece (see figure 1) and their colonies overseas laid the foundations of the economic, social, and cultural framework that constrained and enabled Greek achievements for the next five hundred years. Rapid population growth promoted warfare, trade, and political centralization all around the Mediterranean. In most regions, the outcome was a concentration of power in the hands of kings, but Aegean Greeks created a new form of identity, the equal male citizen, living freely within a small polis. This vision of the good society was intensely contested throughout the late eighth century, but by the end of the archaic period it had defeated all rival models in the central Aegean, and was spreading through other Greek communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Front Matter
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00281-4 - The Making of the Monastic Community of Fulda, C.744–C.900 Janneke Raaijmakers Frontmatter More information Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought THE MAKING OF THE MONASTIC COMMUNITY OF FULDA, C .744– C .900 The monastic community of Fulda was one of the most powerful institutions in early medieval Europe. This book traces the development of the community from its foundation in the 740s over one and a half centuries, a period richly documented by a variety of texts and archaeological remains. These sources reveal how Fulda’s success forced the monks to rethink their goals and the ways in which they sought to achieve them. Its close connection to the Carolingian royal court also makes Fulda a fascinating case study of how local events infl u- enced life in the palace, and vice versa. The importance of Fulda and the rich array of sources associated with it have long been recognised, but this is the fi rst full study, bringing together history, religion, architectural history and archae- ology. The result is a vivid picture of life in this monastery and also in early medieval religious communities in general. janneke raaijmakers is a lecturer in Medieval History at the Universiteit Utrecht. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00281-4 - The Making of the Monastic Community of Fulda, C.744–C.900 Janneke Raaijmakers Frontmatter More information Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought Fourth Series General Editor: rosamond mckitterick Professor of Medieval History, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Sidney Sussex College Advisory Editors: christine carpenter Professor of Medieval English History, University of Cambridge jonathan shepard The series Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought was inaugurated by G.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTINUITY and CHANGE in the EIGHTH CENTURY Conciliar
    CHAPTER 6 CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN THE EIGHTH CENTURY Conciliar Continuity: Alaric to Clovis In September 506, thirty-four Gallo-Roman clerics met in the city of Agde “with the permission of our most glorious, magnifi cent, and pious lord king.”1 Th e honored rex was Alaric II, an Arian Christian, who hoped that by authorizing a council of Catholic prelates, he would be able to rely on their loyalty in the ongoing fi ght for political domina- tion in Gaul.2 Alaric’s dream of a Visigothic-dominated Gaul would be crushed only a year later, when he was defeated and killed by Clovis at the Battle of Vouillé.3 But in 506, the king was still vigorously attempt- ing to hold together a unifi ed Visigothic realm. Th e same year that he convoked the Council of Agde, he also issued the Lex Romana Visig- othorum (or Breviarium), a compilation of Roman law whose infl uence would far outlive Alaric himself.4 Following Clovis’ victory, and the establishment of Merovingian dominance in Gaul, the Lex Romana Visigothorum continued to be copied and consulted frequently, even though manuscripts of the Codex Th eodosianus were still in circula- tion.5 For Alaric, however, the codifi cation project had a more imme- diate aim: uniting the Roman subjects of his kingdom under a single code of laws issued in his own name. Alaric’s unifi cation eff orts were 1 Agde (506), Preface. 2 Mathisen, “Th e Second Council of Arles,” 543, has suggested that Arles II (442/506) was convoked for the same reasons already postulated for the Council of Agde (506).
    [Show full text]
  • 197 9Apj. . .232. .7403 the Astrophysical Journal, 232:740-746
    .7403 .232. The Astrophysical Journal, 232:740-746, 1979 September 15 . © 1979. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A. 9ApJ. 197 AN ION-MOLECULE SCHEME FOR THE SYNTHESIS OF HYDROCARBON-CHAIN AND ORGANONITROGEN MOLECULES IN DENSE INTERSTELLAR CLOUDS H. I. Schiff and D. K. Bohme Department of Chemistry, York University, Downsview, Ontario, Canada Received 1978 October 9; accepted 1979 March 28 ABSTRACT A general scheme is proposed for the synthesis of large molecules in dense interstellar clouds based on rates of ion-molecule reactions measured in our laboratory and elsewhere. C-C bond + + + formation is dominated by reactions involving the must abundant ions C , CH3 , C2H2 , and + C2H3 and the most abundant neutrals C2H2 and CH*, where 1 < x < 4. As a particular example, we show that the scheme can account for the observation of methylacetylene, methyl cyanide, and the cyanoacetylenes HC3N, HC5N, HC7N, and HC9N and is consistent with their observed relative abundance. However, the scheme does require high concentrations of C2H2 and + C2H2 ions to account for the absolute abundances observed. Subject headings: interstellar: molecules — molecular processes I. INTRODUCTION in the ion followed by eventual neutralization. A given The recent detection of large, complex molecules in ion may undergo a number of different reactions, the dense interstellar clouds has led to various suggestions relative probabilities of which are governed by the rate for their genesis. Breakdown of even larger molecules constants and the concentrations of the neutral reac- formed in stellar atmospheres (Hoyle and Wickrama- tants. For dense clouds, H2 is a major neutral molecule singhe 1977), recombination on interstellar grains and hydrogenation reactions of the type + + (Watson and Salpeter 1972a, 6; Allen and Robinson CnH^ + H2-^CnH* + 1 + H (1) 1977), and homogeneous ion-molecule reactions (Herbst and Klemperer 1976; Dalgarno and Black will dominate up to particular values of x beyond 1976; Dalgarno 1976) have been proposed.
    [Show full text]
  • Buddhist Adoption in Asia, Mahayana Buddhism First Entered China
    Buddhist adoption in Asia, Mahayana Buddhism first entered China through Silk Road. Blue-eyed Central Asian monk teaching East-Asian monk. A fresco from the Bezeklik Thousand Buddha Caves, dated to the 9th century; although Albert von Le Coq (1913) assumed the blue-eyed, red-haired monk was a Tocharian,[1] modern scholarship has identified similar Caucasian figures of the same cave temple (No. 9) as ethnic Sogdians,[2] an Eastern Iranian people who inhabited Turfan as an ethnic minority community during the phases of Tang Chinese (7th- 8th century) and Uyghur rule (9th-13th century).[3] Buddhism entered Han China via the Silk Road, beginning in the 1st or 2nd century CE.[4][5] The first documented translation efforts by Buddhist monks in China (all foreigners) were in the 2nd century CE under the influence of the expansion of the Kushan Empire into the Chinese territory of the Tarim Basin under Kanishka.[6][7] These contacts brought Gandharan Buddhist culture into territories adjacent to China proper. Direct contact between Central Asian and Chinese Buddhism continued throughout the 3rd to 7th century, well into the Tang period. From the 4th century onward, with Faxian's pilgrimage to India (395–414), and later Xuanzang (629–644), Chinese pilgrims started to travel by themselves to northern India, their source of Buddhism, in order to get improved access to original scriptures. Much of the land route connecting northern India (mainly Gandhara) with China at that time was ruled by the Kushan Empire, and later the Hephthalite Empire. The Indian form of Buddhist tantra (Vajrayana) reached China in the 7th century.
    [Show full text]
  • Sept09frontiers.Pdf
    Frontierswww.boeing.com/frontiers SEPTEMBERAUGUSTJUNE 2009 20092009 / / / Volume VolumeVolume VIII, VIII,VIII, Issue IssueIssue IV VII Space for growth The arrival of Boeing’s newest satellite is opening doors to opportunities in the commercial market SEPTEMBER 2009 / BOEING FRONTIERS BOEING FRONTIERS / SEPTEMBER 2009 / VOLUME VIII, ISSUE V On the Cover 14 New bird Nearly one-third of the approximately 300 commercial satellites in orbit today were built by Boeing at its million- square-foot satellite factory in El Segundo, Calif. The latest model, known as the Boeing 702B, opens the door to many opportunities in the commercial market, where customers are looking for adaptable, medium- power satellites. Four years in development, the 702B from Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems made its debut in July. COVer IMAge: MiKE ConneLLY, Boeing InteLSAT PROGRAM DIRECTOR OF DIVISION OPERATIONS (LEFT), AND MIKE NEUMAN, 702B PROGRAM DIRECTOR, LEAD SPACE AND INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS’ 702B SATELLITE PROGRAM. DANA REIMER/BOEING AND BOB FERGUSON/BOEING PHOTO: SPACECRAFT TECHNICIAN PAUL IM OF BOEING’S EL SEGUNDO, CALIF., SATELLITE FACTORY, ASSEMBLES A BATTERY PANEL USED ON THE 702B. BOB FERGUSON/BOEING BOEING FRONTIERS / SEPTEMBER 2009 / VOLUME VIII, ISSUE V 3 Frontiers Publisher: Tom Downey Table of contents Editorial director: Anne Toulouse EDITORIAL TEAM Executive editor: Paul Proctor: 312-544-2938 Editor: James Wallace: 312-544-2161 Managing editor: Vineta Plume: 312-544-2954 Art director: Brandon Luong: 312-544-2118 24 Commercial Airplanes editor: Julie O’Donnell: 206-766-1329 Super trip in 82 days Engineering, Operations & Technology Earlier this year, a Boeing-led team that included two Super Hornets circled the globe, editor: stopping in a number of countries to perform at air shows and display the jet fighters.
    [Show full text]
  • Constructing God's Community: Umayyad Religious Monumentation
    Constructing God’s Community: Umayyad Religious Monumentation in Bilad al-Sham, 640-743 CE Nissim Lebovits Senior Honors Thesis in the Department of History Vanderbilt University 20 April 2020 Contents Maps 2 Note on Conventions 6 Acknowledgements 8 Chronology 9 Glossary 10 Introduction 12 Chapter One 21 Chapter Two 45 Chapter Three 74 Chapter Four 92 ​ Conclusion 116 Figures 121 Works Cited 191 1 Maps Map 1: Bilad al-Sham, ca. 9th Century CE. “Map of Islamic Syria and its Provinces”, last modified 27 December 2013, accessed April 19, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilad_al-Sham#/media/File:Syria_in_the_9th_century.svg. ​ ​ 2 Map 2: Umayyad Bilad al-Sham, early 8th century CE. Khaled Yahya Blankinship, The End of the ​ Jihad State: The Reign of Hisham Ibn ʿAbd al-Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads (Albany: ​ State University of New York Press, 1994), 240. 3 Map 3: The approximate borders of the eastern portion of the Umayyad caliphate, ca. 724 CE. Blankinship, The End of the Jihad State, 238. ​ 4 Map 4: Ghassanid buildings and inscriptions in Bilad al-Sham prior to the Muslim conquest. Heinz Gaube, “The Syrian desert castles: some economic and political perspectives on their genesis,” trans. Goldbloom, in The ​ Articulation of Early Islamic State Structures, ed. Fred Donner (Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2012) ​ 352. 5 Note on Conventions Because this thesis addresses itself to a non-specialist audience, certain accommodations have been made. Dates are based on the Julian, rather than Islamic, calendar. All dates referenced are in the Common Era (CE) unless otherwise specified. Transliteration follows the system of the International Journal of Middle East Studies (IJMES), including the recommended ​ ​ ​ ​ exceptions.
    [Show full text]
  • Instructions for 1999 Kentucky Form 740-Np Nonresident Or Part-Year Resident Income Tax Return
    INSTRUCTIONS FOR 1999 KENTUCKY FORM 740-NP NONRESIDENT OR PART-YEAR RESIDENT INCOME TAX RETURN WHO MUST FILE FORM 740-NP TAXPAYER ASSISTANCE Form 740-NP must be used by full-year nonresidents who had Automated Refund and Tax Information System income from Kentucky sources and by part-year residents who had income while a Kentucky resident or from Kentucky Information may be obtained on the status of income tax sources while a nonresident. These persons must file Form refunds by using the Cabinet's automated refund and tax 740-NP if (1) they had any income from Kentucky sources and information system (ARTIS). This service is available 24 hours a combined gross income from all sources of $5,000 or more, a day. or (2) Kentucky gross receipts from self-employment of $5,000 A touch-tone telephone and the following or more. information from your return will be required: ( Full-year nonresidents must report all income from Kentucky Social Security number shown first on your label or listed sources (including distributive share income, Schedule K-1), first on your return. from activities carried on in Kentucky or from the performance of services in Kentucky and from property located in Kentucky. The exact whole-dollar amount to be refunded to you. Once you have the required information, call (502) 564-1600 Persons moving into Kentucky must report income received and follow the recorded instructions. from Kentucky sources prior to becoming residents and income received from all sources after becoming Kentucky residents. If during the call you do not receive a refund mailing date, please allow seven days before calling again.
    [Show full text]
  • TB-ST-740:(2/19):Quick Reference Guide for Taxable and Exempt
    Tax Bulletin Sales and Use Tax TB-ST-740 February 1, 2019 Quick Reference Guide for Taxable and Exempt Property and Services Introduction Sales of tangible personal property are subject to New York sales tax unless they are specifically exempt. Sales of services are generally exempt from New York sales tax unless they are specifically taxable. This bulletin describes: • taxable property and services, • exempt property and services, and • exemption documents. Tangible personal property and services Whether sales of a particular good or service are taxable may depend on many factors. You should consult our publications and tax bulletins for more detailed explanations of what property and services are subject to sales tax. See the listing below for examples of taxable tangible personal property and services. The term tangible personal property means any kind of physical personal property that has a material existence and is perceptible to the human senses (in other words, something you can see and touch). Examples of taxable tangible personal property, services, and transactions that are subject to sales tax are: • tangible personal property: ◦ furniture, appliances, and light fixtures; ◦ certain clothing and footwear; ◦ machinery and equipment, parts, tools, and supplies; ◦ computers; ◦ prewritten (canned/off-the-shelf/standard) computer software (whether transferred by CD-ROM, Internet download, remote access, etc.); ◦ motor vehicles; ◦ boats and yachts (however, see also TSB-M-15(2)S, Changes to the Application of Sales and Use Tax to
    [Show full text]
  • Unit 5: the Post-Classical Period: the First Global Civilizations
    Unit 5: The Post-Classical Period: The First Global Civilizations Name: ________________________________________ Teacher: _____________________________ IB/AP World History 9 Commack High School Please Note: You are responsible for all information in this packet, supplemental handouts provided in class as well as your homework, class webpage and class discussions. What do we know about Muhammad and early Muslims? How do we know what we know? How is our knowledge limited? Objective: Evaluate the primary sources that historians use to learn about early Muslims. Directions: Below, write down two things you know about Muhammad and how you know these things. What I know about Muhammad... How do I know this …. / Where did this information come from... Directions: Below, write down two things you know about Muslims and how you know these things. What I know about Muslims... How do I know this …. / Where did this information from from... ARAB EXPANSION AND THE ISLAMIC WORLD, A.D. 570-800 1. MAKING THE MAP 1. Locate and label: 4. Locate and label: a Mediterranean Sea a Arabian Peninsula b Atlantic Ocean b Egypt c Black Sea c Persia (Iran) d Arabian Sea d Anatolia e Caspian Sea e Afghanistan f Aral Sea f Baluchistan g Red Sea g Iraq h Persian Gulf. 2. Locate and label: h Syria a Indus River i Spain. b Danube River 5. Locate and label: c Tigris River a Crete b Sicily d Euphrates River c Cyprus e Nile River d Strait of Gibraltar f Loire River. e Bosphorus. 3. Locate and label: 6. Locate with a black dot and a Zagros Mountains label: b Atlas Mountains a Mecca c Pyrenees Mountains b Medina d Caucasus Mountains c Constantinople e Sahara Desert.
    [Show full text]
  • 17-14 Vacation 500 South 500 West.Pdf
    RECORDED JUL 21 2017 CITY OF LOGAN ORDINANCE N0.17-14 Logan City Recorder AN ORDINANCE VACATING RIGHT OF WAY ON PARCEL 02-058-0056 WHEREAS, the City has received a request submitted by the property owner of the subject public right of way, requesting that the public right of way be vacated, WHEREAS, the City has authority by State Law to vacate streets, rights of way, and public utility easements, from use by the public; WHEREAS, the existing public right of way being vacated supported a sewer dump station which is being removed to support a future access to the County parcel; WHEREAS, the Logan Municipal Council finds there is good cause for vacating the public right of way and finds such action shall not materially injure the public or any person; and, WHEREAS, the proposed vacation of public right of way, as set forth herein, has been reviewed by the City and the City Council, and all appropriate hearings, postings, and notifications have been performed in accordance with Utah law to obtain public comment regarding the proposed determination. THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MUNICIPAL COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF LOGAN, STATE OF UTAH, AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1: Pursuant to Section 10-9a-609.5, Utah Code Annotated, 1953 the public rights of way shown in Exhibit A are hereby abandoned and vacated . SECTION 2: Effective Date. This ordinance shall become effective upon publication. PASSED BY THE LOGAN MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, STATE OF UTAH THIS dQ DAY OF ~ 1 2017 by the following vote: Ayes: ~.J~~,°"S"\\M..,~L:1, ~~1 0~, ~ Nays: t°'- (5\--e.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014-2015 and Is Accurate and Current, to the Greatest Extent Possible, As of June 2014
    Cover Cover 1 University’s Mission Statement James B. Duke’s founding Indenture of Duke University directed the members of the University to “provide real leadership in the educational world” by choosing individuals of “outstanding character, ability and vision” to serve as its officers, trustees and faculty; by carefully selecting students of “character, determination and application;” and by pursuing those areas of teaching and scholarship that would “most help to develop our resources, increase our wisdom and promote human happiness.” To these ends, the mission of Duke University is to provide a superior liberal education to undergraduate students, attending not only to their intellectual growth but also to their development as adults committed to high ethical standards and full participation as leaders in their communities; to prepare future members of the learned professions for lives of skilled and ethical service by providing excellent graduate and professional education; to advance the frontiers of knowledge and contribute boldly to the international community of scholarship; to promote an intellectual environment built on a commitment to free and open inquiry; to help those who suffer, cure disease and promote health, through sophisticated medical research and thoughtful patient care; to provide wide ranging educational opportunities, on and beyond our campuses, for traditional students, active professionals and life-long learners using the power of information technologies; and to promote a deep appreciation for the range of human difference and potential, a sense of the obligations and rewards of citizenship, and a commitment to learning, freedom and truth. By pursuing these objectives with vision and integrity, Duke University seeks to engage the mind, elevate the spirit, and stimulate the best effort of all who are associated with the University; to contribute in diverse ways to the local community, the state, the nation and the world; and to attain and maintain a place of real leadership in all that we do.
    [Show full text]