This doesn't look too bad.
Notice that it's got the date and time right, even though it's not quite sure it believes it. That means that it did receive at least one satellite. As Dave would say: "There's a trap for young players." The time isn't UTC. It's GPS time. GPS Time doesn't pay any attention to leap seconds so it's currently 17 seconds ahead of UTC. There is a command to change from GPS Time to UTC Time but it's not in the manual. Google for it.
It may or may not have been able to download all the data it wants. It obviously hasn't tracked enough birds simultaneously to calculate its location. Since you've now given it your approximate location, it should speed up the process. Until it's finished the initial acquisition, you can't even tell if your signal strength is going to be acceptable or not.
See where it talks about 'Mode: Survey' ? After it finds the birds, it goes into a survey mode where it figures out its exact location. I forget how long that takes. Then it changes to 'Mode: Hold' . That's when it can really start to lock down the OCXO. Of course, at that point, the OCXO is still probably staggering around like a drunken sailor so the control is not entirely effective.
The HUP will stay at 432 us (its default value) for some hours, at least, and then start to come down. Mine is still staggering around.
By the way, don't forget that 'staggering around' means that over the last three days my unit has deviated from perfection by less than 300 parts per billion so for most normal purposes, it's perfectly usable. The error of the 10 MHz signal would be less than 1 Hz. Yes, I'm a Time-Nut.
Ed