Sunday, December 18, 2011

The Automotive History Hub | Automotive News

The museum was opened on 06 July 1974 and has observed over 1.five million visitors from all the 50 United States and other people from over 40 other countries. The museum was born from Auburn Automobile Firm (the former national headquarters of the Auburn Automobile Firm) which was the hub of manufacturing of some of the Auburn and cord automobiles seen along the Auburn streets.

The museum boasts of 3 story floors holding much more than 120 cars manufactured in the 1894 ? 1999 years with specialization in the Auburn, Duesenberg and Cord automobiles producing it the greatest and widespread display centre of such automobiles in the world. Having earned its automotive accreditation in 1997 from the American Association of Museums (AAM), the museum boasts of high standards, retained exceptional reputation, accountability, continued improvements and field reorganization standards. It has retained these factors from the time of accreditation to the present times generating it a major visitor attraction zone over the past years which has lead to it becoming awarded some of the most prestigious awards in the world such as becoming listed in the ?Top Ten Gearhead Destinations in the United States? by MSNBC News in 2007.

For an automotive visitor in the United States, this is a ?must? destination for them, it has all that one will urge to see and understand from the automotive history makers. It takes one back to the earlier years of the 1930s and gives one the actual impression of how the automobile industry was in those years. Although history has developed because the opening of the museum, its reputation and dedication has remained intact to push the Auburn automotive legacy a lot more years ahead. Their ultimate dedication has kept visitor flow to the museum, which opens from 9 am to five pm every day to welcome individual and family members members who may well want to explore the magnificent hub of automotive history. The museum holds some of the history creating vehicle models, which incorporate a 1936 Cord 810 Westchester Sedan which is one of the few units incorporated with a bustle trunk(there are rare or no chances of seeing the other units unless they have been well maintained considering that then). A 1929 Chrysler Imperial Roadster, which is created of Locke body parts and has won the CCCA (Classic Automobile Club of America) and the AACA (Antique Automobile Club of America) senior awards. The museum plans to hold an annual event with inclusion of live auctioning of some of these legendary automobiles with the auction proceeds been forwarded to the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum. This makes the finest of events particularly for classic automobile lovers who will have to invest as small as for the auctioning ticket. Other vehicles to be auctioned consist of a 1930 Auburn Speedster that has been customized and repaired over the period to sustain its original style, a 1976 Cadillac El Dorado Bicentennial Convertible with exclusive features such as retained original characteristics and an odometer read of 32 miles only!

The museum defines the true automotive history and at one point of life of an automobile lover, they really should plan to pay a visit to the magnificent automotive history holder.

Source: http://www.idieinclusiva.org/the-automotive-history-hub.htm

ncaa bowl games bowls honey badger brooke mueller herman cain harry potter and the half blood prince drew brees

Saturday, December 17, 2011

IDC: iPad maintains tablet dominance, HP's TouchPad fire sale burned brightly

While the Android tablets continue to roll in, Apple can still lay claim to the lion's share of the tablet market according to IDC's latest report. Its research suggests that the iPad holds onto 61.5 percent of the worldwide market share, down from 63.3 percent last quarter. Android devices in total also saw a slight contraction, down from 33.2 percent to 32.4 percent. This is partly explained by the HP TouchPad's final hurrah, which rocketed the ill-fated webOS tablet up to third place with a 5 percent of share of tablet sales and an estimated 903,354 devices sold. Samsung maintained its Honeycomb tablet crown, nabbing 5.6 percent of all tablet sales. The Korean manufacturer was closely tailed by Barnes and Noble's Nook Color with 4.5 percent and Asus, arriving at fifth place with a four percent share. Tablets in total sold less than the analysts had predicted, although growth has still exploded 264 percent compared to this time last year. Meanwhile, E-readers outperformed estimates, with 6.5 million E-readers sold in the third quarter, up 165.9 percent from last year. IDC expects some disruptive new tablets will spice up the fourth quarter results and you can take a look at its findings and predictions at the full press release below.

Continue reading IDC: iPad maintains tablet dominance, HP's TouchPad fire sale burned brightly

IDC: iPad maintains tablet dominance, HP's TouchPad fire sale burned brightly originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Dec 2011 05:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink DigiTimes  |  sourceIDC  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/16/idc-ipad-maintains-tablet-dominance-hps-touchpad-fire-sale-bu/

millionaire matchmaker shawshank redemption 3 10 to yuma west virginia football west virginia football black friday violence black friday violence

Research shows hands-free phones just as risky

A driver uses a cellphone while driving Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, in Los Angeles. The National Transportation Safety Board declared Tuesday that texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is just too dangerous to be allowed anywhere in the United States and is urging all states to impose total bans except for emergencies. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

A driver uses a cellphone while driving Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, in Los Angeles. The National Transportation Safety Board declared Tuesday that texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is just too dangerous to be allowed anywhere in the United States and is urging all states to impose total bans except for emergencies. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

(AP) ? Like it or not, when someone is talking to you, your brain is listening, processing and thinking about what's being said ? even when you're in the driver's seat trying to concentrate on traffic.

That's why drivers get distracted during cellphone conversations, even when using hands-free phones, researchers said. It's also part of the reason why the National Transportation Safety Board went ahead this week with a recommendation it knows a lot of drivers won't like ? that states ban hands-free, as well as handheld, cellphone use while driving.

It's not where your hands are, but where your mind is that counts, NTSB chairman Deborah Hersman told reporters.

The board doesn't have the power to force states to impose a ban, but its recommendations carry significant weight. And, judging from the public reaction, they've already started a national conversation on the subject. NTSB has been swamped with calls, emails and tweets from drivers both praising and condemning the action.

But it's the proposed hands-free ban that has generated the most controversy.

What's next? No passengers? No kids? No tuning the radio? Maybe NTSB will ban driving altogether, was the tenor of the response on Twitter.

The scientific evidence, however, is generally with NTSB, researchers said.

"There is a large body of evidence showing that talking on a phone, whether handheld or hands-free, impairs driving and increases your risk of having a crash," Anne McCartt, senior vice president for research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, said.

Jim Hedlund, a safety consultant and former National Highway Traffic Safety Administration official, recently examined 300 cellphone studies for the Governors Highway Traffic Safety Administration. He couldn't recall a single study that showed drivers talking on a headset or hands-free phone were at any less risk of an accident than drivers with one hand on the wheel and a phone in the other.

A similar analysis for the government of Sweden recently came to the same conclusion: "There is no evidence suggesting that hands-free mobile phone use is less risky than handheld use."

What's missing is hard evidence that accidents are increasing because of cellphone use. One reason is that U.S. privacy laws have made it difficult for researchers to study whether cell phones were in use in accidents in the U.S. The two large studies that have been done ? in Canada and Australia ? found drivers were four times more likely to have a crash if talking on a cellphone. It didn't matter whether the cellphone was hands-free or handheld.

But that hasn't translated to an increase in highway fatalities in the U.S., which hit their lowest level since 1949 last year.

Of 6,000 drivers surveyed by the highway administration, 40 percent said they don't consider it unsafe for drivers to talk on a hands-free cell phone. Less than 12 percent said that about a hand-held phone.

Marcel Just, director of Carnegie Mellon University's Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging, isn't surprised.

It's counterintuitive to think that hands-free talking is dangerous because people don't have any sense that their conversation is draining brain power away from driving, but that's exactly what's happening, he said.

Just is the co-author of a 2008 study that used driving simulators to test the performance of drivers not engaged in conversation and drivers who could hear someone talking to them through headphones. Drivers took the simulator tests inside an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) machine that recorded images of changes in their brains while driving, including which areas of the brain were used for driving. The amount of the brain devoted to driving was 37 percent less in drivers who could hear someone talking to them than for drivers not using cellphones.

"The human mind can multitask, but each task is performed with less brain power and lower proficiency," Just said.

The driving simulators also showed a deterioration of skills on the part of drivers who could hear someone talking to them, including weaving between lanes and edging over the side of the road.

"When someone is speaking your native language, you can't will yourself to not hear and process it. It just goes in," Just said. Even if a driver tries to ignore the words, scientists "can see activation in the auditory cortex, in the language areas (of the brain). "

Accident investigators have seen cases of drivers talking on hands-free phones whose minds are so engrossed in their conversations that they ran into something plainly visible.

In a 2004, a bus driver taking students on a class trip drove his 12-foot-high bus into a 10-foot, 2-inch-high bridge arch in Alexandria, Va., peeling off the roof of the bus. There were signs warning drivers about the height of the bridge, and the bus driver was familiar with the route. He also saw a bus in front of him change lanes to avoid the low arch. But the bus driver, who was talking a hands-free phone at the time, drove right into it.

"There is a standard code for crash investigations called roughly 'look, but didn't see.' In other words, I was looking in the right place, but I didn't register what was there," Hedlund said.

Of course, drivers don't have to be using cell phones to have conversations ? they talk with passengers all the time. But talking to an adult passenger doesn't involve the same risk as a phone conversation, researchers said. That's because passengers are engaged in the driving experience with the driver. If they see a danger, they'll usually warn the driver. Passengers also tend to instinctually adjust their conversation to the level of traffic and other difficulties confronting the driver.

There are lots of other things that go on in cars that are risky: eating and drinking, tuning the radio, studying maps and applying makeup, for example. Just like talking on the phone, most of those things involve a choice by the driver.

As for the screaming toddler in the backseat demanding attention, "some things are just part of life," McCartt said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-15-Drivers-Cellphones/id-269642401e39439a81351d5455458f2a

eat to live eat to live tebowing tebowing ron paul money bomb ron paul money bomb zynga stock

Friday, December 16, 2011

Games company Nexon slips in Tokyo debut (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Online gaming firm Nexon Co, an Asian rival to U.S.-based Zynga, slipped lower on its first morning of trading on Wednesday, following its $1.2 billion IPO, Japan's biggest this year.

Nexon, founded in South Korea almost two decades ago, offers PC-based games for free, while charging users small fees for in-game virtual items such as clothing for avatars -- a so-called freemium model that analysts see as relatively recession-proof.

"Part of the problem is that they priced it at fair value, hence it wasn't going to come on at a huge premium," said David Gibson, an analyst at Macquarie Capital Securities in Tokyo.

He also noted that not all shareholders were restricted from offloading their holdings right away.

By mid-morning, Nexon was trading at 1,288 yen versus its IPO price of 1,300 yen.

The broader market was down 0.2 percent, while domestic rivals Gree and DeNA dropped 1.6 percent and 3.5 percent respectively.

Zynga, known for its success in developing games for Facebook, was forced earlier this month to trim its planned near-$1 billion IPO -- still the largest from a U.S. Internet company since Google Inc raised $1.7 billion in 2004 -- due to weak financial markets. Zynga's first day of trading will be Friday.

Nexon, whose most successful offerings include MapleStory and KartRider, has more than 77 million active monthly users, compared with Zynga's 260 million.

Between 2008 and 2010, Nexon's operating profit tripled to 30 billion yen ($385 million)and sales increased more than 70 percent to 70 billion yen. The company employs 3,240 people, mostly in South Korea, and derives most of its business from Asia. China and South Korea accounted for two-thirds of revenue last year.

The company said on Wednesday it expected operating profit to rise 23 percent in the year to December 2011, indicating a slowdown in its breakneck growth.

A cyber attack in which hackers gained access to personal data, but no financial information, on more than 13 million subscribers to its MapleStory role playing game in South Korea probably took some of the shine off the IPO, analysts have said.

Nexon has said it will use the IPO proceeds to pay off debt, build a new home for its Nexon Korea Corp unit, upgrade games systems and invest in third-party games developers.

It was the biggest initial public offering in Japan since drugmaker Otsuka Holdings took in 160 billion yen a year ago, and came despite weak market conditions, with the benchmark Nikkei average down about 17 percent this year.

Japan's IPO market has been in the doldrums in the wake of the March earthquake and given the sluggish prospects for the domestic economy. So far this year firms have raised just 160 billion yen through initial public offerings in Japan, down from 1 trillion yen last year and one sixth the average over the past decade.

Early this month, Nikko Asset Management cancelled its planned $586 million IPO, citing weak markets and the uncertainty sown by Europe's debt crisis.

At around 1,250 yen, Nexon is trading at 17 times the company's projected earnings for the year ending this month, slightly higher than Gree at 15 times consensus forecasts for the year to June 2012.

Global games industry revenue was $60.4 billion in 2009 and expected to rise to $70 billion in 2015, according to research company DFC Intelligence.

Nomura Securities, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were joint global coordinators for the IPO, while Barclays Capital was bookrunner on the international tranche.

($1 = 77.8450 Japanese yen)

(Editing by Joseph Radford and Edwina Gibbs)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111214/tc_nm/us_nexon

drake take care tracklist dr murray trial take care drake cain accuser aesop rock take care track list michael jackson trial

House votes sanctions on Iran, North Korea, Syria (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation on Wednesday that would expand sanctions on Iran, cracking down on a wider range of energy issues and closing some loopholes in existing energy and financial sanctions.

Some senators in both parties are also working on legislation to tighten sanctions on Iran, the world's fifth biggest oil exporter, because of concerns it is developing a nuclear bomb.

In a 410-11 vote, the House passed a bill that would expand sanctions on companies involved in the oil industry, including on investments, selling Iran goods or services used in refineries, or providing Iran with refined products worth $5 million or more in a year.

The bill, sponsored by Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, would also place sanctions on developing infrastructure or ports, or buying Iranian sovereign debt.

Separately, the House passed a defense bill 283-136 including a provision that would impose sanctions on foreign financial institutions that do business with Iran's central bank. That measure is expected to pass the Senate and be signed into law.

The House passed another bill by Ros-Lehtinen, 410-11 to target sanctions on countries or companies that help Iran, North Korea or Syria pursue nuclear, chemical or biological weapons or develop missile programs.

Under this bill, even entities selling conventional military goods or technology to those three countries could have their assets frozen in the United States.

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton; editing by Anthony Boadle)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111215/pl_nm/us_usa_iran_sanctions

white house shooting internet censorship sveum benetton ads cornucopia best buy black friday deals thanksgiving crafts

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Obama, fellow Democrats push tax cut extension (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama prodded congressional Republicans on Monday to extend a payroll tax cut, and his fellow Democrats proposed to fund it with spending cuts and a "tiny surtax" on the rich.

Republicans will likely reject the Democratic move, which appears aimed at cranking up pressure on them to compromise and find a way to renew the popular tax break in advance of next year's congressional and presidential elections.

Speaking at the White House, Obama said the tax cut needs to be acted upon before they expire at the end of this month for the sake of millions of Americans and the weak U.S. economy.

"The majority of economists believe it's important to extend the payroll tax cut and ... would lower their growth estimates for our economy if it doesn't happen," Obama said.

Republicans argue that the tax cut, which went into effect last year, failed to stimulate the economy and undermined the Social Security retirement program that it funds.

Senate Republican Whip Jon Kyl said, "There's some very important reasons not to do this again. It doesn't produce a good result and can produce some bad results."

But Kyl noted that he backed the tax break last year because the legislation also extended income tax cuts enacted during the administration of President George W. Bush.

"If we do that again, obviously it would be something I would be supportive of," Kyl said.

Democrats have opposed an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, contending they swell the record U.S. debt and provide unneeded aid to the very rich.

Without congressional action, the payroll tax that workers pay to help fund the Social Security retirement program would revert to 6.2 percent, up from the current 4.2 percent tax.

Democrats want to temporarily reduce it to 3.1 percent, but have abandoned efforts to extend the tax break to employers.

TINY SURTAX ON THE WEALTHY

As Obama spoke at the White House, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid took the floor of his chamber and announced a modified proposal to cover the cost of an extension with a "mixture of spending cuts" and a "tiny, tiny surtax" on the wealthiest Americans.

The proposed Democratic extension and expansion of the payroll tax cut would cost about $185 billion, and save the average American family about $1,500 next year, aides said.

The wealthy would also benefit from an extension of the tax cut because it's levied on the first $106,800 of an employee's salary.

Democrats propose covering the cost of the tax break extension with about $40 billion in "cost savings" agreed to by Democrats and Republicans on the now-defunct super committee on deficit reduction. Most of the rest would be paid for by a surtax of less than 2 percent on income above $1 million.

Some savings would come from tightening, at the request of Republicans, eligibility requirement to prevent millionaires from drawing unemployment benefits.

"This is a serious proposal and Republicans should take it seriously," Reid said.

Citing public support, Reid said, "Republicans in Congress dismiss it at their peril."

Republicans argue that the payroll tax cut coupled with a tax increase on millionaires was bad economic and tax policy. They argue the temporary payroll tax break did little to create jobs and that the proposed tax increase on millionaires would stifle job creation.

Republican leaders in the Senate and House of Representatives have been struggling to stake out a unified position on the payroll tax cut.

Earlier this month, Republicans were reluctant to embrace Obama's call to extend the payroll tax cut, voicing concerns about the cost and whether it would stimulate the economy.

But with fears of a political backlash in the run-up to the November 2012 presidential and congressional elections, at least some of their leaders decided to push for an extension - provided an agreement can be reached on how to pay for it.

Last week, House Speaker John Boehner, the top U.S. Republican, declared that extension of the payroll tax cut would be a boost to the economy.

Obama took political aim at Republicans, who rose to power largely by opposing tax cuts, particularly on the rich.

"I know many Republicans have sworn an oath never to raise taxes," Obama said. "How can it be that the only time there's a catch is when it comes to raising taxes on middle class families?"

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111205/pl_nm/us_usa_taxes

snow white and the huntsman philip rivers chanukah chanukah 11 11 11 meaning miracle berry billy crystal