Archive for the 'other' Category

Love hotel–Its very interesting

I find it on the wiki. just for I think this word is from Japan.

A love hotel (ラブホテル, rabu hoteru?) is a type of short-stay hotel found in East Asian countries and regions such as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong, operated primarily for the purpose of allowing couples privacy to have sexual intercourse. The same concept exists in Central America, particularly in Guatemala, where they are called autohotels.[1]

Love hotels usually offer a room rate for a “rest”, or kyūkei (休憩, kyūkei?) in Japanese, as well as for an overnight stay. The period of a “rest” varies, typically ranging from one to three hours. Cheaper daytime off-peak rates are common. In general, reservations are not possible, leaving the hotel will forfeit access to the room, and overnight stay rates only become available after 10pm. They may also be used for prostitution or by budget-travelers sharing accommodation.

Entrances are discreet and interaction with staff is minimized, with rooms often selected from a panel of buttons and the bill settled by pneumatic tube, automatic cash machines, or a pair of hands behind a pane of frosted glass. While cheaper hotels are utilitarian, higher-end hotels may feature fanciful rooms decorated with anime characters, equipped with rotating beds, ceiling mirrors, karaoke machines,[2] strange lighting or styled similarly to dungeons, sometimes including S&M gear.[3]

These hotels are typically either concentrated in certain city districts such as Dōgenzaka (道玄坂, Dōgenzaka?) in Shibuya, Tokyo, near highways on the city outskirts, or in industrial districts. Few Japanese people wish to have a love hotel in their neighbourhood, and construction in residential areas is often opposed.

Love hotel architecture is sometimes garish, with buildings shaped like castles, boats or UFOs and lit with lurid pink and purple neon lighting. However, many love hotels are very ordinary looking buildings, distinguished mainly by having small or covered windows

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Now you can unlock your iPhone 2.0

Thx for iPhone DevTeam offers Pwnage 2.0. It could help us unlock our iphone 2.0
But the problem is Pwnage 2.0 just for MAC this time, that means I could not try it for everybody.
anyway you can download it from here, also you may need bootloader for unlock iphone. you can download here
Also I have a movie, it could help you how to unlock your iphone.
if you need just sent a email to 626593047 at QQ.com I will give your all the safewave and movie

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some pic about HTC Touch Diamond

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Good news for me, 3 years open work premit

From:http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/backgrounders/2008/2008-04-21.asp

Post-Graduation Work Permit Program

The Post-Graduation Work Permit Program allows most international students who have graduated from an eligible program at a post-secondary institution to gain valuable Canadian work experience. A minimum of one year of work experience  in managerial, professional or technical positions (i.e., at level 0, A or B under the National Occupational Classification system) will be necessary to apply to stay permanently through the Canadian Experience Class.

The changes to the program include extending the duration of the work permit to three years across the country for those whose program of study is at least two years (previously, permits could be granted for only one or two years, depending on location); providing the flexibility for new graduates to work in any field and not just their field of study; and removing the requirement to have a job offer.

To be eligible for the program, international students:

  • Must have studied full-time for the eight months preceding the completion of their program of studies and have graduated from:
    • a public post-secondary institution, such as a college, university or CEGEP (in Quebec); or
    • a private post-secondary institution that operates under the same rules and regulations as public institutions, and that receives at least 50 percent of its financing for its overall operations from government grants (currently, only private college-level educational institutions in Quebec qualify); or
    • a Canadian private institution authorized by provincial or territorial statute to confer degrees.
  • Must apply for a work permit within 90 days of receiving written confirmation (for example, a transcript or an official letter) from the institution that they have met the requirements of the academic program.
  • Must have completed and passed the program of study and received a notification that they are eligible to obtain their degree, diploma or certificate.
  • Must have a valid study permit when they apply for the work permit.

Note that if the student’s program of study is less than two years but at least eight months, the student would be eligible for a post-graduate work permit. However, the validity period of the work permit must not be longer than the period of study of the graduate at the particular post-secondary institution in Canada.

International students not eligible for the Post-Graduation Work Permit Program include the following:

  • Students participating in a Canadian Commonwealth Scholarship Program or a Government of Canada Awards Program funded by the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
  • Students receiving funding from the Canadian International Development Agency and participating in a distance learning program.
  • Students who have previously been issued a post-graduation work permit after any other program of study. However, note that graduates who are already working with a work permit issued under the previous rules are eligible to apply for an extension.
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Delta considers NWA merger offer

Delta Air Lines Inc. is considering an offer from Northwest Airlines Corp. to revive merger discussions, this time without a combined pilot labor contract, sources close to the matter confirmed Monday.

Talks between the airlines stalled last month, after the pilots groups couldn’t agree on how to merge their seniority lists, a critical component in any combined labor contract. After a lull in talks, Northwest approached Delta last week about pursuing a merger even without a pilots’ deal in place.

The Delta board met Thursday and Friday, and on Monday sources said the airline was considering Northwest’s proposal. Executives at both airlines remain in contact, but haven’t scheduled any formal talks or meetings.

Both airlines are evaluating how their companies have changed since the initial deal was struck. With the run-up in fuel prices Delta, Northwest and other airlines recently announced cuts in passenger seating to compensate for the higher cost of fuel. Delta also announced it wanted to cut 2,000 jobs.

Representatives for each airline would not comment Monday.

If Delta does agree to renewed merger talks, the airline would have to revisit an earlier agreement they hammered out with Northwest in January and February, industry experts noted Monday. Any new deal would have to take into account the recent surge in jet fuel prices and the fact that some of the projected merger savings depended on the pilots’ union forging a unified labor agreement in advance.

The price of oil has risen more than $20 a barrel since late January, making the airlines’ biggest cost even larger. Northwest, for one, is expecting to spend almost $1 billion more on fuel this year than it had projected. In addition, four airlines have either shut down or announced plans to do so soon, citing high fuel costs.

The Northwest pilots union wouldn’t comment about the possibility of the airlines pursuing a merger without a pilots’ deal in place, and the Delta pilots union did not return calls.

Atlanta-based Delta and Eagan, Minn.-based Northwest, Michigan’s largest carrier, decided early on that they wanted to come to terms on a combined four-year pilots’ contract — including a merged seniority list — before going forward with a merger. It was a move that broke from tradition and stood to eliminate long-standing pilot labor problems seen in similar mergers, like the 2005 tie-up of US Airways and America West.

As part of the combined contract, the pilots did negotiate significant pay raises as well as an equity stake in the new company and a voting seat on its board. But the two chapters couldn’t reach consensus on a unified seniority list, which determines a pilot’s pay, work schedule and what equipment and routes he or she can fly.

Northwest pilots said they’d be willing to take the issue to an arbitrator, but Delta pilots opposed that move.

The pilots stand to lose financially should the airlines go forward without their blessing.

“[Delta and Northwest] aren’t going to keep those sweeteners for pilots with no labor contract,” said Daniel Kasper, managing director of aviation consulting at LEGC LLC in Cambridge, Mass.

Market forces getting worse
During the past few months of merger talks, Delta CEO Richard H. Anderson and Northwest CEO Doug Steenland issued separate memos to their employees, reassuring them that the airlines wouldn’t go forward with a merger that threatened their pay, seniority or job security.

But analysts say market forces would now make those promises harder to keep.

“The higher oil prices mean the pilots can’t really do anything now,” said Ray Neidl, an industry analyst with Calyon Securities in New York. “They’ve been given their chance.”

Going forward without pilot support would be harder for Delta and Northwest, Neidl said, but the possibility of a more expansive route network that could generate more money could make it worth the risk.

Neidl and others also have speculated Northwest and Delta could forgo a full-fledged merger and instead combine the two airlines under a single holding company, similar to the corporate structure at Air France-KLM. Though it is one company, both brands still operate separately. Such an arrangement would need the same Department of Justice antitrust approval as a normal merger, Neidl said.

Continental Airlines and the defunct Eastern Air Lines operated under a similar structure in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

“It’s something I’ve been recommending for years,” Neidl said. “It allows many benefits of a merger without having to force a labor deal. As oil prices continue up, they’ll have to consider these options.”

News from http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080408/BIZ/804080346/1001/BIZ

in fatc, i donot think it is good for me. i dislike delta.

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how can I truth u? CNN

I found those picture at http://anti-cnn.com/, I can not belive that. but what could i say? I can remember many years ago, i try to visit BBC or CNN in China. beacuse I think they are tell us a ture story about world and China. but right now, I can not sure, their words now. do they really want to report a news or they jiust want tell us what they think?
Cut the picture, using the picture from other country. What Happened in Tibet? maybe, all the news is their dream. and we beliver they are honest. we are wrong.

March 28: 德国画报3月28日竟然使用比CNN更恶劣的截图


During the interview with Chinese Ambassador, CTV inserted the video clip of Nepali policemen to “demonstrate” that the Chinese Ambassador was lying.

CTV ”Mike Duffy”采访中国大使,竟然在大使对话过程中,又插入尼泊尔警察画面,来说明中国大使正在说谎(2:45-3:30)。

  AFP LIES. 网友检举法新社不实报道
Tibet is not a “country”!!!

19fox
19n24
19ntv
19spiegel

20rfi
20rfi02
英国《泰晤士报》 Times

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Special Feature - Canada/U.S. vehicle price differences: why Canadians pay more

Vehicle pricing is an issue fraught with difficulty for automakers selling into any world market. Success in every segment - even those featuring upscale vehicles - is strongly influenced by competitive pricing. In most years since 1999, we have performed an MSRP analysis comparing vehicle prices in Canada and the United States (adjusted for exchange rates), and this year’s study has yielded some interesting results.

The subject of pricing is especially pertinent in Canada because of this country’s proximity to the United States. Unlike in other international vehicle markets - where major differences in economic, social, and regulatory environments require automakers to tailor their lineups to a specific country’s needs - Canada’s showrooms are filled with vehicles similar and in some cases identical to those available in the United States. Having the same products available in both markets makes it fairly easy to draw conclusions about pricing trends between the two countries.

Many manufacturers obfuscate the equivalency issue by offering alternative trim levels or options packages in Canada and the U.S., but our study takes those potential differences into account by comparing base models and/or fully-loaded versions. The definition of “base model” (or even “loaded” model) in each country can be very different, and this analysis does not take all of these differences into account. However, we think that it gets you into the ballpark. It’s certainly close enough to understand price differentials between countries.

We started doing this analysis in 1999, when vehicles were generally cheaper in Canada than in the U.S. Due to a number of factors (e.g., lower average incomes, frugal consumers, devalued currency, etc.), prices generally tilted in favour of Canadian buyers. In 1999, the average Canadian market vehicle was $3,167 (Canadian dollars) less expensive than its U.S. counterpart (exchange rate adjusted). We believe automakers made a conscious effort to bring vehicles into the realm of affordability for a wider swath of the Canadian market (a practice that was less necessary for the U.S. market). True, this strategy limited per unit profitability, but there is little doubt that the surging new vehicle market of the early 2000s was at least partially aided by this cut-rate pricing - pricing that could not logically continue.

In recent years, however, the situation has changed enormously. Using an average of U.S. dollar exchange rates from January to June 2006, we have determined that the typical vehicle is $5,842 (17 percent) more expensive in Canada than in the United States.

To take this down to a more comprehensible level, consider the case of the Subaru Impreza WRX. In Canada, this sporty sedan lists for $35,495, while in the U.S., it bases at $24,995. Converted using the abovementioned exchange rate average, the U.S. price works out to $28,524 in Canadian currency. The Subaru WRX is 20 percent more expensive in Canada than in the U.S., the price differential effectively moving it from the upper end of the “Compact Sedan” category and into the meat of the “Small Luxury” market. A great number of other cars display similar social mobility when their Canadian and American prices are compared.

Contrary to our previous years’ findings, only five 2006 models in the study (we did not price every vehicle) achieved the distinction of being more affordable in Canada than in the United States: the Pontiac Montana SV6, Toyota Corolla, Hyundai Elantra, Chrysler PT Cruiser Convertible, and Hyundai Accent. It appears that, to date, automakers have not adjusted their MSRPs to reflect our dollar’s newfound strength, and Canadian vehicle buyers have not reaped the benefits resultant from a strong currency.

Why? First, prices this year are comparable to last year. Only the exchange has changed, not fundamental pricing. Second, stable pricing regimes are valued and have a lot of merit. Drop prices too quickly and consumers will just wait for the next price decrease. Third, the economy and the vehicle markets are strong and the OEM’s can get away with these prices. Fourth, some OEMs purchase in their home market currencies and do not see any exchange rate advantage. Fifth, profits in the markets have been very lean for a long time and some of the exchange rate advantage is simply restoring profitability.

One issue that became apparent this year was that import nameplate automakers have adopted a radically different pricing structure compared to their GM/Ford/DaimlerChrysler-branded competitors. In past years, the vehicle pricing strategies employed by all manufacturers resulted in nearly-equal price differentials relative to each company’s U.S. pricing matrix, but there has been a major swing towards import-nameplate profitability in 2006. The numbers speak volumes:

  • GM/Ford/DaimlerChrysler passenger cars average $4,332 over American MSRPs, whereas import nameplate cars average $7,939 over U.S. pricing.
  • GM/Ford/DaimlerChrysler light trucks average $3,639 over American pricing, while import-nameplate trucks average an extra $6,432.

Clearly, this is an exchange rate issue. With the Canadian dollar commanding nearly $1.10 in the U.S. conversion (June, 2006) there has been a restoration of profitability at all levels of the Canadian vehicle distribution and retail sectors. Manufacturers, distributors, and dealers no longer need to operate at the low margins that were their hallmark of Canadian vehicle companies during the lean 1990s.The flip side of this equation is that a greater amount of negotiating headroom exists on any given vehicle, so hardnosed consumers may be able to extract an extra bit of value from their vehicle purchases. This study would yield a different set of results if transaction prices (rather than unnegotiated MSRPs) were compared, since some companies have been very aggressive with incentives this year. We now know why: the exchange rate has given them the ability to be aggressive with incentives.

Going through the vehicle segments, some trends are brought to light. High volume vehicles have the most competitive cost structures, while lower volume models are the most likely to receive premium pricing - even if they are, in fact, medium-to-high volume products in the United States. Similarly, those vehicles purchased on a “needs basis” (e.g. Entry Level or Midsize/Family vehicles) generally have Canada-U.S. price differentials under 10 percent, whereas “aspirational” vehicles - even the relatively high-volume Small Luxury models - regularly carry Canadian price premiums between 15 and 25 percent.

Perhaps as a result of its recently (and publicly) adjusted pricing strategy, General Motors has the distinction of offering the greatest parity between Canadian and American vehicle prices. Outside the luxury segments, it was uncommon for any GM vehicle to carry a price premium greater than 5 percent. Even within the luxury segments, GM vehicles often populated the bottom of the price differential matrix. (Click here to see how price differentials between Canada and the U.S. have changed over the past few years, and here to see average price differentials for the 2006 model year.)

Interestingly, GM is also the company that has lost the most market share in the past 12 months. One could interpret this as Canadians not recognizing GM’s pricing advantage. We believe this is because consumers have come to expect a heavy discount from GM. When they didn’t get it (even though GM’s prices were competitive), they didn’t purchase. This is a good example of the downside of incentives. How does any OEM get off this drug?

Subcompact, Compact, & Intermediate Cars

While all vehicle segments in the Canadian market showed marked affordability downswings, Subcompact (+$1,420), Compact (+$1,245), and Intermediate Passenger Cars (+$1,991) remained the least affected areas of the market. Vehicles in these segments are aimed at price sensitive consumers, so manufacturers have not exploited the pricing differential to the same degree as in other sub-markets. Of all passenger car segments, these three showed the least change in the past two years; between 2004 and 2006, the price differential increased by $2,448 for Subcompact, Compact, and Intermediate cars, while the average passenger car price differential (including Luxury and Sport segments) rose by $4,464 during the same period.

Large/Luxury/Sport Vehicles

Not surprisingly, the various segments that comprise our “Large/Luxury/Sport” category (Small Luxury, High luxury, Large SUV, Luxury SUV, Sport, and Luxury Sport) were home to the largest average price differentials on the Canadian market. In terms of both absolute value and percentage differences, the High Luxury and Luxury Sport segments commanded top dollar with average Canadian pricing of $12,204 (+ 17.8 percent) and $14,408 (+ 18.4 percent) above equivalent American MSRPs. To cite specific examples, both the Chevrolet Corvette and Lexus LS430 carry an astonishing 25 percent Canadian market differential. Converted to Canadian dollars, these vehicles carry respective American market price tags of $50,771 and $64,506, but the identical cars purchased from Canadian dealerships retail for $67,805 and $85,700. Granted, these are low volume vehicles, but the level of price inflation currently on display represents an obstacle in the path of one of Canada’s fastest-growing vehicle segments (i.e., the broader Large/Luxury/Sport grouping).

Small Luxury vehicles fared slightly better in the comparison, with an average price differential of 11.9 percent. Out of 12 cars included in the study, only a single model (Cadillac’s CTS, + 4 percent) carried a Canada-U.S. price differential under 10 percent.

Canadian Sports Cars also carry a stiff premium, with the segment averaging 13.4 percent over U.S. pricing. Notable vehicles included the Mazda MX-5 Miata (+ 18 percent), MINI Cooper S (+ 18 percent), Acura RSX (+ 19 percent), and the aforementioned Subaru Impreza WRX (+ 20 percent). The Chrysler PT Cruiser GT Convertible carried a refreshing 4 percent price advantage.

On average, Large SUVs are priced 12 percent higher in Canada than in the U.S. The GM/Ford/DCX vs. import nameplate issue is on full display in this segment, with vehicles like the GMC Yukon (+ 2 percent) competing against the Nissan Armada (+ 18 percent) and Toyota Sequoia (+ 22 percent).

Like the Luxury passenger cars with which they compete, Luxury SUVs were another bastion of high Canada-U.S. pricing differentials. Of 20 vehicles compared, only two possessed price differentials under 10 percent (Dodge Magnum, 5 percent; Hummer H2, 9 percent). Nearly two thirds of Luxury SUVs carry a Canadian price disadvantage of 15 percent or greater, with the highest sampled differential of 22 percent belonging to the $68,400 Lexus GX470 ($53,219 CDN at U.S. dealers).

Compact and Intermediate SUVs

We normally do not group these vehicle segments together, but it seemed apropos for the purposes of this comparison. Compact SUVs, unlike the majority of “Entry Level” vehicles with which they are usually grouped, have an average Canada-U.S. price differential of 11 percent. The figure increases to 16 percent in the Intermediate SUV market. The Ford Escape Limited, a mainstay in the Compact SUV segment, carries a 21 percent Canadian market price differential.

Compact and Intermediate SUVs carried average price premiums of $2,976 and $6,261 in Canada. Both dollar values are greater than those attached to any other “needs-driven” vehicle segment.

Small Vans

Minivan pricing appears to follow the Intermediate Passenger Car segment very closely. Minivans were, on average, 8 percent more expensive in Canada, with the average differential rounding to $2,564. Given that this is one of the most heavily incentivized segments in the Canadian vehicle market, we believe that the actual transaction prices of vehicles in this segment (especially those sold by GM, Ford, and DaimlerChrysler) would align more closely with U.S. values. As in many other segments, General Motors offers the most competitive pricing, with the Canadian market Pontiac Montana SV6 basing 6 percent below the American MSRP.

Small Pickup, Large Pickup, and Large Van

Both pickup truck segments had an average Canadian price premium of 10 percent, but a good portion of the differentials comprising that figure come from import nameplate vehicles. In the Small Pickup sector, the GMC Canyon and Ford Ranger both carried a 6 percent premium in Canada, while the Nissan Frontier was over by 23 percent. Similarly, in the Large Pickup segment, the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra were priced identically in Canada and the United States - complete parity was achieved between the trucks’ MSRPs in both countries. The Dodge and Ford pickups were also competitive, with small differentials of 3 and 5 percent, respectively. Contrast this pricing philosophy with that employed by Nissan and Toyota, sellers of the Titan (+ 18 percent or $5,894) and Tundra (+ 25 percent or $6,616) full size pickups.

Large Vans, the single segment in which no import nameplate automakers currently compete, has clearly retained some of the domestic-nameplate profitability forsaken in the Large Pickup category. General Motors’ two vans each carry an identical Canadian price premium of 5 percent ($1,466), while Ford’s Econoline commands an extra 10 percent and DaimlerChrysler’s Sprinter earns 15 percent over U.S. MSRPs. Segment-wide, there is an average Canadian market price disadvantage of $3,927. Compare this with our 2004 analysis, where we determined that Large Vans carried an average $10,947 price advantage in Canada.

This pricing analysis leads us to believe that the OEMs will be fairly aggressive with their incentives through the rest of the year. To date, most OEMs are using the exchange rate situation to their advantage by doing some or all of the following:

  • offering higher incentives
  • increasing equipment options
  • restoring their profitability
  • restoring dealer profitability

With more pricing latitude in Canada, we expect this will provide an opportunity for the market to perform better than we forecast last fall when exchange rates were in the 85 to 87 cent range. Add in the GST cut and the market could actually be up this year a point or two instead of down 3 to 5 percent as originally forecast.

One of the biggest issues raised in this study is that of arbitrage. Namely, will Canadian consumers start crossing the border to buy vehicles? Yes and no - it is entirely possible that an arbitrage situation will take place (or is currently taking place) in the used vehicle market, but it is unlikely that individual Canadians will purchase new vehicles in the U.S. to avoid the high price differentials. It is too complex for them. Dealers might but this is also limited.

But there are major differences between the new and used vehicle markets. The only hurdles involved in importing a used vehicle are regulatory. New vehicle dealers are often bound by franchise agreements that prohibit cross-border selling. In Canada, car dealers selling into the U.S. risk the possibility of losing OEM franchise agreements, and vehicles they sell into a foreign market often lack the warranty coverage that domestically-purchased enjoy. We suspect similar rules bind U.S. dealers from selling vehicles to Canadians. These policies exist to promote pricing sanity within both markets.

Although used vehicle prices are affected by a number of other factors (e.g. sales region, vehicle condition), one of the major determinants of prices in the used market is new vehicle pricing. Therefore, it is very possible that the current new vehicle market price differentials will be reflected in the used values in the coming years. This will make the used vehicle market susceptible to arbitrage, though it is unlikely that many individual consumers will deal with the trials of vehicle importation. It is far more probable that dealers and wholesalers have begun shopping at U.S. auction houses and undertaking the necessary paperwork to bring late-model vehicles into the Canadian market at cut-rate prices.

An identical situation cropped up in the early 1990s, when free trade made it possible to import used Large/Luxury/Sport vehicles from the U.S. (where the prices of such vehicles had historically been lower in both the new and used markets). It took a year or two for OEMs to adjust their pricing, but once changes were made, both the price differential and the arbitrage situation evaporated.

We believe that vehicle companies will do whatever it takes to make sure Canadians do not go south of the border for their vehicle purchases. Professional players taking advantage of the used market price differential have a limited window of opportunity to play the arbitrage game, since the OEMs will likely adjust prices accordingly within a couple of years (as GM already has).

Dennis Desrosiers is a Canadian auto industry analyst. See www.desrosiers.ca.

From: http://www.canadiandriver.com/articles/dd/canada-usa_price_differential.htm

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Tibet WAS,IS,and ALWAYS WILL BE a part of China

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Ferrari going to Olympics with Italian team

With the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing fast approaching, the Italian Olympic Committee is looking to Ferrari for a little help. The Italian automaker will put its extensive motorsports knowledge to work in athletic equipment like canoes, sailboats and potentially bicycles. Looking forward to the 2010 Winter Olympics, bobsleds, luges, skeleton sleds and Paralympic skiis will get the prancing horse touch, as well. Particular attention will be paid towards aerodynamic improvements as the Italian teams will be granted access to Ferrari’s wind tunnel for testing. No word on whether they’ll be allowed in the paint shop to spray down the equipment in Ferrari’s iconic red color. More extensive use of exotic materials will also be incorporated into the designs, presumably lots and lots of carbon fiber. Ferrari president Luca Cordero di Montezemolo said of the deal, “If there is even one-thousandth of Ferrari in Italian victories, we’ll be honored.”

[Source: Edmunds.com]

This is should be a good new~~a vehicle company with Olmpics game. how could i image that.

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New Soul by Yael Naïm

The song of New Soul is for MacBook Air. it sound so nice.
also apple ready another two song
1234 by Feist for ipod nano
Music is a Hot, Hot Sex by CSS for ipod touch
also is cool
just go and try you will like it
there is a link you can download New Soul
http://www.fs2you.com/en/files/b62f4aa3-c56e-11dc-88d4-0014221b798a/

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