Greetings!!

Saturday, July 19, 2014




The 150cc segment is the most popular in India, without any doubt. It’s a segment which acts as a bridge between commuter bikes and performance motorcycles, this way you can have a bit of both. The most popular 150cc bikes in India are the Bajaj Pulsar150 and Honda Unicorn. The Japanese automaker did try to push Unicorn buyers to upgrade to a better 150cc bike, an effort which went in vain when the CB Dazzler was launched. In its aggressive product push, Honda has launched the CB Trigger, a very promising 150cc motorcycle which is now part of our long term fleet.

The Honda CB Trigger has been the most important 150cc bike launch of 2013, which has caused many established rivals to worry. We have just put on some kilometers on the bike and our initial impressions are very positive. The Honda CB Trigger has been returning us a constant 48 km/l in city traffic and what really pleases us every day is the fact that even in the winters, the smooth and refined Honda engine always starts-up (with choke of course) with the same zest it does all year long. However it does end up shutting off as it simply can’t idle for long, even if it’s kept on for a couple of minutes. The lack of DC lightning is a shocking omission which is more than apparent at night.

Where the Honda CB Trigger excels is the city. The handlebar is very light making easy work of congested traffic. Decent low end pep makes ambling around town a stress free affair. The instrument cluster is simply awesome and gives you a feeling of riding a much costlier bike, after all, the console is inspired from the CB1000R. However what is really out of place on a premium 150cc commuter is the switch gear. Except the CBR250R, all Honda bikes uses the same old switch gear which feels really cheap and is contradictory to the rest of the bike which has the typical high quality Honda bits. How difficult is it for Honda to update the switch gear by including an engine kill switch?

What is really fantastic on the CB Trigger are the brakes. Our bike is equipped with CBS which is such a boon in the city. Stopping power is strong but the combined braking system ensures both front and rear brakes are equally applied when you tap either one of the brakes thereby making riding in the city slightly easier and safe. The MRF tyres offer decent grip and the lack of saree guard makes the bike look so much better proportioned. The CB Trigger gets a full chain case which is a very practical add-on for our dusty conditions.

As much as the CB Trigger is good in the city, it’s even better on the highways. The riding position isn’t sporty, it’s upright and the seats are comfortable so you don’t tire even after long hours on the saddle. The Honda motor is just stupendously refined and rushes to the redline with zest, making a nice and throaty sound. Power delivery is linear but being a Honda, the CB Trigger has terrific top-end and that aids in a quick sprint from 60 to 115 km/hr. However the Trigger is best kept at 100 km/hr for long distance cruising. We took the bike for a good highway run when we were shooting the Royal Enfield Continental GT and not only did the Trigger keep up with the GT for the most part, it also never felt uneasy, the powertrain is just so smooth.

What is even smoother is the gearbox which has absolutely positive shifts and is a joy to use. The Trigger is a bike you can have a lot of fun with, it’s very composed around corners and you can turn in quickly in the tightest of bends. Through long sweepers, you can maintain higher speeds and the bike remains very stable at triple digit speeds as well. We got the bike at just a tad under 1400 kms and had to get its first service done as the oil wasn’t changed resulting in a mileage of 30 km/l. Out on the highway, cruising at 90 km/hr, we have been getting a constant mileage of 54 km/l. In our initial stint with the CB Trigger, we are quite impressed and can’t wait to ride this practical motorcycle over longer distances.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

2011 DLF IPL4 Points and standings


Sunday, January 9, 2011

IPL season 4 - Players List team wise

IPL Sahara Pune Warriors

  • Yuvraj Singh
  • Graham Smith
  • Robin Uthappa
  • Tim Pane
  • Angelo Mathews
  • Ashish Nehra
  • Callum Ferguson
  • Wayne Parnell
  • Mitchell Marsh
  • Jerome Taylor
  • Alfonso Thomas
  • Jesse Ryder
  • Murali Kartik

Kings XI Punjab (KXIP)  

  • Yusuf Pathan
  • Adam Gilchrist
  • Shaun Marsh
  • David Hussey
  • Dinesh Karthik
  • Stuart Broad
  • Abhishek Nayar
  • Praveen Kumar
  • Ryan Harris
  • Piyush Chawla
  • Dimitri Mascarenhas
  • Nathan Rimmington
Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) 


  • Virat Kohli (retained)
  • Tillakartane Dilshan
  • Zaheer Khan
  • AB de Villiers
  • Daniel Vettori
  • Saurabh Tiwary
  • Dirk Nannes
  • C Pujara
  • C Langevelot
  • Luke Pomersbach
  • Abhimanyu Mithun
  • Johan Van Der Wath
  • Rilee Rossouw
  • Nuwan Pradeep
  • Jonathan Vandiar
  • Mohd. Kaif
Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR)


  • Gautam Gambhir
  • Yusuf Pathan
  • Jacques Kallis
  • Brad Haddin
  • Shakib Al Hasan
  • Brett Lee
  • Eon Morgan
  • Manoj Tiwary
  • L Balaji
  • Jaidev Unadkat
  • Ryan Ten Doeschate
  • James Pattinson

Deccan Chargers (DC)

 

  • Kevin Pietersen
  • Cameroon White
  • Kumar Sangakkara
  • JP Duminy
  • Shikhar Dhawan
  • Ishant Sharma
  • Dale Steyn
  • Pragyan Ojha
  • Amit Mishra
  • Daniel Christian
  • Manpreet Gony
  • Chris Lynn
  • Juan Theron
  • Michael Lumb

Delhi Daredevils (DD)

  • Virender Sehwag (retained)
  • Irfan Pathan
  • David Warner
  • Naman Ojha
  • James Hopes
  • Mornie Morkel
  • Aaron Finch
  • Mathew Wade
  • Ajit Agarkar
  • Ashok Dinda
  • Umesh Yadav
  • R Von Der Merwe
  • Venugopal Rao

Rajasthan Royals (RR)

  • Shane Warne (retained)
  • Shane Watson (retained)
  • Ross Taylor
  • Rahul Dravid
  • Johan Botha
  • Paul Collingwood
  • Shaun Tait
  • Pankaj Singh
Chennai Super Kings (CSK)
  • MS Dhoni (retained)
  • Suresh Raina (retained)
  • M Vijay (retained)
  • Albie Morkel (retained)
  • Michael Hussey
  • Wriddhiman Saha
  • Dwayne Bravo
  • Doug Bollinger
  • R. Ashwin
  • S Badrinath
  • Scott Styris
  • Ben Helfenhaus
  • Jogindar Sharma
  • Nuwan Kulasekara
  • Sudeep Tyagi
  • Suraj Randiv
  • George Bailey
  • Faf du Plessis

Team Kochi

  • Mahela Jayawardene
  • VVS Laksman
  • Brendon McCullam
  • Sreesanth
  • RP Singh
  • Parthiv Patel
  • Ravindra Jadeja,
  • Steven Smith
  • Muttiah Muralitharan
  • Ramesh Powar
  • Brad Hodge
  • T Perera
  • Vinay Kumar
  • S O’Keefe
  • Owais Shah
  • Michael Klinger
  • John Hastings 
Mumbai Indians 
  • Aiden Blizzard
  • James Franklin
  •  Andrew Symonds
  • Moises Henriques
  • Sachin Tendulkar 
  • Harbhajan Singh
  • Moises Henriques
  • Davy Jacobs
  • Clint McKay
  • Lasith Malinga
  • Munaf Patel
  • Kieron Pollard
  • Rohit Sharma

 



 

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Facebook comes to "THE END" ON MARCH 15th!

PALO ALTO, CA –Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook will be shut down in March. Managing the site has become too stressful.

“Facebook has gotten out of control,” said Zuckerberg in a press conference outside his Palo Alto office, “and the stress of managing this company has ruined my life. I need to put an end to all the madness.”
Zuckerberg went on to explain that starting March 15th, users will no longer be able to access their Facebook accounts.

“After March 15th the whole website shuts down,” said Avrat Humarthi, Vice President of Technical Affairs at Facebook. “So if you ever want to see your pictures again, I recommend you take them off the internet. You won’t be able to get them back once Facebook goes out of business.”
Zuckerberg said that the decision to shut down Facebook was difficult, but that he does not think people will be upset.

“I personally don’t think it’s a big deal,” he said in a private phone interview. “And to be honest, I think it’s for the better. Without Facebook, people will have to go outside and make real friends. That’s always a good thing.”
Some Facebook users were furious upon hearing the shocking news.
“What am I going to do without Facebook?” said Denise Bradshaw, a high school student from Indiana. “My life revolves around it. I’m on Facebook at least 10 hours a day. Now what am I going to do with all that free time?”
However, parents across the country have been experiencing a long anticipated sense of relief.
“I’m glad the Facebook nightmare is over,” said Jon Guttari, a single parent from Detroit. “Now my teenager’s face won’t be glued to a computer screen all day. Maybe I can even have a conversation with her.”

Those in the financial circuit are criticizing Zuckerberg for walking away from a multibillion dollar franchise. Facebook is currently ranked as one of the wealthiest businesses in the world, with economists estimating its value at around 7.9 billion.

But Zuckerberg remains unruffled by these accusations. He says he will stand by his decision to give Facebook the axe.

“I don’t care about the money,” said Zuckerberg. “I just want my old life back.”
The Facebook Corporation suggests that users remove all of their personal information from the website before March 15th. After that date, all photos, notes, links, and videos will be permanently erased.


Source : http://weeklyworldnews.com/headlines/27321/facebook-will-end-on-march-15th/

Saturday, January 1, 2011

True Stories Behind Car Company Logos

This story doesn’t have much to do with Slot Cars – rather our fascination with cars themselves and the origins of some of the iconic logos that brand many of our slot cars. Enjoy the read!
From Ferrari’s Prancing Horse to Cadillac’s crest, automobile logos appear on everything from steering wheel hubs to giant billboards, and even the lapel pins on the suits of company executives. This kind of flexibility is one of the design elements needed for an effective and strong logo, says Jack Gernsheimer, Creative Director of Partners Design Inc. and author of Designing Logos: The Process of Creating Symbols that Endure.
With over 40 years of advertising experience and more than 500 logos to his credit, Mr. Gernsheimer believes it’s essential to look long-term and to keep things simple when designing a logo. “Not getting too trendy with the type or color” is vital, he says. “When you design a logo, ideally it should endure for decades.” For many automakers, the roots of their logos stretch back over a century and contain enough symbolism and intrigue to fill a Dan Brown novel.

Automotive Pioneers

Tragedy plays a role in a popular myth surrounding the famous intertwined double-R logo of British luxury automaker Rolls-Royce. The company’s founders, Sir Henry Royce and Charles Stewart Rolls, originally used red lettering for the emblem that combined the first initial of their last names. Legend has it the color was changed, from red to black, in a mark of respect after the death of Sir Henry Royce in 1933. In reality, black lettering was simply considered more becoming of a prestigious luxury car. The timing of the color change was pure chance. Rolls Royce’s second iconic emblem, the Spirit of Ecstasy hood ornament, is linked to a similarly tragic (but in this case, entirely true) tale. Designed by Charles Sykes in 1911, the model for the emblem was Miss Eleanor Thornton, the personal secretary of John Scott Montagu, the 2nd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu and friend of company co-founder Charles Stewart Rolls. In 1915, Miss Thornton died at sea while traveling to India. Yet for almost 100 years her likeness has graced every Spirit of Ecstasy.
The origins of some automotive logos begin even before the dawn of the automobile. The Mercedes-Benz three-pointed star is commonly known to symbolize the use of the company’s engines on land, sea and air. But the star first appeared on a personal note written in 1872 from company founder, Gottlieb Daimler, to his wife. Mr. Daimler used a three-pointed star to mark the location of his family’s new home in the town of Deutz, Germany. His sons adapted the emblem as the Mercedes-Benz logo from 1910 onward.
One of the best known emblems of all time, Ferrari’s Prancing Horse first appeared on warplanes flown by Francesco Baracca, an aviator and hero of World War I. In 1923, Enzo Ferrari met Francesco’s parents after a race, where they suggested Ferrari use their son’s prancing horse badge on his race cars—both for good luck, and as an homage to Francesco, who died before the war ended. A yellow background was added (it’s the official color of Enzo Ferrari’s hometown of Modena, Italy) and the horse’s tail was redesigned to point upward.
In the case of BMW, myth (and savvy marketing) has fooled generations into linking the company’s logo with an aviation theme. “A German advertising agency in the 1920s produced an ad that showed the [BMW] roundel against the spinning propeller of an airplane to reflect the company’s origins as an aircraft engine manufacturer,” says Dave Buchko, company spokesman for North America. “That, it seems now, turns out to be urban myth.” While it’s true that BMW manufactured airplane engines, the blue and white logo represented the colors of the Bavarian flag, not a stylized propeller and sky.

American Ingenuity

Had it not been for a talkative spouse, the Chevy Bowtie emblem could have claimed one the strangest design origins. Louis Chevrolet said the famous emblem was inspired by a wallpaper pattern in his hotel room during a visit to Paris in 1908. The story would have been considered fact, had it not been for Mr. Chevrolet’s wife. She later said her husband had seen an advertisement featuring a similarly shaped logo in a Sunday supplement. Eye-catching design—and careful evolution—is a theme found in many American car company logos.
The Cadillac crest is the coat of arms of French military commander and explorer, Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, who founded Detroit in 1701. Simplified and streamlined over the years, the basic style remains intact. “It’s so distinctive, you don’t want to give that away,” says Anne Marie Webb, Design Manager for GM’s Global Brand Identity. When updating one of GM’s brand logos, Webb says she always considers elements “that made it recognizable and strong.” Even then, cultural differences must be considered. The Buick Tri-Shield emblem is monochromatic in every country except China, where the logo maintains red, blue and grey coloring. “They felt [color] had a more premium feel,” explains Webb.
Changing times can also bring big changes in a logo. For more than 80 years, Chrysler has used a wide range of badges featuring ribbon seals, or ribbon seals with wings. But in 1962, Chrysler Chairman Lynn Townsend wanted a more modern and less fussy corporate logo. According to Chrysler’s archives, out of approximately 700 designs, Townsend selected the Pentastar. Many assumed the design symbolized the five divisions of the company (circa the early 1960s). It didn’t; the design simply looked good.

Lawyers, Latin and Luck

Some car company logos owe their existence to legalities and economies of scale. In 1909, having left the company bearing his name, August Horch established a second automobile company in Zwickau, Germany. But with his name already in use, Horch had a serious problem. He couldn’t legally name his new company after himself. However, when translated into Latin, “Horch”—which means “hark”—became the lawyer-friendly “Audi.” The four interlinked Audi rings came about in 1932, when four struggling automakers joined together under the corporate banner of Auto Union. These companies included Audi, DKW, Wanderer and, ironically, the original Horch.
Volvo also has Latin roots. Meaning “I roll,” the name was taken from a brand of ball bearings before it was applied to the Swedish automaker in 1924. The Volvo logo is the Roman symbol for iron—symbolizing a warrior’s shield and spear. The diagonal streak across the grille was originally only a mounting point for the badge, but is now “almost as much a brand ID as our iron symbol,” says Daniel Johnston, Product Communications Manager at Volvo Cars North America.
Good luck—and an easier to pronounce name—played a role in the creation of the Toyota nameplate in 1936. In the book Toyota: A History of the First 50 Years, company founder Kiichiro Toyoda “ran a contest for suggestions for a new Toyoda logo. There were over 20,000 entries. The winning entry consisted of katakana characters in a design that imparted a sense of speed… “Toyoda” became “Toyota” because as a design it was esthetically superior and because the number of strokes needed to write it was eight, which in Japan is a felicitous number, suggestive of increasing prosperity.”

Statues, Stars, and Smart Cars

Inspiration for a name and logo can come from careful consumer research, legal loopholes or, in some cases, by looking at the surrounding environment. The Maserati brothers took inspiration for their company’s trident logo from the statue of Neptune in the central square of Bologna, Italy, where Maserati was originally headquartered. The trident with Maserati script below was sketched by Mario, an artist, who also happened to be the only Maserati brother never actively involved in the design or engineering of cars.
Inspiration for the Subaru name literally came from the heavens—or more precisely, the Japanese name of a star cluster in the Taurus constellation. Six of the stars are visible to the naked eye and—in keeping with corporate identity—this matches the six companies which combined to form Fuji Heavy Industries, Subaru’s parent company. The Hyundai name has an even simpler explanation. In Korean it means “modern,” while the company’s logo is a stylized “H” that also represents two people, the company and customer, shaking hands.
The Smart name seems to speak for itself, no translation needed. It actually happens to be an acronym of Swatch (the Swiss watch company that was a partner during the early stages of the company), Mercedes (the brand’s current custodian), and “Art.” The company’s logo signifies compact, with a “C,” and forward thinking with an arrow emblem.

Plot Twists

When it comes to the origin of an iconic logo, the same car company can sometimes have two variations of the same story. That holds true with Porsche, and the truth behind the German sports car manufacturer’s eye-catching emblem. According to a spokesperson with Porsche Cars North America, an extremely influential automobile distributor, Max Hoffman, met with Ferry Porsche in a New York City restaurant in 1951. The discussion moved on to Hoffman’s belief that Porsche needed a powerful logo, something distinctive and elegant. A rough sketch was made then and there, on a dinner napkin.
Yet the story from Porsche Germany differs from this colorful explanation. Max Hoffman did ask Ferry Porsche for a logo, but the emblem was designed by Porsche engineer Franz Xaver Reimspiess—and most definitely not sketched on a napkin somewhere in Manhattan. Does it matter who is right or wrong? Probably not.
A tall tale never hurts, especially when it involves two companies known for building some of the most exotic cars in the world. Car enthusiasts love to stoke the rivalry between Lamborghini and Ferrari, even down to the minutiae of the Lamborghini logo. The design of the gold and black emblem was led by company founder Ferruccio Lamborghini, and the bull located in the center stands for his astrological sign (Taurus). Legend has it that Mr. Lamborghini purposefully copied the Ferrari shield, then reversed that company’s yellow and black color scheme to prod the ego of Enzo Ferrari.
With the key protagonists having passed away, there is probably no way to know for certain how much of this is true. “To our knowledge, this is just a rumor,” said a spokesperson for Automobili Lamborghini S.p.A. “The only way to confirm would have been to ask Mr. Lamborghini himself.”

Friday, December 31, 2010

Google's new year Doodle

Search engine giant Google has always amazed its users with its innovative and creative takes on festivals and occasions. This time, on the new-year occasion, Google's GMMXle doodle showing up on Google.com is somehow a brainteaser for many, as most people are unable to understand what the secret code GMMXle means.
The new-year Google Doodle displaying the word "GMMXle" with fireworks in the background has forced us into thinking about the logic behind it. The real deal behind the mysterious GMMXle doodle is an apparent code, in which 2011 is written in roman characters.
However, letters G and E are the first and the final letter respectively in the GMMXle doodle, only to add confusion. The four letters in the middle of the GMMXle doodle are actually altered with the roman characters, welcoming 2011.
Google's GMMXle doodle has been creatively designed for the new year, and has evoked a lot of interest and grabbed much attention on social networks.
faliciasmith is based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America,

Some of other Doodles of google so far