Would you buy a VW 1.9 TDI diesel on a Caddy platform?

Posted By on June 14, 2011

Although this Volkswagen Caddy 1.9L TDI isn’t available in the U.S. (yet), I know many diesel TDI enthusiast who could comfortably live with this volkswagen-caddyugly duckling when it comes to styling. The small van like cargo-carrying diesel mini-van with a 5-speed manual would be considerably more efficient than what North America offers today — and the price point looks  as if it would be low enough to make it a good seller for small business ($22,000 in Australia = $23+K USD). Even for young families this would make for a versatile and functional vehicle. Here’s a detailed walk through video from overseas. (below)

Let it be known that registration is open for the 2011 TDIFest

Posted By on June 13, 2011

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The invitation to the annual TDIFest may not be the biggest and best car show in the nation, but for a group of loyal Volkswagen (and Audi) TDIClub members, it is the big bash of the year – and not to be missed. Previous “fests” have been hosted by local dedicated members of the TDIClub forum and is held annually on Labour Day weekend (I’ve spelled it that way out of respect for club founder and Canadian Fred Voglmaier – dedication unparalleled).

This years TDIFest 2011 will be held held in Lexington Kentucky on September 2-5, 2011 and members from our local Cincitdi.com chapter are assisting in hosting.

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Previous years it has been held in Portland, Oregon (TDIFest2010), Washington, DC (TDIFest 2009), Cincinnati, OH (TDIFest 2008), Montréal, Quebec, Canada (TDIFest 2007), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (TDIFest 2006)Lake Mills, Wisconsin (TDIFest 2005), New England (TDIFest 2004), outside Toronto (TDIFest 2003), Grand Rapids, Michigan (TDIFest 2002), Park City, Utah (TDIFest 2001) and the first one was in Wilmington, NC (TDIFest 2000).

So … if you own or have been contemplating buying a VW TDI or Audi TDI diesel, this is the place to be; vendors, help and fun await. Registration is open now … join us September 2nd – 4th. The Forum links require ‘free’ user name registration, etc. The TDIFest requires a registration fee – although register online early and receive a discount.

tdifest2011LexingtonKY

Vintage flying WWII B-17 goes down in northern Illinois

Posted By on June 13, 2011

It was a good day for pilot and passengers aboard the flying historic WWII bomber Liberty Belle (LibertyBelleFoundation.org), but not so good for those who have devoted their lives to the restoration and preservation of flying history. From the crash video above, all were lucky to be out with their lives, but the damage to the airplane looks to be a total loss. I watched it giving tours a short time ago … post.

From the tracks in the field, the pilot did his best to bring down the 4 engine monster … it’s a wonder all survived noting the fire damage.

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Read more at WLS-TV news in Chicago.

Who doesn’t PLANK while reading the morning paper?

Posted By on June 13, 2011

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I’m just keeping my kids on their toes … and trying to stay one step ahead of their assumption that I’m just an old 52 year old fuddy duddy dad. Hey, I may not be doing all that much more cliff diving, but am probably in the top ten percent of 50+ year old “plankers!” Oh … so you don’t know what it is? LINK
Smile
Figured I had better credit my source (below) …

How Planking Became the Internet’s Latest Bored Game

Plankers Are Prone to Pose for Pictures Atop Cars, Camels; It Rivals Lying Down

By AMIR EFRATI

New Zealand rugby star Chris Lowrey fielded an unusual request while greeting fans after a match two weeks ago. "Plank for us!" one fan yelled.

Mr. Lowrey, 24 years old, knew exactly what to do. The 6-foot-3, 238-pound athlete dropped to the stadium grass, lying face down with a stiff body and arms to his side—emulating a slab of wood—until he was sure fans had enough time to take photographs, which were later posted on Facebook.

The Planking Phenomenon

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Ben Jones

The ‘Going Green Plank’ in Beaumont, Canada.

"It was absolutely incredible, and fans of both teams were unified around the moment," says Deborah Enstrom, 36, who was at the Auckland rugby stadium with her family.

Mr. Lowrey, who had learned about "planking" a few days earlier, says he "was just happy to oblige the fans."

One of the latest kooky Internet fads—planking—is moving into the real world in real-time. The trend involves turning one’s body into the shape of a wooden plank that rests rigidly, and often precariously, on chimneys, police cars, trees, basketball hoops, and any other conceivable surface. Some "plankers" do it as prank-like performance art in public spots, while thrill seekers plank in dangerous places and capture the moment on camera, posting the images on Facebook or sharing among friends.

Now the planking "meme," as Internet-based phenomena are called, has gotten so widespread that thousands of plankers are lying down on stairs, towers or busy streets from California to Scandinavia to the Middle East. Some are planking in front of landmarks like Disney World’s Cinderella Castle and the Taj Mahal.

To plank, simply lay face down on something, and keep yourself stiff as a board. Don’t forget to take a picture! The popularity of planking has risen sharply, even as controversy over the odd sport brews. WSJ’s Amir Efrati reports.

The teenage son of New Zealand Prime Minister John Key recently posted a photo of himself on Facebook, planking on a sofa with his father posing in the background.

It has gotten to the point that some say they are already suffering planking fatigue and a controversy has erupted over who invented planking. Some trace the meme to Sam Weckert, a carpenter in Clare Valley, a small town in southern Australia. In January, Mr. Weckert posted a page on Facebook dedicated to planking. More than 16,000 photos of plankers have since been uploaded to it. About 315,000 people have declared themselves "fans" of the page, electing to receive updates when new pictures are posted.

"It’s a very simple idea that captured people’s hearts," Mr. Weckert says.

But a rival group from England, which in 2007 started a different page on Facebook to celebrate people’s ability to lie down on objects, says it should take the credit.

"I find it funny how the Australian makes a game and a Facebook group exactly the same as ours and starts claiming he’s invented it," says Gary Clarkson, 28, from Taunton, England, who says he developed "the lying down game" with a friend 12 years ago.

[PLANK-AHED]

A woodland planker

The global craze has inspired risk-taking, as plankers try to one-up each other. In a high-profile incident last month, a man from Brisbane, Australia, died when he slipped and fell seven stories while planking on a narrow balcony. The incident prompted Australia’s Prime Minister Julia Gillard to urge caution.

"Everybody likes a bit of fun, but the focus has to be on keeping yourself safe first," said Ms. Gillard, in response to questions from reporters about the incident.

Mr. Weckert, who says he wasn’t aware of the U.K. game, says planking began in 2008 when he and his friends began doing the "worm" dance, a breakdancing move popularized in the 1980s, at local bars. That morphed into lying down as stiff as a wood plank, "getting drinks spilled all over you," he says.

When he was kicked out of bars for the stunt, Mr. Weckert continued planking on top of cars and mailboxes. The practice spread slowly to friends, but lay dormant until he posted the Facebook page in January. After a local radio show mentioned planking, interest rose.

On the fan page, Mr. Weckert lists ground rules. The planker must "lay face down, ensuring your face remains expressionless for the duration of the Plank," with arms placed by the side, legs straight and toes pointed down. Every plank posted online "must be named."

Within weeks there were too many photo submissions—several per minute—to bother upholding those rules. Among Mr. Weckert’s favorites: a man planking across the backs of two camels.

If history repeats itself, it repeats even faster on the Internet. In 2007, Mr. Clarkson, who works in marketing for a cosmetics company, set up a Facebook group to share photos of "The Lying Down Game."

The game asks people to lie down on objects, but stiffen their bodies the same way they would if they were standing upright. Toes must point straight out, not down. That Facebook group has more than 20,000 photo submissions and more than 100,000 members.

No matter who started the fad, it has spread like wildfire. In south Australia, two contractors at an oil-processing facility were fired last month after planking on top of 180-foot pipes.

Eight grocery employees and managers in Australia were canned last month after photos emerged of them planking on meat-slicing machines and seven-foot-high shelves, among other things.

"We’re now one of many Australian employers who have had to dismiss employees since this fad started," says a spokeswoman for Woolworths Ltd., the grocery and retail chain where the incidents occurred. "An Internet trend is no excuse to breach safety rules."

In the U.S., Austin Light, a 20-year-old student at the University of California, Berkeley, has become obsessed with planking.

"We can’t walk around without looking for a new place to plank," he says. He’s tried planking at a furniture store, a coffee shop and the Cal basketball team’s locker room.

Some are already sick of the fad. Filip Odzak, a childhood friend of Mr. Weckert, says he watched with excitement as planking went viral, and even convinced two dozen models to plank on a runway during a fashion show he organized in February.

Now planking is "so mainstream that it’s turned into a pastime for the stupid breed of humanity," says the 26-year-old from Adelaide. Last month, Mr. Odzak revoked his status as a "fan" of planking on Facebook so that he wouldn’t receive any more updates.

LINK

Book: We Were Pirates by Robert Schultz and James Shell

Posted By on June 12, 2011

wewerepiratesbookEnjoying a World War II audio narrative and reading about the book We Were Pirates.  It is a book that help us understand the life of WWII American submariners, particularly Torpedoman Robert Hunt and his point of view. He shared his memories and his collection of photos and documents from his service aboard the USS Tambor; the audio, video (below) and book tells what it was like both aboard and on leave during his time in the Pacific. The information was well research and documented by authors Robert Schultz and James Shell (published in December 2010). Below is an audio recording from Hunt, Schultz and Shell.

  We Were Pirates: A Torpedoman’s Pacific War (mp3)

Listening to the audio and how the author’s preserved a bit of military history, returned my thinking to what my generation can do to honor these men. We do need to continue to save their memories in a way that future generation might hear their words. The Library of Congress has a Veterans History Project along with suggestions on how ‘we’ can interview and save their thoughts. I’ve downloaded the PDF and am planning to share it with a couple in my family in hopes to archive the memories of my father (Korea) and my father-in-law (WWII). Hmm … better not drag my feet too long?

Below is a short video of Bob Hunt as his crippled sub makes it into Pearl Harbor shortly after being attacked by the Japanese (below).

Belated Tech Friday Google account and Gmail security advice

Posted By on June 11, 2011

Planned on making this a Tech Friday post, but Saturday will have to do. gmaillogo

I’ve been talking with a few people who have adopted Gmail as their primary email and semi-forget gcontactslogoabout security issues. It is increasingly a problem as evident by the concern over government officials email accounts possibly being accessed. Although most of have been warned not to share ‘id theft’ related information over email due to the relative lack of security, we all sometimes get careless. According to Google, here’s what you can do to better secure your information (especially now that smartphones are archiving contacts, etc with the ‘cloud’ … Google’s services among the most widely used).

Here’s what Google suggests:

(1) Use a strong password for Gmail, and don’t use that password on any other site. Google has a good set of tips for creating strong passwords. These include using passwords with a mix of letters, numbers and symbols, and keeping any password reminders in a place that isn’t easily visible.

(2) Don’t fall for emails that ask you to enter your password. Nobody asks you to enter your password in an email. And don’t enter your password after following a link in an email, especially if you’re taken to an unfamiliar site. In your browser, you can bookmark links you regularly use and go to those links instead of clicking on ones in emails.

Google will only ask for passwords using the regular password prompt on a page that starts with https://www.google.com. (Note the “s” after the “http.”)

(3) Watch out for red warnings about suspicious account activity in your Gmail, and check your account for unusual access. If Google detects strange behavior on your account — for example if your account is being accessed from Eastern Europe at some times and the U.S. at others — it will alert you and give you details about the suspicious activity. These alerts are pretty hard to miss, given that they’re bright red and all. Google started providing them last year and gave a good rundown of the process at that time.

You can check your most recent account activity on your own as well. In your Gmail inbox, scroll down to the bottom of the page. You’ll see a little note that says “Last account activity” and some information about timing and Internet Protocol (IP) address. For more information, click on the link that says “Details.”

(4) Regularly update your browser and operating system. Software companies routinely release patches to combat known attacks, so it’s important to keep your software up to date.

(5) Use anti-virus software — but make sure it’s from a trusted company. Some scammers will claim to be providing security software, but they’re really making you install software that takes your information. Google has a good list on its site.

(6) Always sign out of your account when you’re using public computers.

(7) Especially if you’re using a public computer, clear private data and browsing history after you use the machine. You should clear saved passwords, autofill data, browsing and downloads regularly. On most browsers, you can do this by going to “tools” or “preferences” and checking your Internet options.

(8) Enable something called two-step verification for your account. This means that in addition to your password, you’ll have to enter a number that Google sends to your phone. (You can decide to require the extra number only every 30 days.) To learn about two-step verification and sign up, just go to Google’s site about the process. The process can get a little complicated if you use your Gmail with smartphone applications and the like, but Google has a helpful video that does a good job of explaining it.

(9) Check the forwarding addresses and “delegated accounts” associated with your Gmail. You can do this by going to the little gear symbol in the top right corner of your Gmail and selecting “account settings.”

To check forwarding addresses, click on “Forwarding and POP/IMAP.” If there is a strange address in the drop-down menu, messages could be copied to that address without your knowledge.

To check whether other accounts can access your mail, click on “accounts” and look at the section called “Grant access to your account.”

And (10) Make sure you’ve updated your secondary email address and security question, so you can recover your account if you lose access to it. More information is on Google’s site.

LINK

Road testing the 2012 Volkswagen Passat TDI

Posted By on June 10, 2011

Here’s a write-up by Jonathan Spira for Diesel Driver that highlights the new American built mid-size TDI sedan coming from Volkswagen …

The 2012 Volkswagen Passat TDI will be arriving at VW dealerships soon and we had an opportunity to pick up the car at the factory  in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and drive it to Nashville.

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The Passat 2.0L TDI is available in three flavors. The basic TDI comes well-equipped with 17” alloy wheels, heated front seats, a touchscreen radio, and a six-speed manual transmission, all for $25,995. You can add a sunroof and a DSG (Direct-Shift Gearbox or Direkt-Schalt-Getriebe) as options (separately or as a package) or you can get both plus 18” alloy wheels, navigation, Volkswagen’s Mobile Device Interface (MDI), fog lights, and exterior chrome accents all in one package.

READ

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Mulling my options when it comes to replacing my cellphone

Posted By on June 10, 2011

I’ve been keeping my eye on the new Sprint “Android” Motorola-Photon-4Gofferings since both Sprint and HP Palm have been a bit quiet on the slow motion release of the HP Palm Pre 3. The recent news from Sprint is that it will have the Motorola Photon 4G running Gingerbread 2.3 – the latest Android release. The Photon is similar in function to ATT’s Atrix although Sprint’s version will have a little larger screen and use a docking feature with TV, computer monitor and keyboard RATHER than the cool laptop-like docking station. Let’s say I’m thinking about a new phone, but not in a rush … although playing with my daughter’s new EVO 4G does make me a bit more anxious. (another temptation is the new HP Touchpad soon to be released … but not sure it is a ‘need’ items if one has a full featured smarphone and regularly uses a laptop?)

The Motorola Photon 4G features a 4.3-inch qHD display, 1GHz dual-core Tegra 2 processor, 16GB of storage, front-facing VGA camera, rear-facing 8-megapixel camera with full 1080p HD video capture support, 4G WiMAX, 16 Gb of internal memory , external up to 32 Gb and GSM worldphone.

The Motorola Photon will be available this Summer via Sprint, price and date, still unknown.

LINK

Down for the sixth week – Dow Industrial Average heads south

Posted By on June 10, 2011

I wish I would have been a better listener to the old adage: “Sell in May and go away and play.”  (INDU heads below 12000 Friday morning)

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It looks as if we’re in for a 6th week of down markets; a tough summer for those Americans hoping President Obama’s “bump in the road” comment was true and reminded that last years “recovery summer” comment was as misguided as the previous President’s “mission accomplished” (of course you won’t hear that in the sympathetic to Obama press). 

Nowadays there are a few more economists and pundits believing that the spending and Fed easing policies …along with the rammed through Obamacare aren’t all that helpful in creating “private sector” jobs or encouraging business expansion – in fact they may be doing the opposite. Those new policies and laws along with 200 new banking regulations, high corporate tax rates  and lack of a coherent energy policy reduce the incentive on small business as well as large international companies to invest in the United States. Many large companies are sitting on cash, just waiting for a sign (probably a political change) before they invest in the US or hire additional American workers. In the meantime, those who can least afford it are saddled with the high cost of energy which is a “regressive hidden tax” on middle America. Keeping energy costs high is the weak dollar (QE1, QE2 and 14 trillion debt) and the Obama administrations’ energy policies restricting domestic oil and coal. How long will it be before we realize that a strong dollar and pro-growth strategy is far better for the economy than one that deflate the currency, over regulates companies and encourages business to move offshore?

Volkswagen Passats rolling off the line and being test driven

Posted By on June 9, 2011

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I enjoyed exchanging emails and text messages (and tweets below) with a couple automotive writers touring the newly opened Volkswagen facility in Chattanooga, Tennessee the other day. The photos were great to see (above from Kiplinger’s Jessica Anderson) and the initial opinion regarding the 2012 Volkswagen Passat TDI exciting to hear as well (below from Nick Kurczewski).

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Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog