Category: News

  • Light-duty fleets: The next ten years

    Companies have made significant strides over the past several years in reducing greenhouse gas emissions from their vehicle fleets. Most of the reductions we have seen have come from right-sizing efforts, such as moving from a 6 cylinder engine to a 4 cylinder one. Other efforts, such as adopting fuel-smart driving behaviors, are starting to catch on too. Still, there are a lot of emissions left to cut.

    Environmental Defense Fund is hosting a call series to explore opportunities to cut greenhouse gas emissions from fleets. Please join us for the next call in our series when we will look out over the coming years and ask: What opportunities remain for fleets to reduce ghg emissions? What are fleets doing today and what strategies are up-and-coming? What barriers to do we need to tear down to reduce ghg emissions? Leading this discussion will be Jim Motavalli, a regular contributor to the New York Times Wheels blog, BNet, and the Mother Nature Network among many others sites.

    The call is on May 3rd at 12pm Eastern time. To join, call:

    Phone number: +1 (213) 289-0500

    Code: 267-6815

    The upcoming calls in this series will be:

    • A look into the opportunities and challenges specific to vocational trucks;
    • A deep dive into electrifying commercial fleets; and
    • A deep dive into low-carbon fuels and commercial fleets

    You can keep up with the rest of the call schedule as well as other conferences and events on the Innovation Exchange Calendar.

  • Gameloft’s iPhone Titles Nearly A Quarter Of All Sales


    Gameloft

    Paris-based Gameloft (EPA: GFT), a world leader in making games for mobile phones, said revenues totaled $43.7 million (Euro 33 million) in the first quarter of 2010, jumping 7 percent compared to the same period a year ago, and up 3.8 percent compared to fourth quarter.

    The company, which considers itself an iPhone powerhouse with 63 games in the App store, said 21 percent of the company’s sales in the first quarter came from the iPhone—compared to 14 percent in all of 2009.

    However, it said it was optimistic about other platforms, including recent device releases from Apple (NSDQ: AAPL), Palm (NSDQ: PALM), Samsung, Nokia (NYSE: NOK) and Google (NSDQ: GOOG), and therefore continues to expect revenue growth in 2010. As usual, Gameloft did not provide any other financial results, or specific forecast in its release.

    The one figure it does break out is revenues by region. Europe represented 37 percent; North America, 34 percent and the rest of the world 29 percent, which is fairly comparable to last year’s figures.


  • iRetrophone iPhone Base is Hipper Than You

    iRetrophone for iPhoneDo you feel like you’ve maxed out your emo/meta cred?  Does your 3 wolves howling shirt sneer at you and your oh-so-last-week iPhone?  Well fear not, my bespectacled flannel-clad hipster ‘friend’, the iRetrophone has the cure for what ails you.  That is, if what ails you is your ability to walk anywhere instead of being tethered to one spot in particular… which is kind of the point of owning a cel phone, yeah?  Or do I sound like someone’s grandpa?  Is the next meta-craze immobilizing one’s cel phone?  If so, then sign me up!!!  I’ve been yearning for an excuse to get my tape-driven answering machine out of my attic.  Don’t worry, the handset works too so you can cradle it against your left ear while smoking your corn-cob pipe and twirling your horn-rimmed glasses, Wheezer-fan.


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    iRetrophone iPhone Base is Hipper Than You originally appeared on Gear Live on Thu, April 29, 2010 – 10:32:22


  • Is Nuclear Deterrence Obsolete?

    Nuclear weapons protestors dancing during the first London-Aldermaston March, London, April, 1958. Aldermaston became a nuclear base in 1950 and is now the headquarters of Britain’s Trident missile program.

    In the recent foreign policy debate among the three candidates in next week’s general election in Great Britain—the incumbent Gordon Brown (Labour) against David Cameron (Conservative) and Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat)—it is generally conceded that Clegg won. But I have seen no commentary on the interesting exchange about nuclear deterrence that took place somewhere in the middle of the debate. Britain has at present four Vanguard class submarines that—according to a Cold War agreement between the US and Britain—are designed to carry Trident nuclear missiles leased from the United States. The submarines are becoming obsolete. Clegg noted that it would cost about a hundred billion pounds to replace them with a new generation of submarines, money that might be spent elsewhere. He raised this point at least twice and was ignored by the other two candidates. Finally, the moderator insisted they answer. Gordon Brown said that it was important for Britain to have an independent deterrence—separate from the US’s umbrella—citing the threat posed by countries like Iran. Cameron agreed. Unfortunately Clegg did not ask the obvious question: Why? What earthly function do these submarines serve? Who can they possibly deter, especially since only one of them at a time is ever at sea?

    It has become ever clearer that nuclear arms are no longer useful weapons of war. Iran, to take Gordon Brown’s example, has been put on a list of countries that the US is targeting with nuclear weapons—hundreds of them. This strategy has not deterred anything. It has only made the Iranians more belligerent. Russia has at present the largest stockpile of nuclear weapons of any country. Yet in late March, two women were able to board subways in Moscow and blow up suicide vests using conventional explosives. In the “war” against terrorism, nuclear deterrence has little meaning.

    It should be noted that when nuclear weapons first began to be constructed in the early 1940s, no one thought of deterrence. The bomb was not designed to “deter” Hitler. It was to defeat him and his Axis allies. In the spring of 1943 the Columbia physicist Robert Serber gave a series of lectures to new recruits at Los Alamos. The opening lines of the printed version read: “The object of the project is to produce a practical military weapon in the form of a bomb in which energy is released by a fast neutron chain reaction in one of more of the materials known to show nuclear fission.”

    As far as I can tell, the first suggestion that these weapons could be used for deterrence came from General Leslie Groves, who headed the Manhattan project. Some time after the defeat of Germany, but well before the first successful test of the bomb in July of 1945, he came to Los Alamos. At a small dinner he expressed the view that the Russians would have to be deterred by the bomb. He was sure that they had expansionist plans that included the domination of all of Europe and that nuclear weapons would be necessary to stop them. In fact, Soviet spies had already furnished Stalin with extensive knowledge of the US program well before it became public after Hiroshima; Stalin’s reaction was not to be deterred, but to start a crash program to build nuclear weapons of his own while at the same time occupying the countries of Eastern Europe.

    Indeed, if you think about it, deterrence is an odd concept. It implies explicit or implicit negotiations between the deterrer and the deterree. How is one to know when deterrence has been successful? It is easier to know that it has not been when one is attacked. David tried to deter Goliath by invoking the God of the Israelites. Goliath had no interest. If David had shown Goliath his skills with a slingshot instead of attempting to deter him it would probably have provoked a better defense against sling shots. What does one expect a deterree to do, sign a document admitting that he/she is deterred? Would anyone trust such a document? Without such a document how much deterrence is enough? Is one atomic bomb enough? How about fifty or five hundred? Who is to decide? For many decades, the US and Russia were engaged in a policy of “mutually assured destruction”—MAD. How did we know that destruction of the other side was “assured?”

    A Trident submarine leaving its base, with the village of Strone visible in the background, Clyde, England, December 29, 2007 (Flickr/JohnED76)

    Consider the recent British debate over the Trident missiles: the first thing one must know is that the British have racked up very large debts during the recent recession. Like ours, they are unsustainable. Like ours, the only solution is a combination of reduced services and expenses, along with higher taxes. The second thing one must know is that, although they cost a huge amount of taxpayer money to maintain, only one of Britain’s four Vanguard class submarines capable of carrying Trident missiles is at sea at any given moment. The other three are involved in either training exercises or undergoing maintenance. The crew of the one at sea does not know where it is. Its rules of engagement are contained in a letter from the Prime Minister that is stored in a safe onboard. If the submarine is ever cut off from its base then the letter authorizes the commander to fire the missiles or not depending on his view of the situation.

    The purpose of this arrangement was, originally, to get around the Cold War problem of first strike: by arming a British submarine whose whereabouts were unknown with missiles capable of destroying Russian cities, the US would be able to retaliate against even a devastating nuclear attack by the Soviets—thus deterring Moscow from launching such a strike. But in an era in which the major threat no longer comes from a single nuclear-armed opponent but from terrorists and insurgents, what purpose does this one submarine serve?

    The French also have four nuclear-weapon-armed submarines as well as airplanes. The Cold War reasoning behind this force de frappe was stated by General de Gaulle in:

    Within ten years, we shall have the means to kill 80 million Russians. I truly believe that one does not light-heartedly attack people who are able to kill 80 million Russians, even if one can kill 800 million French, that is if there were 800 million French.

    Given the present situation, this statement seems totally absurd. Yet French President Nicolas Sarkozy insists that these submarine and air missiles are needed to retaliate against terrorist states. The French have had terrorist incidents. Against whom can they retaliate with nuclear weapons?

    From what I have written so far one might draw the conclusion that a total abolition of nuclear weapons is desirable. On this point I am not so sure. I think about conflicts that might have happened but didn’t. For example, given the numerous recent terrorist acts in India such as the Mumbai bombings that have been traced to Pakistani groups, I think it is quite plausible that without the restraint of nuclear weapons on both sides there would have been war. Here deterrence worked. The lesson from this is that the existing bombs on both sides were both necessary and sufficient in this instance. Instead both countries are engaged in efforts to increase their stockpiles of nuclear arms. To what end? One cannot help but be struck by how ludicrous this is.

    The path of a MIRV rocket

    Likewise I think that the mainland Chinese might have tried to reclaim Taiwan if it was not for the nuclear umbrella the US provided. I also suspect that some combination of Arab states might have attempted to destroy Israel if it was not for the generally accepted fact that the Israelis have something like two hundred nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them. These cases seem to me to be an argument that the presence of some nuclear weapons has helped to preserve the peace. But how many do you need? I wonder if in our recent agreement with the Russians there have been frank discussions of what mutually assured destruction really requires. It does not look that way. The signed treaty allows for many more warheads than anyone really needs. It also does not eliminate “MIRVing”—having multiple re-entry vehicles on a single rocket, which defeats attempts to deflect the rockets. I think that when the history of this period is eventually written, two of its worst inventions will be the hydrogen bomb and MIRVing. Both were acts of folly.

    This leaves us with the dilemma that I think characterizes our age. We seem to have a choice between preserving some nuclear weapons in the hope that they will deter some conventional wars or accepting the fact that conventional wars will continue to occur if we eliminate all nuclear weapons. As a species we are very good at developing technology—nuclear weapons are a big triumph in that department. But when it comes to deciding what to do with it, we seem bewildered.

  • Porsche Recalling 2010 Panamera Models for Seatbelt Defects

    porsche panamera

    Toyota will be heaving a huge sigh of relief knowing that other famous brands will also recall some of their vehicles. Joining the bandwagon, Porsche is going to recall 11,324 Panameras (2010 models) as the automobile manufacturer discovered a seat belt related flaw during internal testing. Porsche detailed that accelerating and reversing repeatedly could cause the seat-belt to release. While this is no major problem, Porsche intends to fix the Panameras when they are taken to a dealership for scheduled maintenance. I think we can start making bets to find out who’s next in the recall saga. Who do you think they are?

  • Saudi Arabia targets sustainable growth with GE

    For over 70 years, GE has been a major industrial player in Saudi Arabia — delivering a range of heavy machinery, major infrastructure projects and services in energy, water, transportation and healthcare. Yesterday, that relationship moved to a new level with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding, or MOU, that’s designed to strengthen the country’s manufacturing sector and put it on a path to sustainable economic development by further diversifying its economy. Part of GE’s “company to country” strategy, the strategic partnership will focus on helping Saudi Arabia meet its development goals through industrialization, research and education, and creating new jobs for Saudi nationals. As U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia James B. Smith says in the video below: “They [Saudi leaders] have rolled out an industrialization strategy to move Saudi Arabia to a knowledge-based economy. I know of no company that’s better positioned to help them do that than GE.”

    As part of the MOU, GE will explore manufacturing opportunities in the country for local and export markets and potentially partner with Saudi Arabia on international development projects — with a focus on Africa and the Islamic world. In addition, GE will provide expertise in the establishment of a world-class export development fund and stress-test Saudi Arabia’s National Industrial Strategy — which is a $16 billion project being launched next month that will strengthen its manufacturing sector and double the industrial output of the country’s GDP.


    From the top: In the video above, Nabil Habayeb, President & CEO, GE Middle East and Africa, provides an informal overview of GE’s work in the region as part of our “Meet GE” series of employee stories. Meet more GE people at http://www.ge.com/meetge/.

    The agreement was signed at the U.S.-Saudi Business Forum, which concludes today in Chicago. The gathering of more than 200 attendees brings together leading entrepreneurs, top U.S. and Saudi government officials and civic leaders to enhance cooperation in a range of sectors including energy, finance & investment, agriculture and information technology.

    As Ferdinando Beccalli-Falco, President & CEO of GE International, said: “The Kingdom’s multipronged development approach emphasizes education, research and industrialization — areas where GE can make a tangible difference.”

    The video below provides an overview of GE’s work in the country:

    * Read the announcement
    * Read coverage in the Chicago Tribune
    * Learn more about our work in Saudi Arabia

    Learn more in these GE Reports stories:
    * “China deals span coal, high-speed rail & locomotives
    * “GE & Kazakhstan ink major rail service & plant deals
    * “Pakistan boosts energy & infrastructure for 2020 goals
    * “GE and Nigeria ink landmark infrastructure agreement
    * “GE to supply $1B of gas turbines to Saudi Arabia

  • Report: Tesla’s Elon Musk says new CUV model due in 2013

    Filed under: , ,

    IED Tesla EYE concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Tesla EYE design concept we saw in at the Geneva Motor Show was just an experiment some students at the Istituto Europeo di Design of Turin did with the Tesla brand. But the idea that we will see more and new vehicle models from Tesla Motors is a fact, as CEO Elon Musk reaffirmed this week during his acceptance speech for the Automotive Executive of the Year Innovator Award. AutoWeek was on hand and reports that Musk said that, after the Model S arrives in 2012, Tesla will introduce a crossover utility vehicle and other models starting in 2013. There’s been talk about a Tesla SUV since at least 2008.

    On the smaller side of things, Tesla’s alliance with Daimler is moving forward with supplying electric vehicle technology for a Mercedes A-Class and the next Smart. For those of you who think Musk has a big ego, he said something in his speech that minimizes the impact of cars like the Tesla Roadster: “The smallest effect Tesla will make will be the cars we make ourselves. The biggest effect will be the cars they [other companies] make.”

    Photos by Damon Lavrinc / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.
    [Source: AutoWeek]

    Report: Tesla’s Elon Musk says new CUV model due in 2013 originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 29 Apr 2010 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Tito Ortiz Jenna Jameson Call Domestic Violence Allegations “A Misunderstanding”

    Tito Ortiz and Jenna Jameson have patched things up and are both singing a different tune about the violent Monday morning encounter that has the professional fighter facing felony domestic charges for throwing the ex-sex worker into a bathtub.

    On Thursday, Jameson withdrew her abuse allegations against Ortiz.

    “What actually happened has now been dramatically distorted and misinterpreted and remarks that both Tito and I made after the police arrived reflect the state of shock that we were both in,” Jenna tells TMZ.com.

    This statement comes just hours after the porn queen claimed a clean drug test debunked her boyfriend’s claim that an altercation between them was an intervention, not an assault. On Monday, a tearful Tito charged that Jenna has been addicted to OxyContin since giving birth to the couple’s twins last year. He’s now claiming that he found two “very old” pills in Jenna’s pants pockets and he jumped to conclusions about her using, resulting in an argument.

    Tito’s lawyer, Chip Matthews, tells TMZ the whole thing was “a big misunderstanding.”


  • 5 Terrifying Parallels Between What’s Going On Now And The Great Depression

    I blogged yesterday about the disaster in Greece, and its rapid spread to other European countries.  Today the fish-eye is turning on countries outside of the PIIGS, including Japan, Britain . . . and us.  According to the Financial Times, “The Fund has calculated that almost all advanced economies need to tighten fiscal policy significantly in the coming decade in order to stabilise debt at 60 per cent of national income by 2030 and the tightening needed in the US, Japan and the UK is just as bad as that required in Greece, Spain, Ireland and Portugal.”

    So perhaps naturally, I’ve been thinking more about the parallels to the Great Depression that I talked about yesterday.  Arguably, the Great Depression was the first global financial crisis, infecting the developed world along with the developing.  So it’s interesting–and frightening–to observe the similarities between that crisis and this one.

    • Excessive international capital flows trigger an initial financial crisis  For a number of reasons, there was a whole lot of gold flowing into New York from abroad in the 1920s.  That money turned into, among other things, margin loans and credit to fuel the Florida real estate boom.  (Yes, there was a previous iteration of the current disaster).  All that leverage eventually collapsed, turning a busted bubble into an international disaster.
    • A second panic emerges more than a year after the initial trigger.  By late 1930, people believed they had turned the corner.  Things were bad, of course, but people had lived through panics before, and after the initial shock, they expected to start rebuilding.
    • Fiscal crises on the periphery turn into banking crises  Creditanstalt, the Austrian bank that ultimately is thought to have triggered our second bank panic when it failed, went down after acquiring a failed bank whose liabilities turned out to be more than Creditanstalt could handle.  But this wasn’t just a banking problem–it was a fiscal problem.  Austria had a mix of fiscal problems, many of them stemming from the credit contraction, and could not afford, politically or financially, to bail out a major bank.
    • Excessively tight monetary policy plays a central role  There is a direct correlation between how long a country stayed on its gold standard, and how deeply it suffered during the Great Depression.   Defending your currency meant high interest rates that crushed recovery.
    • Bad monetary policy has international effects  In the thirties, the mechanism was international gold flows; now, it is the euro.

    I’m not sure how much to make of this.  If you look hard enough, you can always find similarities in situations.  But they are striking enough to make me wonder if they aren’t part of some broad template for international banking crises.  Not that I’m exactly the first person to suggest this, but the mess in Greece, and the resulting contagion, makes it seem more plausible.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • EPA’s “Climate Change Indicators in the US” report: Issues for Society and Ecosystems

    The last major section from the EPA’s new Climate Change Indicators in the US report is society and ecosystems. Below are key summary points.

    Clear changes in growing seasons, bird migration leaf growth and blooming dates have occurred and the trends suggest that they will continue. Heat-related deaths show much more variability, despite clear heating trends, but that could be due to a variety of factors beyond climate change that have an influence on this topic.

    (more…)

  • Quinn breaks with Democrats on redistricting plan

    Posted by Monique Garcia at 1:22 p.m.

    As lawmakers in Springfield prepare to vote on a proposal to change the way state House and Senate districts are drawn, Gov. Pat Quinn today said he’s not a fan of the plan his fellow Democrats drafted.



    The governor said that he doesn’t see the proposed changes "as moving the ball forward all that much" and worries districts will be crafted to protect sitting lawmakers instead of reflecting a particular geographic area.



    "It’s awfully complicated," Quinn said. "I’m not sure if it’s a reform or not, to be honest."


    The proposal, which already passed the Senate, would place a constitutional amendment on the November ballot asking voters to approve a process that would give lawmakers a stronger hand in drawing legislative boundaries. The House could vote on the idea as soon as this afternoon, though Democrats would need at least one Republican vote to reach the three-fifths margin needed for approval.



    "I just think the best way to have redistricting is to set up competitive districts that are not gerrymandered to make sure the people have the best representatives," said Quinn after a groundbreaking ceremony in Glenview for a
    pharmaceutical company building its headquarters there with $4 million in tax credits. "Too often this is an exercise of protecting incumbents of both parties. I don’t think that’s healthy."



    While Quinn isn’t backing the proposed changes, his opposition is unlikely to derail the proposal as it’s a question that goes directly to voters and does not require his approval. Still, Quinn said if he’s elected in November he will work to bring about comprehensive changes.

    "I’ve always felt that redistricting has been way too political in our state, by both parties. So if I’m governor I’m going to try and be the person who makes sure we do it right for the people and not for the politicians."

    Republicans joined by government reform groups have an alternative redistricting plan, but Democrats defeated it this week. The Democratic criticism is that the Republican plan takes the map-drawing process out of the hands of lawmakers who will be impacted by it.

  • Why Does Amtrak Charge Me Extra To Use My Student Discount?

    Consumerist reader Rachel was recently trying to book a train trip from Washington, D.C., to Newark, NJ, on Amtrak’s website and ran across a bit of a snag — When she attempted to claim the Student Advantage discount, her ticket was suddenly $13.90 more expensive.

    Here’s how Rachel tells it:

    Tonight I went online to buy an Amtrak ticket for next month (5/22) on the usually expensive Northeast Corridor Line though I lucked out and was able to find a $49 ticket. Coupled with my Student Advantage Discount, I was pretty pleased that for once I wouldn’t be paying a ridiculous sum to ride the rails. However, when I put in my information for the discount, the price of the ticket jumped to $62.90.

    Does Amtrak have some sort of policy against using discounts on fares lower than $50? It seems pretty ridiculous to be unable to take advantage of your discount at all times (excepting the policy that tickets must be bought no later than 3 days in advance), but hey, that’s me.

    We were able to replicate Rachel’s situation and got the exact same results. And when we tried one of the higher-price fares listed for that day, the Student Advantage discount was actually a discount.

    Looking at the Amtrak page that details the Student Advantage program, there doesn’t appear to be anything in the listed limitations regarding a threshold at which the discount no longer applies.

    Our best guess is that, aside from a computer glitch, Amtrak considers the $49 fare as an already-discounted rate, but then Rachel should have gotten a message that she could not combine the discounts instead of a higher price.

    Below are screenshots of the fare with and without the Student Advantage “discount.”
    Itinerary with Student Discount.bmp

    Same Itineray, No discount.bmp

  • India to Launch Climate Adaptation Fund for South Asia, Seeks to Increase Strategic Dominance

    India has announced to set up a fund to assist South Asian countries to adapt to the challenges of the changing climate. The 16th South Asian Association on Regional Cooperation (SAARC) held at Thimphu, Bhutan had the theme ‘Towards a Green and Happy South Asia’. Heads of governments of eight South Asian countries took part in this summit which focused on environmental issues.

    SAARC was established on December 8, 1985 by Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Pakistan. Sri Lanka, Nepal and Maldives; Afghanistan was later added as a member. In terms of population it is the largest regional cooperation forum in the world with a combined population of about 1.5 billion. In addition these eight members, there are nine observers to the forum including China, the European Union and the United States.

    India is the dominant member of the forum and it demonstrated its dominance by leading from the front on the issue of climate change. The Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh projected the adaptation fund as a ‘gift’ to the member nations as he announced the ‘India Endowment for Climate Change in South Asia’. He also proposed to set up regional climate innovation centres in South Asia in order to stimulate research and development in clean and sustainable energy technologies which the members nations can have easy access to. (more…)

  • Mega Man Zero Collection all set for June NA release

    Even though Mega Man Zero Collection has been delayed in Japan, the same doesn’t hold true for North America. Capcom has announced that the game is on course for a June 8 North American release.

  • HP: All-in with webOS, dropping Android?

    HP’s Chief Strategy Officer / Chief Technology Officer, Shane Robison, sat down with CNN to chat about HP’s plans with the new Palm acquisition.

    It’s clear that HP intends a "change in [their] business model," and will be going all-in with webOS, which Robison calls "a modern, very capable operating system." In the beginning, at least, HP has no intentions on licensing webOS to other manufacturers.

    More interestingly, Robison didn’t rebuff a question that HP would be dumping Android entirely – pointing to the fact that with Palm there’s a "tightly integrated approach" between software and hardware. They’ll be "sorting out" their strategy for Windows Phone 7 over the coming months, but they’re "very, very serious partners with Microsoft," so it doesn’t look likely that HP will be dropping off the list of launch partners for the OS.

    HP is also "anxious" to keep all the key employees at Palm – a sentiment we’re fully behind. Read the entire interview here.

  • 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee will set quality standard for new Chrysler models

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee

    Chrysler Group LLC, which has been criticized on keeping its new product plans under the wraps, has repeatedly said that the 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee flagship SUV will set the bar for other new products that will come out later this year. In the mean time Chrysler is concentrating on generating revenue to fund the new vehicles to come.

    As for the 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Chrysler and Fiat CEO says that the model “must be flawless. It needs to be perfect and it will be.”

    “It is important for us because it is a large volume vehicle and the first one for the new Chrysler,” said Jeep chief Mike Manley.

    The new Grand Cherokee will also be the first vehicle with Fiat input. The model will be produced at Detroit’s Jefferson North plant using Fiat’s manufacturing system and will offer the first evidence of quality improvement for Chrysler.

    “It is a signature car for Chrysler,” Marchionne said. “It will have quality that is unprecedented in the history of the place.”

    Click here for more news on the Jeep Grand Cherokee.

    Refresher: The 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee will be offered with two new powertrains including Chrysler’s new flexible fuel 280-hp Phoenix 3.6L V6 which increases fuel-economy by up to 11 percent. The range will be topped off with a 5.7L HEMI V8 making 360-hp and a maximum torque of 390 lb-ft.

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee:

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Detroit News


  • Next Hyundai Elantra Previewed by Korean-Market Avante

    This is the new Hyundai Avante, which debuted yesterday in Seoul, South Korea. Outside of the brand’s homeland, the Avante wears Elantra badges, meaning this car serves as a preview of the next U.S.-market Hyundai Elantra.

    The new sedan wears the stretched lights, flowing lines, and body creases that define Hyundai’s “fluidic sculpture” design language, as seen on the Genesis and Sonata. The Avante also shares many styling cues with the smaller Hyundai Verna/Accent we saw in Beijing last week.

    Under the hood is a 1.6-liter gasoline engine hooked up to a six-speed automatic transmission. The engine makes 138 hp and 123 lb-ft of torque, and features variable valve timing, direct injection, and variable intake geometry. Despite being positioned as an entry-level small car, the Avante packs HID and LED lighting, heated seats, and a color LCD screen in the instrument cluster.

    The Avante goes on sale later this year in Korea. We can probably expect a new Elantra sedan for our shores by 2011, although we don’t yet know what specific equipment will carry over. We’ll update you as soon as we know more.

    Related posts:

    1. 2009 Hyundai Elantra / Elantra Touring – Review
    2. Hyundai, Kia Plan Fuel-sipping Variants of Accent, Elantra, and Forte – Car News
    3. 2008 Hyundai Elantra – Review
  • McAfee Offers Free Virus Scan

    If you have a PC or work around them, you should be familiar with McAfee. They are one of the top computer security companies in the world. If you have an Android device on SK Telecom in Korea you will soon be able to download this free Anti-Malware software to your handset.

    This software is designed for your Android device and it has similar functions to the desktop version of the security suite. Your personal information will also be secured as well as the app will automatically update itself and scan your device. The folks over at Androidguys are reporting this will be a free download for the Motorola XT720 and more Android devices will be added in the near future.

  • Hands on with the Skyfire 2.0 Android browser

    Let’s take a quick look at the new Skyfire 2.0 browser for Android, shall we? Full page rendering? Check. Flash video? Check. Bells and whistles? Check and check. Our quick verdict: So long as you’re not worried about any privacy concerns regarding proxy browsers, this could easily become your main browser.