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  • Civic LXL chega as lojas amanhã?

    Amanhã a Honda deve autorizar a comercialização do Civic LXL através de sua rede de concessionárias no país.
    A nova versão chega para ficar entre a LXS e a EXS, mas segundo informações, a LXS será extinta devido à proximidade do preço com o City.
    O modelo chegará com direção elétrica, rodas exclusivas de 16 polegadas, retrovisores com repetidores de seta e paddle shift (mudança de marcha no volante) na versão automática.
    O Civic LXL deve ser vendido com preços entre R$66.400 (manual) e R$71.500 (automático), preços pouco acima do sugerido para o LXS.
    Fonte: iCarros.

  • How Many Questionable Assumptions Can You Layer On Top Of Each Other To Estimate Bogus ‘Losses’ From Unauthorized iPhone App Downloads?

    A while back someone had sent me to a website I’d never heard of called 24/7 Wall St. that had a post claiming how much certain top blogs were “worth.” The reason someone pointed me to it was because it had Techdirt in the list. What was amusing was that whoever wrote the article made a bunch of assumptions and every single one of them was wrong — and some of them could have been checked with a simple look at our website. Given that every single assumption was wrong, the conclusion was equally laughable. I actually emailed them to point out a few factual errors in the post — none of which were corrected. Since then I tend not to trust anything from that site — though it has a habit of getting attention for similarly ridiculous “estimates,” and people repeat them as if they were factual.

    Allison K was the first of a whole bunch of you to send in the fact that the site is trying to “estimate” the “impact of piracy” of iPhone apps on Apple and app developers. While I commend the site on at least explaining its methodology, the more you read it, the more ridiculous it becomes. They simply layer questionable assumption upon questionable assumption upon questionable assumption, and when they get stuck, they pull out a random number. It’s almost comical to read. As Allison noted, it reminds her of xkcd’s famous comic of the Drake Equation, where one of the variables in the formula is defined as “Amount of bullshit you’re willing to buy from Frank Drake”:




    It’s nice to have some sort of concrete numbers, because people like to have numbers to discuss. But when they’re based on so many layers of questionable assumptions, they tend to do a lot more harm than good. People will assume there’s some real basis for them when there is not.

    And, of course, as everyone should understand by now there’s no such thing as “losses” from unauthorized access. There is only a failure on the part of the company to convince people to buy. There is no line in their financial reports on “losses” from such activities — with good reason. The only issue is a business model issue, which is that the company has not given users a good enough reason to buy, so they chose to get the product elsewhere.

    Update: And it gets more ridiculous. 24/7’s response was a comment below that did not address any of the concerns but simply says that I must not have made it through my high school math class. Classy. Meanwhile, Dark Helmet points us to TUAW’s takedown of the numbers, where they note that based on the assumptions, 24/7 appears to be assuming that there are 510 pirated apps per device. Uh. Yeah. Check those assumptions, folks.

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  • El Palacio Nacional de Puerto Príncipe en Haití…destruído !!!

    Ante todo,apenadísimo por lo que están viviendo los haitianos…un país con tantas carencias y encima les viene a pasar ésto.. qué desgracia !!!.. esperemos nomás que las víctimas fatales no sean tan elevadas como están proyectando..se habla de más de 100,000 muertos !!!.. qué espanto !!!..
    Desde niño,el "ícono" por así llamarlo de Haití,que siempre relacioné con el país,fue el Palacio Nacional,quizás porque era el lugar que siempre fue más publicitado de Haití… sumado a que en los años 70s. y 80s. (muchos foristas eran muy niños ó estaban naciendo… ó no habían nacido !!!),el mundo vivía toda una telenovela con la familia gobernante,los Duvalier.. los famosos "Papa Doc","Mama Doc" y el temible "Baby Doc"… los dos primeros ya fallecidos y el tercero viviendo días sin gloria en Francia… Ellos daban fiestas fastuosas en éste Palacio y llamaban la atención del mundo,pues siendo Haití un país tan pobre,era escandaloso enterarse de éstas fiestas "versallescas"… En 1974 el seleccionado de fútbol de Haití fue al Mundial y muchos países americanos hincharon por ese equipo.. hubo una especie de "feeling",pero lamentablemente no hicieron mucho progreso… Luego ya vinieron los años de numerosos presidentes,entre ellos Aristide y Cédras entre los más famosos…



    53 segundos de movimiento telúrico causaron ésto :


    Como dato curioso,uno de los más importantes colegios de Puerto Príncipe,se llama "Santa Rosa de Lima"…esperemos que no se haya destruído…
    Acá una foto del colegio con estatua de Santa Rosa de Lima…
  • EA Sports Surveys Consumers About Potential Negative Tiger Impact

    Tiger Woods PGA Tour Online

    After EA Sports announced that it would be sticking by Tiger Woods and president Peter Moore reaffirmed that in a blog post earlier this month, it seemed pretty clear that Tiger was not in danger of losing his videogame endorsement deal. But at the very least, EA Sports seems to be investigating whether that decision is doing their brand any harm by way of a survey from Greenfield Online.

    Among the Tiger-related questions in the survey are the following two (both pictured at Kotaku):

    Q. EA Sports makes a Tiger Woods video game. Has the controversy made your impressions of EA Sports more or less favorable, or has it had no impact?

    Q. Has the controversy made you more or less likely to buy a Tiger Woods related video game in the future?

    Clearly, there is at least some modicum of concern that the Tiger scandal could reflect poorly on EA Sports. With Tiger Woods PGA Tour Online’s open beta launching later this month, it’s undoubtedly far too late to simply pull Tiger’s name off of it. But if the polling comes back overly negative, EA Sports might have to rethink its continued support of Tiger.

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  • Is the US increasingly a nation of psychoses?




    Modern society, with its emphasis on material possessions and indifference to community, is making us mentally ill. It’s an argument that wouldn’t seem out of place on the Sunday talk shows, but in this case, it’s appearing in the academic journal Clinical Psychology Review, and the argument is backed by decades of data and a cognitive model that attempts to make sense of the process. The data suggests that there has been an increase in a standard measure of mental problems among individuals in their late teens and early 20s, and that the trend dates back at least to the 1930s.

    The authors mention that a variety of studies have found mixed results when examining the time course of mental health within the US. Some of the studies that have attempted to address this problem have attempted to extrapolate trends using surveys of people in different age groups, but these studies suffer from two problems: mental health doesn’t remain static during an individual’s lifetime, and those with serious mental disabilities (such as clinical depression) tend to die younger than their peers.

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  • Vodafone to Sell the Nexus One in Germany?

    Found under: Google, Nexus One, Vodafone, Germany,,

    It looks like the Google Nexus One is coming to Europe markets via Vodafone. In Germany the carrier will start selling the device next month according to a supposedly leaked flier. The phone will probably get the attention of lots of German Android fans and since its coming from Vodafone it will be available for much less.Sure youll probably have to get a two-year new contract from Vodafone but thats a small price to pay in order to get the device. After all Android looks to be th

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  • Renaming a school

    How to honor the late Dr. Sharples

    Editor, The Times:

    Your Jan. 9 editorial speaks well of Caspar Sharples, [“Honoring Dr. Sharples,” Opinion], the late and eminent Seattle physician whose career as a School Board member and one of the chief architects of the Childrens hospital was foundational to the humanitarian and educational character of the community.

    There are two points you may have overlooked in the recent efforts to relocate the Sharples school dedication. The Sharples family is guided by a resolution enacted by the School Board in 2000 that prescribes that a new dedication to Sharples be equivalent to the old one in architectural, educational and civic importance. The family deemed that the old John Hay site did not meet those criteria. A reason for this — and not the least important —was that John Hay’s architecture and landscape are controlled by the Landmarks Board. A new dedication there would be compromised by the apparently irradicable signage that announces the place as the John Hay School.

    With the concurrence of the president of the School Board, the Sharples family presented a “memorandum of understanding” in December whereby the family would accept the Hay site providing the school district agreed to make good faith and positive efforts over time toward reconciling these and other issues. However, the district dismissed the proposed memorandum out of hand and without discussion. At this juncture the family realized that the district’s rigidity was not conducive to an accord.

    You also recommended “patience” on the part of the Sharples family and friends. We have demonstrated patience beyond measure these past 10 years. The thing that drove the family to reject the Hay site was the district’s intractable deadline of Jan. 6 to either accept or decline it. A little patience on that score would have been welcome. Meanwhile, the Sharples family stands by its earlier memorandum that bespeaks goodwill and patience toward resolving whatever issues impede conferring the dedication on a qualified school.

    — Joseph C. Baillargeon, for the Sharples family and friends, Seattle

  • Rain Design’s iMac turntable sends the iMac for a spin

    Filed under: , , ,

    iMacs are great, except when you have one sitting with its back to a wall and you need to plug something into the back of it. Particularly with the larger models, you end up having to pick up the iMac and swing it around to get to those ports on the back. Wouldn’t it be a lot easier if you could just spin it?

    That’s the idea behind the Rain Design i360, a turntable that encloses the base of an iMac or Apple Cinema Display, and then allows easy movement of the display. Want to show a co-worker on the “back” side of your iMac something? Just spin the entire computer around. Need to plug or unplug something? No problem — just swing the iMac or Cinema Display around and do it.

    I’ve had an i360 on my first-generation Intel iMac since just after I bought it, and I can’t count the number of times that it has saved me from having to pick up the computer and slide it around to plug something in. I’ve recommended the i360 to many of my Mac consulting customers who have iMacs or Cinema Displays, and many of them end up buying the device.

    The i360 base has a bit of weight to it so it doesn’t move, and there are rubber feet on the bottom to insure that your desktop isn’t scratched. The computer or display base is held in place with a single screw, so installation is simple. The manufacturer’s teardrop logo cutout (seen above) has a clear plastic window, so you can put a picture or logo into it just for fun.

    There are now two models of the i360. The original, available for US$39.90, works with the 20″ and 21.5″ aluminum iMacs, the 15″, 17″ and 20″ “plastic” G5 and Intel iMacs, and the 20″ and 23″ Cinema Display. To match the iMac you own, the base of the i360 comes in either painted white or in bare aluminum. The new model (US$44.90), called the i360 24″, fits the 24″ and 27″ aluminum iMacs and the 24″ Cinema Display. Alas, there is no i360 for the 30″ Cinema Display.

    The i360 has served me well over the years, and it surprised me to find that TUAW hadn’t reported on this cool piece of hardware before. If you find your iMac sitting in the wrong direction often, it might be worth getting one and taking it for a spin.

    TUAWRain Design’s iMac turntable sends the iMac for a spin originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Nokia N900 Gets Ovi Store Support

    Found under: Nokia, N900, Ovi Store, ,

    The Nokia N900 is by far one of the best gadgets ever to have been created by Nokia last year. Unfortunately for everyone that purchased the device not everything is fun and games. One reason for that is that the Ovi Store wasnt available to the Maemo device. But what do you know folks It would seem that the Ovi Store has gone live to the N900 and you can enjoy it already. Now you can click away on that Ovi Store icon and youll be taken away for a custom interface especially made f

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  • How good and idea would it be for SACU to be a Federation

    Indeed it is long overdue. The Southern African Customs Union could be transformed from the oldest customs union in the world to be a strong Confederation of independent states with a unified economy, open borders, single currency. This indeed could be easily achieved since these 5 nation’s economies are integrated to a certain degree. With a population of about 51,055,878 people, a GDP of $541 billion and GDP per capita of $10, 000, this region will be the strongest Federal government in the whole of Africa in the economic sense. Moreover with a common English language and mostly similar cultures, conflict is something unlikely to occur. The big advantage is the huge number of good universities, well developed and maintained infrastructure, the exponentially growing educated population, well established mining industries etc it can perform to and beyond the levels of economies like South Korea.

    SACU is 100 years old today and has been consistent in the agreements that were made when the Union of South Africa was formed. After all the countries South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland and Namibia have historical attachments from back in 1910 when they were Union of South Africa, Bechuanaland Protectorate, Basutholand, Swaziland and Suid Wes Afrika respectively.

  • If Life Were a Role Playing Game [Comics]

    Using a Peek lowers your intelligence by 3, and wearing three T-Shirts only gives you +1 to defense, but +20% cold resistance. [Dog House Diaries]







  • Felons get the vote

    A slap in the face

    A Seattle Times editorial published on Monday [“Appeal felon-vote ruling.” Opinion, Jan. 11] addressed the Washington state “felon disenfranchisement law,” which denies voting rights for persons who have been convicted of felonies and incarcerated. The editorial notes that “Washington has stripped felons of their right to vote as a punishment on top of time behind bars.”

    I doubt that as a “punishment,” this law has any impact on felons. Nor would it have any impact as a crime deterrent. But what it does do — as the editorial points out — is compound a person’s “separation from civil society.” It is, as you suggest, an additional slap in the face for the felon.

    Is this what we want, to further humiliate persons who have been convicted of crimes? We know that crime is in part the result of disadvantaged opportunity, discrimination and victimization, particularly when applied to youth and children. To pretend that this is not the case is to be blind to the realities of contemporary society.

    Our goal in working with those in the criminal-justice system should be more appropriately directed toward rehabilitation. Providing access to education, employment and appropriate housing would serve as examples of activities that could assist this group to reintegrate into “civil society.”

    Disenfranchisement, further stigmatization and alienation of this population will only impede rehabilitation and, as an additional outcome, put others in the community at greater risk of crime.

    — Jere G. LaFollette, Mount Vernon

    Exposes discrimination

    The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has decided that felons should have the right to vote, because denying them that right disenfranchises minority voters disproportionately. It is long overdue that the issue of discrimination in incarceration is exposed.

    While females comprise over 50 percent of the population, they make up less than 10 percent of the inmate population. Arrest rates of people younger than 30 make up a vastly higher proportion than their percentage of population. And if one studied the education level of inmates, one would see that people with college degrees are vastly underrepresented as compared to their population at large.

    By using plain, provable statistics, it is obvious that the police are deliberately not arresting retired, white, college-educated females to the degree that they should be.

    This reverse discrimination must stop.

    — Tom Tangen, Edmonds

    Uncomfortable with the notion

    It’s nice to know that here in the state of Washington, logic and common sense have been buried under a steaming pile of political correctness.

    I can’t say that I’m comfortable with the notion that I now have the same voting rights as gangbangers and level-three sex offenders. These people are felons for a reason.

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t it a lawyer’s job to uphold the law, not destroy it? It’s quite apparent that none of those [9th Circuit Court] judges have ever been robbed at gunpoint.

    — Jeremy Ghea, Federal Way

  • Founding Fathers’ foresight

    Should acknowledge slavery’s existence

    Republican Bob Benze’s “Founding Fathers didn’t envision wealth distribution” [Opinion, Jan. 12] supplies important history that Americans overlook — at our own peril — respecting the original calculus underlying the U.S. Constitution.

    The essay would be immensely more useful, however, if it explicitly acknowledged that central terms of that initial calculus allowed one human being to own another outright and calculating a value for slaves as chattel property at three-fifths of that of an enfranchised voter. This proved unacceptable to a one-term Whig congressman who would become the first Republican president [Abraham Lincoln] in 1861. Freeing and enfranchising slaves in the early 1860s drastically changed the calculus of the Founding Fathers forever.

    Railing against the evolution since 1789 of our Constitution— after the Republican Revolution that followed the Declaration of Independence by four score and seven years — is less helpful than integrating at least the Republican Revolution underlying that evolution into a logical argument with intellectual honesty.

    — Will Knedlik, Kirkland

    Fathers did anticipate need to redistribute wealth

    Whether or not the Founding Fathers “envisioned wealth redistribution,” they were intent on forming “a more perfect union to establish justice and promote the general welfare” of this newly formed country. The verbs “establish” and “promote” anticipate a sociopolitical process through which constant improvement is achieved.

    It is estimated that, due to insufficient wealth or unwillingness to ascribe to a religious creed, half of all white males were precluded from voting after the Fathers crafted their preamble. Women and people of color were denied this basic right, as were men called upon to fight for their country but were too young to vote. So too, were Catholics, Jews, Quakers and others too far removed from mainstream Protestantism.

    Fortunately, America did not remain fossilized after 1776, but became an evolving society, perfecting itself through a process of increasing inclusion and equality. As Paul Krugman notes on the same opinion page [“European social democracy works”], Europe is becoming even more dynamic — and prosperous.

    There have been Americans who fought every step toward redistributing power and wealth; some are still among us. I can’t imagine the Founding Fathers supporting only wealth retention since they risked their assets and freedoms to expand ours.

    — Bob Selby, Blaine

    American versus European dynamism

    Your Monday editorial page had an amusing contrast between two adjacent articles. It would be hilarious if the issues weren’t so serious.

    In “Founding Fathers didn’t envision wealth distribution,” Bob Benze repeats the usual Republican theory that if the government redistributes the nation’s wealth via taxes and social programs, it will “invariably” inhibit the creation of jobs and industry and the incentive to work. He cites Western Europe — versus Eastern Europe — as an illustration.

    But in “European social democracy works,” Paul Krugman demonstrates with facts, not empty theory, that although European taxes are higher than ours, their per-capita GDP, employment and productivity are almost the same as ours, while their social benefits — including universal health care — far surpass ours.

    Benze’s article reminds us of the old quip, “Don’t bother me with facts, my mind is made up.”

    — Robert and Susan Stanton, Seattle

  • Lights out at zoo nocturnal house

    Donate allowance to cause

    I learned in The Seattle Times that the Woodland Park Zoo is going to shut down the nocturnal exhibit [“Zoo plans to close nocturnal exhibit to save $300,000,” NWMonday, Jan. 11]. I am 7 years old and I have been going to the zoo since I was a baby. My favorite place at the zoo is the nocturnal exhibit.

    I love the bats and the sloth especially. I learned at the nocturnal exhibit that we need bats so there aren’t too many bugs. Also, the nocturnal exhibit is a really dark and peaceful place.

    I would like to donate $10 from the part of my allowance that I share. I have been saving up for something important, and this is important to me. I would like to ask the other children of Seattle, if they love the nocturnal exhibit, to give some of their allowance to support it too. I wonder if we could raise the $300,000 that is needed from all our money together?

    — Asa Buehler, West Seattle

    Who decided this?

    I was surprised to read that the zoo’s very popular Nocturnal House will soon be closing. My daughter and I are zoo members and consider this to be one of our favorite zoo exhibits. I don’t recall being asked for any input as either a Seattle taxpayer or as a member of the Zoological Society.

    How was this decision arrived at and what other options are there that would keep this unique exhibit open? Seattle residents need some answers and explanations for what appears to be a very dictatorial decision.

    — John Alwin, Seattle

    Move the elephants to save money

    In Susan Gilmore’s article about Woodland Park Zoo’s plan to close the popular nocturnal exhibit, the zoo claims it will save $300,000 by making this unnecessary move.

    If the zoo were to do the compassionate and cost-effective thing, it would accept the Elephant Sanctuary’s offer to transport and keep the zoo’s elephants for life in a much more suitable environment: 2,700 acres of rolling and varied terrain to roam and explore, plus a 15-acre lake to swim in — all in a much warmer climate.

    Our three elephants at WPZ need more than one acre and they suffer by being locked into a tiny barn for about 17 hours a day due to our colder climate. It’s funny that the figure for keeping three elephants in the zoo is about $400,000. This humane choice would allow the zoo to keep the Nocturnal House open with about $100,000 left over.

    — Nancy Pennington, for the Friends of Woodland Park Zoo Elephants, Seattle

  • Chicago Service Organization Deeply Concerned for Employees and Clients in Haiti

    The Children’s Place Association Serves Children and Families Affected by HIV in Haiti

    The Children’s Place Association, a Chicago-based nonprofit, continues to monitor the situation in Haiti after at 7.3-magnitude earthquake struck the country late Tuesday afternoon and the status of clients and workers remains unknown.

    The organization currently cares for more than 500 clients in Haiti.

    The Children’s Place Association began programming in this poverty-ridden country to help families affected by HIV/AIDS meet the needs of their children.

    “We have been attempting to contact our field workers in Haiti since we learned of the quake yesterday afternoon,” said Cathy Krieger, president and CEO of The Children’s Place Association.

    “At this time we have not been able to reach our team or families and we are deeply concerned for their safety and well-being as the devastation in the area is wide spread.”

    A relief effort is already underway.

    “We have begun to mobilize support for our employees and clients.  While we do not yet know what the specific needs, monetary donations will help us to quickly provide aid once we are able to reach them.  We anticipate these needs will include medical supplies, clean water and food.”

    Donations can be made through the organizations Web site, childrens-place.org, or calling 312-660-3030.

    Supporters are asked to note the donation is for Haiti Quake Relief.

    About The Children’s Place Association

    The mission of The Children’s Place Association is to improve the present and secure the future for children, youth and families confronted by HIV/AIDS or other life-changing health conditions.

    Founded in 1991, The Children’s Place Association serves as a safe haven for children in Chicago whose lives have been affected by HIV/AIDS through the Residential Center and Early Learning Center as well as Family & Community Services and Foster Care & Adoption programs.

    Children’s Place International was launched to care for the 2.5 million children worldwide living with HIV.  Currently the program serves children and families in Haiti, and programming is under development in Guyana.

    For more information on programs and services, visit childrens-place.org or call 312-733-9954.


  • Apple Tablet Just A Bigger iPhone Version?

    Found under: Apple, Tablet, iPhone, ,

    Tablets are going to fill our lives from now on. We will end up having to play with both a tablet and a smartphone at the same time. And well still have some time to deal with our laptops too. Just days ago weve shown you Dells upcoming tablet which has been inspired probably by the much expected Apple tablet. Apples own creation will probably be a best seller. The device is set to arrive later this month and rumors say that its basically an iPhone on Steroids. According t

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  • SNIT – Sistema Nacional de Informação Territorial

    Pessoal neste site podem consultar de forma rapida os PDM’s e PP’s de todo o lado :yes:

    http://www.dgotdu.pt/channel.aspx?ch…7-D332054A3C19

  • Google, China and the WTO

    Google's possible exit from China is all over the news.  Are there any trade issues in there?  Possibly:

    Lawyers said that Google and the US might have a legal basis for suing China at the World Trade Organisation, a move that would further complicate relations between Washington and Beijing.

    According to lawyers, the US could argue that Beijing’s censorship in effect discriminated against foreign services such as Google, contrary to its commitments under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (Gats).

    “If China imposes harsher web filtering restrictions on Google than on local search engines, such as Baidu, Google may have a WTO discrimination claim,” said David Spooner, a former assistant secretary of commerce, now at the law firm Squire Sanders & Dempsey.

    The outcome of a case would depend on how a WTO dispute resolution panel classified search engines. Much of the WTO law addressing internet services and online products is unclear. The last global trade agreement was negotiated in the early 1990s when the technology was in its infancy. But trade experts said a succession of rulings had narrowed governments’ room for manoeuvre, and particularly their ability to use national security or the protection of public morals as defence for censoring words and images on the web.

    Gary Horlick, a leading international trade lawyer, said: “We will have to know a lot more about the facts, especially what the [Chinese] government is doing, but the Gats has a lot of unexplored obligations which might protect Google."

  • Autodelta takes on the Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    As far as Alfa Romeos go, the 8C Competizione is as exotic as they come. Still, some are looking for more. Originally, rumors surfaced that Alfa was working on a lightweight GTA version, but while we wait for that to pan out, Alfa tuner par excellence Autodelta is working on tuning the svelte supercar themselves.

    Few details are known at this point, but a remapped ECU should squeeze out a modest 17 horsepower boost from the stock 444-hp, 4.7-liter Ferrari-developed V8. Autodelta is also working on fine-tuning the chassis, taking their 8C around some of the finest tracks in Europe to get it just right.

    The result is slated to be unveiled at the Pistonheads Performance Car Show in Birmingham later this week, so stay tuned, and follow the jump for the press release in the meantime.

    [Source: Autodelta]

    Continue reading Autodelta takes on the Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione

    Autodelta takes on the Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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