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Posts Tagged ‘cycle’

Weekend Comment Nov 12: STX OSV rides shipping cycle

INVESTORS KEEN TO what seems to be the start of a new shipbuilding cycle now have another choice to place their bets: SGX’s first Norwegian offshore company STX OSV which made its Mainboard debut today, opening 7.6% higher than its IPO price at 85 cents. The stock ended lower at 81 cents with 58.7 million shares changing hands.
 
STX OSV designs and builds complex and customised offshore support vessels (OSVs), including platform support vessels and anchor handling tug and supply vessels, and offshore support and construction vessels capable of work in deep waters. It also produces specialised LNG-powered ferries, naval and coastguard vessels, fishing vessels and icebreakers. Its current order book consists of 64 vessels worth about $4 billion to be completed between 2010 and 2013.

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Nov 8: CapitaMalls Asia, Hyflux, Jardine Cycle, SembMarine

Singapore shares may rise slightly on Monday after stocks on Wall Street recorded modest gains amid stronger-than-expected US jobs data. The Straits Times Index rose 0.5% to 3,240.31 on Nov. 4. The following companies may have unusual price changes in trading today. Share prices are from the previous close. The market was closed for a public holiday on Nov. 5. Here are some stocks to watch, say Bloomberg and Thomson Reuters.

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Managing the Virtual Image Life Cycle

Tech analysis: With the increasing popularity of virtualization comes a new problem: virtual sprawl. Keep your virtual machines under control with patch management and inventory software. – More and more IT
organizations are embracing virtual server and desktop infrastructure
technologies. A December 2009 report from Forrester Research found that 71
percent of the companies it surveyed are using server virtualization and
believe that 62 percent of their x86 server OS instances will…


Franklin Templeton says M&A cycle has just begun

Franklin Templeton expects mergers and acquisitions at US companies, especially in the technology sector, to accelerate, as large firms are seeking fast growth, are bulging with cash and valuations are still cheap.

“We are in that early stages of what we see is an M&A cycle,” Grant Bowers, vice president and portfolio manager, who helps manage the US$932 million ($1.3 billion) Franklin US Opportunities fund, told Reuters in an interview.

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Jardine Cycle & Carriage posts $488m in 1H earnings

Jardine Cycle & Carriage says profit attributable to shareholders in the first six months ending June 30, 2010, stood at US$358 million ($488 million).This included a non-trading gain of US$5 million.

Underlying profit increased by 71% to US$353 million and underlying earnings per share rose by 71% to US¢99.35.

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Google Chrome Team Accelerates Stable Build Cycle

Google is speeding up the delivery pace for its Chrome Web browser, cutting stable release time to six weeks from three months. Chrome, challenging Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox and Apple Safari in the browser market, currently has 7.2 percent market share. – Google July 22 said it is ramping up its build cycle for Chrome, the Web
browser that will serve as the platform for running Web applications on Chrome
Operating System.
Chrome Program Manager Anthony LaForge said his team is establishing a new
release process to speed stable Chrome releases to …


Weekend Comment June 18: Late cycle recovery

ON THE BACK of better news flow, the Straits Times Index firmed up to end last week 37.1 points or 1.3% higher. The Euro woes aren’t over yet and will continue to dampen sentiment, as they did today with markets dipping slightly. But bull markets are meant to climb a wall of worry, says Andrew Beal, director of Pacific equities at Henderson Global Investors. And while some economic indicators point to slowing growth, this should be expected given the strong recovery last year, he adds.

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Jardine Cycle & Carriage posts 1Q profit of $244m

Jardine Cycle & Carriage, a motor distributor, said it had a net income of US$178 million ($244 million) in the first quarter, according to a statement to the Singapore stock exchange. Revenue was US$3.57 billion.
 
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Jardine Cycle falls in Singapore on valuation concern

Jardine Cycle & Carriage, the automotive distributor that gets 89% of sales in Indonesia, dropped on concern valuations have been expensive following recent gains, reported Bloomberg.
 
Jardine Cycle fell 2.2% to to $24.44, the biggest decline on the benchmark Straits Times Index, which slipped 0.2%.
 
“Valuations look expensive,” said Lynette Tan, an analyst at DMG & Partners Securities
 
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“America’s Next Top Model” Cycle 14 Contestant Interviews

A new season of Tyra Bank’s America’s Next Top Model is upon us, and fashion fans are in for another cycle of high heels and even higher drama. Tyra and The CW have unveiled the 14 aspiring young stunners who will compete for the title of the Fashion World’s Next Big Thing on the [...]

Software Testing- Software Development Life Cycle Posted By : Yaniv Iny

PractiTest offers software testing, ALM tool, test management, saas test management, test tool, QA management software, software testing tool, manual testing tools, testing management and test management tools.

PT Astra International’s Michael Ruslim passed away: says Jardine Cycle & Carriage

Michael Ruslim, President Director of PT Astra International Tbk, Indonesia’s biggest car retailer, passed away this morning at Mount Elizabeth Hospital, says Jardine Cycle & Carriage. He was 56.

Jardine Cycle & Carriage says Ruslim was diagnosed with dengue fever over the weekend and his condition deteriorated rapidly. He was in critical care until the time of his passing.

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Jammu aims to go green by promoting cycle rickshaw use

Alarmingly high pollution levels in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir has prompted the administration and environment experts to promote the use of cycle rickshaws as a mode of transport.
Jammu is trying to go green traffic wise.
The introduction of cycle rickshaws is seen as a promising development from the business point of view.
The [...]

A certain age

The heat has brought out a new plague of mad, show-off, kamikaze-style boy cyclists. I have never been all that keen on cyclists, ever since the dog was mown down and I was nearly sliced in two on the pavement, but compared with this new lot, the old-style cycle maniac is Fotherington-Thomas.

The latest sort tend to come out on warm evenings and have a new type of bike – minimalist, no gears, no lights. Bare-chested, or with shirts billowing in the wind, they swirl and wheelie about, across red lights, the wrong way up one-way streets, along pavements – no bells, no helmets, no fluorescent jackets. None of that cissy stuff, just top-speed, miss-death-by-half-a-whisker freestyle riding.

“They’re all boys, aren’t they?” says my friend Olga breezily, “That’s what they do. Give them any sort of vehicle and they’ll try and kill themselves in it.” She rather admires them, because she’s a cyclist herself. I had a terrific row with her in the car last week, me driving along in the dark, a whirling mass of shadowy boy cyclists weaving and zipping round the cars and hovering in blind spots, while Olga applauded them and admitted shooting red lights, nipping up one-way streets and along pavements herself.

“I’ve got every right to do it,” said she saucily. “There are no proper cycle lanes and those one way systems are terrifying. You all drive much too fast. The only safe place for cyclists is on the pavement.”

I had a shout, but Olga didn’t give a stuff. Last week a crazed motorist cut her up, called her a lesbian, and drove on to the pavement, trying to kill her. And Fielding had to jump off his bike and hurl himself into a hedge just before a mad motorist crushed his bike to pulp, on purpose.

There’s no arguing with Olga and Fielding. To them, it’s clear cut: cyclists green and good, motorists bad. They know they’re right. But I know I’m right. This is another war with no solution in sight. Let’s hope there aren’t too many casualties.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Its Official: U.S. Trapped in an Extended Deflationary Cycle

Bernanke has just confirmed that the Fed’s prediction is for extended deflation.In an OpEd in the Wall Street Journal, Bernanke writes:My colleagues and I believe that accommodative policies will likely be warranted for an extended period. At some poin…

Bristol adopts Paris-style bike scheme

On a rainy morning, few takers for country’s first citywide ride-and-go plan

It’s a miserable morning in the centre of Bristol. The rain is tipping down and only a halfwit would think of hiring a bike in this weather. So count me in.

Ride-and-go cycle schemes are a familiar part of the cityscape on mainland Europe. Barcelona, Amsterdam, Paris and Berlin all have well-established cycle networks, but somehow Britain has always rather lagged behind.

There are small local schemes in Southport, Cardiff, Hammersmith and Fulham, in London, and only yesterday Blackpool’s opened for business. But the closest we have to a whole-city scheme is in Bristol – Britain’s first designated Cycle City – where Hourbike operates with some support from the council.

The deal is straightforward. You register for a one-off fee of £10 and for that you get a code that lets you turn up to one of the cycle hubs and ride a bike. The first half-hour is free, any time over that works out at about £1 a hour (the idea is to undercut local car parking charges) and you can return the bike to any of the hubs dotted around the city.

Through the drizzle, I punch in the code, the electromagnetic lock is released and I have control of Daniel. The bikes all have names which are cuter than the cycles themselves because they are on the streets 24/7 and the idea is to make them solid and anonymous so that people don’t nick them.

So Daniel and I are ready but where to go for a test cycle? There are three other hubs in the centre and a couple more on the edge of the city near the University of the West of England, but I’ve no idea exactly where as there isn’t a map. Never mind. Andy, the street cleaner, should be able to help out. “There’s one outside the Royal Infirmary,” he says, “but I can’t say I’ve seen anyone using the bikes at either place.” Are you round this way often? “Every day”.

So I head off to hospital and soon discover another reason – apart from the weather – why no else is on a hire bike: it’s almost impossible to go anywhere in Bristol without going up a hill (I wonder if I’ll see any locals with colossal Tour de France-style muscled thighs). At the infirmary there’s a couple of bikes corralled at the hub, but still no sign of riders. Jim, a hospital technician, says he has never seen one.

There’s a bus stop next to the hub and no sign of a bus. Jo has been waiting for at least 10 minutes. Would she fancy a go on a bike? “It sounds like a good idea,” she says, “but I don’t think so.”

But it’s all downhill from here. “Maybe another time.”

I cycle round aimlessly for a while longer looking for another Hourbike but then reckon enough’s enough and tie Danny up for the day and head home.

It’s still early days. There are large parts of the city that still aren’t covered, though the bigger problem is winning punters’ hearts and minds. Tim Caswell, the managing director of Hourbike, which started the Bristol scheme earlier this year, refuses to be discouraged. “We’ve got about 300 people registered so far,” he says. “And with the help of the council we’re looking to increase the number of hubs and bikes so we’ve got most of the city covered. This is the way forward and we are committed to it.”

Getting it right is easier said than done. You can’t really pilot them by sticking a couple of bikes in the centre of town and hoping for the best, because people won’t see the point. It’s only when the full infrastructure is in place that it works. So you’ve got to be prepared to invest – and so far, especially with local government feeling the pinch, councils have tended to play safe by doing nothing.

“There’s a tendency to think there’s only one model,” said Phillip Darnton, who chairs Cycling England, an independent body set up by the government to promote pedal power. “Not everything has to be on the scale of the Paris Velib or TfL’s proposals for London. These are both large schemes aimed at significantly reducing commuter congestion: towns such as Southport, which has also just opened a cycle-hire scheme, are looking more to recreate the ambience of the seaside town, so they need something much less intensive.”

Even so, Britain does not have the best track record when it comes to promoting cycling. A bike hire scheme in Cheltenham has just closed and the London mayor, Boris Johnson, has managed to get on the wrong side of several councils with his plan to tear up several of their car parking bays to install cycle hubs and rob them of some revenue – so there’s still a lot of politicking to be done before London comes on stream.

So how come we’re so rubbish at cycle schemes and mainland Europe has been so successful? “It’s partly cultural,” said Marie, a Paris resident. “Cycling is seen as normal in France, whereas in Britain it’s often more about macho types in Lycra. But it’s also because people are less afraid of cycling in Paris because our drivers are so much better than yours.” Now there’s a thought.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Amphibians like to mate under a full Moon

Scientists have discovered that amphibians around the world synchronize their mating activity by the full Moon.
According to a report by BBC News, this global phenomenon has never been noticed before, but frogs, toads and newts all like to mate by moonlight.
The animals use the lunar cycle to co-ordinate their gatherings, ensuring that enough males and [...]

Two wheels good, t**t riding them sometimes not

Bikes are out in abundance in London today on Day Two of the exciting Crowe vs Boris willie waving competition, er tube strike.
I am all for cycling. It’s good exercise, it’s environmentally friendly, and it can be relaxing. But not when the rider is a t**t.
Cycling may be carbon neutral, but the toxic smog [...]