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Posts Tagged ‘falling’

America’s Middle Eastern Puppet Regimes Are Falling Like Dominoes

The images from the protests in Cairo, Egypt today are stunning. See this, this and this.President Mubarak’s family has already fled the country.As Raw Story notes:Demonstrators calling for economic and political reforms broke through police barriers…

An Overwhelming Number of Scientific Studies Conclude That Cavity Levels are Falling Worldwide … Even In Countries Which Don’t Fluoridate Water

Everyone agrees that the number of cavities have plummeted in the U.S. over the last couple of decades, after water fluoridation was introduced (that is why health officials call water fluoridation “one of the ten greatest public health accomplishmen…

NOL down on oversupply, falling rates

Shares of Singapore-listed container shipping firm Neptune Orient Lines (NEPS.SI) fell as much as 2.5% on Friday because of oversupply in the industry and falling container rates.
 
There is also general negative sentiment in the shipping industry following floods in Australia, although it is not directly affecting container traffic.

Read more…

Falling out of style

I wonder how Giorgetto Giugiaro really feels about seeing the ItalDesign company he spent forty years building as part of a global automaker?

He’ll surely be hoping it’ll have a better future than another Carozzerie that he headed before setting up ItalDesign in 1968 – Ghia.

From 1965 to ’67, Giugiaro, then a young, rising star of the car industry, was appointed head of design for Ghia – a company at the time most famous for a VW model, the Beetle-based Karmann Ghia coupe. Changes of ownership at Ghia meant Giugiaro’s tenure was brief. By 1970, Ghia had become a division of a major car company – Ford.

Oddly, in the same week that VW announced the ItalDesign deal, Ford announced that it had killed the Ghia sub-brand in the UK, saying it had run its course.

While the Ghia studio in Turin remains part of the Ford empire, the Ghia brand was very soon relegated to little more than a top-line trim level. Successfully too, for 30 years and counting, through various generations of Granadas, Cortinas, Escorts and Fiestas. Ghia meant plush velour seats instead of vinyl. The vinyl went on the roof, of course.

Ghia trim had come to stand for fake wood and a soft ride – certainly not the image Ford wants to project, in the UK at least. Fiesta, Focus and Mondeo have all lost their Ghia versions over the past year or so, and the last of the Ghia-badged Galaxy models will be gone any day now.

“It’s served us very well – but we’re in a new decade and we’ve got to show people we’re doing something a little bit different,” said Ford of Britain marketing director Mark Simpson.

In its place is Titanium, a more modern and youthful sub-brand, but pitched above Ghia in terms of specification, so as not to alienate the older buyer more accustomed to a Ghia.

“The Ghia customer wanted luxury and more appointment. Titanium is more modern – though we had to satisfy older customers – we didn’t want to follow Oldsmobile and reinvent the brand, but lose all our existing customers,” Simpson said. The plan seems to be working. Take-up of Titanium trim is much greater. “On old Fiesta, we sold 3% Ghia, but with the new Fiesta, Titanium take-up is over 20%,” he added.

Ghia trim lives on in many European markets, however, but the studio was reconfigured as an “virtual design centre” in 2002 – its last tangible contribution to the Ford range was the Streetka cabrio of a few years back.

It’s a bit of a waste, really – considering what might have been. In 1964, Ghia even tried to become a supercar brand of its own, creating a beautiful Chrysler-powered coupe called the L6.4 (the name relates to the size of its 6.4-litre V8 engine).

It’s a rare car, but a familiar one– how many 40-somethings had the Corgi Toys model of the L6.4 in the ’60s, complete with the little corgi dog on the parcel shelf? Coolbear certainly had one (and probably still has it somewhere) and as a young lad often wondered why he never saw a real one on the streets of Blackpool.

Probably something to do with the total production run – just 25 were built. Customers included Frank Sinatra. But he preferred Vegas to the Golden Mile…

ANALYSIS: Has Giugiaro got the timing right?

Apple iPad Preorders May Be Falling Off After Strong First Day

Apple may have sold 120,000 iPads on its first day of preorders March 12, according to analyst estimates. Those same analysts are also predicting the perhaps inevitable falloff in preorders. According to their estimates, nearly 70 percent of preorders are for iPads with WiFi, as opposed to the WiFi and 3G-enabled version, and orders were almost evenly split between the 16GB, 32GB and 64GB versions. Apple predicts that some 150,000 apps will be available upon launch for the 9.7-inch tablet PC, and has already begun its marketing push ahead of the iPads April 3 release.
– Daniel Tello, a blogger and analyst,
leveraged data supplied by volunteers to arrive at an estimation of 120,000
iPads sold via Apples Website March 12, the inaugural day that Apple
opened the device to preorders. That number included 50,000 iPads sold within
a single two-hour period. The iPad…


Microsoft’s Week Involved Battery Complaints, Falling Mobile Share, Security

Microsoft dealt with a number of issues this week, including complaints from a small number of Windows 7 users about degraded battery life for their laptops running the operating system, and reports that some users who installed one of Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday security updates are receiving the dreaded Blue Screen of Death. Microsoft is gearing up for next weeks Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, where the company is scheduled to make a high-profile announcement regarding its plans in the mobile space. This announcement will most likely be the unveiling of Windows Mobile 7, its much-rumored smartphone operating system, although recent rumors suggest that Microsoft is interested in potentially acquiring BlackBerry maker Research In Motion.
– This week, Microsoft wrestled with complaints from a subset of Windows 7
users about poor battery life for some laptops running the operating system.
Some of those users reported experiencing battery life as short as 15 minutes
after upgrading their laptops to Windows 7, while others received a


Shoppers escape falling jet part

A car-sized panel from a cargo jet fell out of the sky on Friday and crashed into a mall car park in Florida, startling shoppers but causing no injuries or damage, the airline said. Federal authorities and Atlas Air were investigating why the 68kg canoe-shaped fairing detached from the wing of a

Falling flat

More evidence that America is experiencing a jobless recovery

A WEEK ago, Americans were told that their economy had expanded for a second consecutive quarter, and rapidly at that: output grew at an annual rate of 5.7%. This week, they are reminded that a return to growth has yet to benefit the jobless. The economy lost 20,000 jobs in January, a decline driven by the loss of 75,000 jobs in the construction sector. Economists had forecast an increase in employment of around 15,000. The unemployment rate, based on household rather than establishment data, showed a slight improvement, dropping from 10% to 9.7%, but nearly 15m Americans remain unemployed. As Larry Summers put it in Davos last week, the American economy is experiencing “a statistical recovery and a human recession”.

Several positive trends continued in January. Firms added 52,000 temporary workers and increased hours, just as they did in December, hinting at growing if cautious optimism. Employment rose in health, education and professional services, and retail employment grew by 42,000 in January, on a seasonally adjusted basis, after declining in December. Manufacturing employment also grew, by 11,000, the first increase since the beginning of recession. Analysts point out that the adjustment of the data is tricky around the holiday season, and actual underlying employment may have grown in January. …

Falling star

Christmas woes for British Airways, even though a court orders that a strike is cancelled

THERE was a time, a decade ago, when British Airways (BA) could credibly claim to be “the world’s favourite airline”, as its posters proudly affirmed. Not any more. And certainly not to those passengers who were hastily booking alternatives to their BA flights this week as the threat of a long strike over Christmas loomed. The walkout was averted on Thursday December 17th, but the underlying problems that led to the standoff remained unresolved. Compounding the woe came news of a series of two-day strikes at Eurostar, the passenger-train service under the English Channel, and the collapse of Flyglobespan, a Scottish airline.

The dispute at BA centres on its desire to cut costs by reducing cabin staff on most flights and limiting wage increases. The airline’s pilots and engineers have already accepted austerity measures; cabin staff, notified of the proposed changes in July, are less inclined to compromise (though some have taken voluntary redundancy). On December 14th Unite, the union which represents almost all of the company’s 13,500 cabin staff, said they had voted overwhelmingly to strike. …

2-Factor Authentication Falling Short for Security, Gartner Says

In a new report, Gartner points out where strong two-factor authentication is falling short when it comes to preventing fraud and online attacks. According to the firm, businesses need to makes some changes.
– Strong two-factor authentication is falling short, and businesses need to take notice, according to a report from Gartner.

In a new report, quot;Where Strong Authentication Fails and What You Can Do About It, quot; Gartner analyst Avivah Litan contends that Trojan-based, man-in-the-browser att…


Still falling

Britain’s ongoing recession is the longest and deepest since the war

BRITAIN’S recession, already the deepest since the second world war, has now become the longest, lasting for six consecutive quarters. Contrary to widely held expectations that the economy had started to recover over the summer, it shrank by 0.4 per cent compared with the level of activity in the second quarter. As a result GDP has now fallen by 6% since its peak at the start of 2008.

Even before this unexpected setback the recession was proving harder to shake off in Britain than elsewhere. Helped by the resilience of China, the world economy turned the corner this spring. Germany and France returned to growth in the second quarter. Figures due next week are expected to show that America, unlike Britain, emerged from recession in the third quarter. …

Cirque du Soleil performer dies after falling off a trampoline

A Cirque du Soleil performer has died after falling off a trampoline during a training session in Montreal. Cirque du Soleil said Saturday Oleksandr Zhurov (Sacha) died in a Montreal hospital Saturday after falling off the trampoline on Friday. The company said the 24-year-old Ukrainian

Afghanistan not In danger of falling to Taliban, says Obama’’s NSA

Afghanistan is not in imminent danger of falling to the Taliban, President Barack Obama’’s national security adviser, Lt. Gen. James Jones said Sunday as he downplayed worries that the insurgency could set up a renewed sanctuary for Al Qaeda.
Retired Gen. James Jones made the comments after eight U.S. soldiers were killed near the Pakistan border [...]

Boss of Madonna’s Raising Malawi charity quits after falling for her trainer

Queen of pop Madonna has lost the head of her Raising Malawi charity after he fell for her trainer.
Executive director Philippe van den Bossche, who helped Madonna adopt her daughter Mercy, is leaving the charity’s Los Angeles headquarters to live with petite but perfect Tracy Anderson in New York.
“Philippe and I have been together for [...]

Apple iPhone OS 3.1 Phishing Protection Falling Short, Researchers Say

Security pros say the Apple iPhone OS 3.1′s anti-phishing feature falls short, failing to block sites blocked by the desktop version of the Safari browser.
– The anti-phishing feature for the iPhone OS 3.1 isn’t all it’s cracked
up to be, according to security researchers.
For whatever reason, some researchers have found, phishing sites blocked by
the desktop version of Apple Safari are not consistently blocked by
the mobile version. Since Apple r…


Businesses Falling Victim to Cyber-crime, Report Finds

A survey conducted by Panda Security found small businesses have a serious lack of anti-spam and anti-malware protection.
– Cloud-based security specialist Panda Security has announced its worldwide
barometer on security at small and medium-sized businesses. According to a
study, which surveyed 5,760 companies worldwide, 44 percent of the more than
1,400 U.S.
respondents have recently been infected by Internet threat…


Missile Crew Discharged After Falling Asleep While Holding Classified Launch Code Devices

BISMARCK, N.D. — The Air Force discharged three North Dakota ballistic missile crew members who fell asleep while holding classified launch code devices, the military announced Tuesday. Officials said the codes were outdated and remained…

Carl Pope: United We Stand; Divided We’re Falling

Sadly, in the way that matters, and in the place that matters, our energy policy is running in place instead of moving forward. This morning…