
Do any one got more story for this great piece of mugen engine? Spec's bout this? Would love to know more bout this engine...A great engineering marvel from the 70's.






Let's make things clear..



Recently, I've been smoking self rolling tobacco. It's becoming my fav free time activity to roll em to store in the hard case..
With the Multi-Touch interface on iPhone, you can make a call simply by tapping a name or number in your contacts or favorites list, your call log, or just about anywhere. Visual Voicemail lets you select and listen to messages in whatever order you want — just like email.
Widescreen iPod

iPhone shows off your content — music, movies, TV shows, and more — on a beautiful 3.5-inch display. Add to your collection by downloading music and video wirelessly from the iTunes Store. Scroll through songs and playlists with the touch of a finger. Even brow
se your album artwork using Cover Flow.
Breakthrough Internet Device

iPhone uses fast 3G and Wi-Fi wireless connections to deliver rich
HTML email, Maps with GPS, and Safari — the most advanced web browser on a mobile device. It has Google and Yahoo! search built in. And since iPhone multitasks, you can make a phone call while emailing a photo or surfing the web over a Wi-Fi or 3G connection.

iPhone comes with some amazing applications. And you can choose from thousands more on the App Store and download them with a tap. Your iPhone gets even better with every new app. Play games. Be more productive. Keep yourself entertained. No matter what you want to do on iPhone, there’s an app for that.
It works like no other phone.

With iPhone, Apple combined innovative hardware features with the world’s most advanced mobile operating system to redefine what a mobile phone can do. Applications work together seamlessly and they sync with your computer — whether you’re on a Mac or a PC. From its revolutionary Multi-Touch display to its intelligent keyboard to its smart sensors, iPhone is years ahead of any other mobile phone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPhone

For workers everywhere, the troubled economy may feel like an emotional roller coaster. "Layoffs" and "budget cuts" have become bywords in the workplace, and the result is increased fear, uncertainty, and higher levels of stress. Since job and workplace stress grow in times of economic crisis, it’s important to learn new and better ways of coping with the pressure. The ability to manage stress in the workplace can make the difference between success or failure on the job. Your emotions are contagious, and stress has an impact on the quality of your interactions with others. The better you are at managing your own stress, the more you'll positively affect those around you and the less other people's stress will negatively affect you.
There are a variety of steps you can take to reduce both your overall stress levels and the stress you find on the job and in the workplace. These include:

In 1946 Soichiro Honda established the Honda Technical Research Institute in Hamamatsu. Two years later the Honda Motor Company was founded at a start up cost of 1 million dollars. Fifty-eight years later a company that began as a regional concept has sprawled across the world, becoming an international giant in the automobile industry. Though Honda’s name is associated most closely with cars, its manufacturing range is impressive, from motorcycles, ATVs, generators, and lawn equipment, to marine engines, Honda makes it all.
Though the origins of this now mega-successful company were small, the company’s rise to regional, national, and international fame is impressive. After experiencing success within the nation of Japan, the company moved offices from Hamamatsu to Tokyo, the hub of the nation. The financial success accompanied by the release of the first sports car in 1963 along with the first light truck model foreshadowed the triumph Honda would see in the late 1960s with the new N series of minicars. In 1968 the N Series topped the sales chart in Japan. By this time Honda was seeing financial success not only in Japan, but abroad. Honda’s entrance into the American market was done with the motorcycle. The American Honda Motor Company was established in 1959 and saw profits from motorcycle sales almost immediately. By 1962 American Honda was selling more than 40,000 motorcycles annually. Because of the success of the motorcycle in the States Honda decided to unleash its version of the automobile. In 1959 the N600 model was launched in Hawaii and by May the car was being sold on the mainland. While the entrance of the Formula One Model into the racing circuit was applauded by the country in 1964 the Honda Civics’ reception was less than welcoming.
The entrance of Honda into the car market was met with some skepticism, as the popular conception at the time was that buying a car through an American dealer was the only way to go. The new Civic, launched in 1973, was out-of-place. Honda’s smaller size was a radical departure from the bulky cars that dominated automobile lots in the 1970s. The entrance of the small, more efficient car was met with suspicion and skepticism. Many lots refused to show the Honda Civic because of its radical appearance and because of its foreign name. But gradually the Civic was worked its way into the fibers of the mainstream car industry. Helping the immersion was the 1973 oil crisis. During this time the fuel-efficient Honda Civic became one of the most valued cars in America. American consumers, with their wallets being hit, shed their desire for large gas-guzzlers and the demand for smaller cars shot up. As a result of the Honda’s CVCC engine, the first power plant to pass the strict emissions standards of the US Clean Air Act, sales for Honda skyrocketed when the public searched for cars that met the new standards. Since the passage of the Clean Air Act all cars have to conform to specific measures. Still, Honda ranks high among environmental friendly cars.
Today Honda’s name can be seen in almost every market. Honda’s presence in the marine world is strong, as is its existence in the lawn and home care equipment world. Still, no matter how diverse the company’s products are the name Honda will most strongly be associated with automobiles, and after all it was the automobile that made the name, Honda, to start with.

Another device we are all familiar with is the Blackberry. However, did you know that a recent study proved that 33 percent of people who used these wirless handheld devices showed the same signs of addiction of that of alcoholics and drug addicts! Well, that would explain why the device has been termed, “the crack berry!”
There are even terms for the feelings and emotions that Blackberry users experience:
“AaackBerry-ing”-when you’ve left the house without it.
“BraxBerry-ing”-the vibration you get when you don’t even have the blackberry on you.
“Whip-Lashberrying”-looking at your blackberry instead of the road
“Gasp-Berrying”-a message you have read precisely when you are somewhere else.
On most phones the 8 key is associated with the letters T, U and V. On the Blackberry it is the key for B and N.
The blackberry has become so popular that it now comes with its own term for injuries. We have all heard of terms like tennis and golfers elbow. Now the term for overusing the blackberry is, “blackberry thumb!”
One fun fact happened in 2007. The French government actually banned the use of Blackberry’s in ministries and in the presidential palace. They feared there would be snooping by foreign spies.
There are more than 7 million people around the world that use the Blackberry.
The Blackberry is actually made in Canada, by Research in Motion.
There is actually a class for people on how to use their blackberry and the right etiquette to use.
President Barack Obama is obsessed with his Blackberry and absolutely refuses to give it up! In fact, he even ordered a top secret blackberry equipped with Secure Voice software to catch eavesdroppers and spies.
These devices really are an all in one entertainment system when you are on the go and travelling.
In corporate email account users 3.65 million use Blackberry’s.
Did you know that the maker of the Blackberry won an Academy Award in 1998 for a digital film barcode reader? That is quite an accomplishment.
There is actually a book coming out all about the Blackberry and its history.
While many companies are downsizing Research in Motion is actually looking to fill over 1,000 new positions!
The blackberry is mostly used by corporate workers but is becoming more mainstream.
Whether you are addicted or not the blackberry is a device that is mesmerizing everyone. It is being called “Black Magic.”
Reference : http://hubpages.com/hub/Fun-Facts-about-the-Blackberry


