2 December 2009

Google’s Matt Cutts | How to Get Better Visibility on Google

Posted on December 2, 2009 at 8:37 pm in

USA TODAY’s Jefferson Graham interviews Google engineer Matt Cutts on how to get your site to the top of Google with 5 basic, common sense SEO tips. Matt Cutts guests on the USA TODAY Talking Tech web video show. New episodes air weekly at http://tech.usatoday.com

Duration : 0:4:57

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GTA 4 – 7 Player Online Police Car Racing

Posted on December 2, 2009 at 8:37 pm in

This is one of many races that can be done on GTA4, this one happens to be a police race with 7 players online over xbox 360 live and optioned with alot of traffic and lots of fog….. hope you like it….

Duration : 0:7:41

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Bodily Injury Coverage – Car Insurance – What Does it Mean?

Posted on December 2, 2009 at 8:37 pm in

Here’s how this works. If you cause an accident and somebody else gets hurt, you might have to pay their medical bills. Or, get this, reimburse them for their lost wages. And hey, paying someone else’s bills or salary could put a serious strain on your budget. Anyway, that’s why you have Bodily Injury Liability coverage. It helps protect your money.

Duration : 0:0:26

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Insurance Institute for Highway Safety: Luxury Car Bumpers

Posted on December 2, 2009 at 8:37 pm in

Bumpers, even those on expensive cars, don’t resist damage in low-speed impacts. The Infiniti G35, the worst performer, sustained almost $14,000 damage in a series of 4 tests conducted at 3 and 6 mph by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The Saab 9-3 was the best, sustaining $5,243 damage. Only 3 cars sustained less than $6,000 damage, while 4 would cost more than $10,000 to fix.

Why bumpers don’t bump: The purpose of a bumper is to absorb the energy of a low-speed collision before it damages expensive-to-repair parts like fenders and hoods. But there are multiple problems, the first of which is that the bumpers on colliding vehicles often don’t line up vertically so they don’t engage to begin with. Even some that do line up don’t stay engaged during an impact. Their aerodynamic styling may allow them to slide under the bumpers of the vehicles they strike. This means they can’t do the job of energy absorption.

Another problem is that the bars underneath bumper covers, which are supposed to do the main work of absorbing crash energy, often aren’t up to it. They may not be big enough to provide much protection from damage, especially if they don’t extend to vehicle corners, or they may be too flimsy to absorb much energy.

Something else driving high repair costs after minor bumps is the price of replacement parts to fix the damage. This is especially true of luxury cars, which are expensive not only to purchase but also to repair.

To assess and compare bumper performance in low-speed impacts, the Institute conducts a series of 4 low-speed tests — full front and rear into a barrier designed to mimic the front or back bumper on another vehicle plus front and rear corner impacts. The full-width impacts are conducted at 6 mph while the more demanding corner impacts are run at 3 mph.

Produced for Insurance Institute for Highway Safety

Duration : 0:2:45

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