ÜYE OL,İZLE KAZAN....

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

LED Art Fan

Advertise your business, or just show off
If you're the type that likes to call attention to yourself, and happen to need to lower the apparent room temperature at the same time, we can think of no better way than with this LED fan. With 42 LEDs mounted on the blades, the LED Art Fan spins and flickers at a brazillian* RPM to create beautiful persistence of vision images. Of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so make sure you behold the video below.
Unbelievable bright images 5 megs of memory holds up to 128 individual frames. You can animate, spin, slide, flash and dissolve to your heart's delight. All the while, enjoying the cool breeze from a chromed-up art-deco desktop fan.
Show off your m4d 4rT 5k1Llz using the included software. Import animated GIF files, or draw your own frames. If you've got a logo you want to display, have at it!
The LED Art fan works with Windows 2000 and Windows XP, and requires a serial port. Make sure you read the manual. As highly programmable as this fan is, you don't want to miss a step and end up with something less than cool.
• Your actual RPM may vary. If you don't know how many a brazillian is… well, it's a lot.
Bu vantilatör sizi hem serinletiyor,hemde seçebileceğiniz resimler ile hoş bir görüntü sağlıyor.85 piksel çözünürlüğe sahip fanı bilgisayarınıza bağlayarak 5mb'lık hafızasına yaklaşık 128 resim yükleyebilirsiniz.

Monday, June 25, 2007

TRAIN



BULLET TRAIN
Bullet Train Guide includes history of the Japanese Bullet Train, Bullet Train Speeds, Bullet Train pictures, Bullet Train video and Bullet Train specifications.
Known in the West as the "Bullet Train", the
Shinkansen is a high speed inter city train in Japan.The ride on the bullet train (Shinkansen) is more like an airplane without some of the hassles. Cost wise the bullet train is fairly similar to flying within Japan, but with the advantage that your start and end right in the middle of the city



















Hundreds of rail passengers got more than they had bargained for when the driver of their train asked them to get out and push.
It took more than half an hour to move the stalled electric train 12 feet so that it touched live overhead wires and was able to resume its journey, officials said on Wednesday.
The incident occurred in Bihar on Tuesday after a passenger pulled the train’s emergency chain and it halted in a “neutral zone,” a short length of track where there is no power in the overhead wires.
“In so many years of service in the railways, I have never come across such a bizarre incident,” said Deepak Kumar Jha, a spokesman for Indian Railways.
A train’s momentum usually allows it to continue moving through neutral zones.India’s rail network carries more than 15 million people daily — more than the combined population of Norway and Sweden — but its safety record often comes in for criticism

tımken a century of leadership








The story of The Timken Company starts at a point where traditional success stories usually end, at the conclusion of a long and profitable career. This was when Henry Timken, a 19th century visionary and innovator in carriage manufacturing, patented the tapered roller bearing, in 1898. The following year, he formed a company to produce his innovation. Through a century, the company grew to make bearings of all types, specialty steel and an array of related products and services. That growth has included a number of acquisitions, the largest of which was The Torrington Company, in 2003. Today, The Timken Company is a global leader in friction management and power transmission.Timken has ranked among the 250 largest U.S. industrial corporations since the 1920s, and its story is linked with the major technological and institutional developments that have shaped our age. It would be hard to overstate the importance of anti-friction bearings and the processes used to make them in the advancement of work and living standards in the 20th century and beyond. And, the company has remained committed to shareholder value, paying dividends every quarter since becoming a public company in 1922.
Both the distinctiveness and the strength of the company's character have derived largely from the sustained role of its founding family, which has maintained a financial stake in the firm and has provided leadership over the generations. Since its founding by Henry Timken in 1899, the company has had five chairmen, all Timken family members. After becoming a public company in 1922, the company adopted a practice of engaging professional executives to lead the company. The result is a highly cohesive management culture based on a shared sense of purpose built around pride of product, led today by Chairman Tim Timken (Henry's great-great grandson) and President and CEO Jim Griffith. There is an identity embodied in the Timken name that has stood firm for more than 100 years and which has come to stand for many worthy things: ethical business practices, quality products, innovation and independence of thought