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Exploring Restaurants Located Near Lake Tahoe Incline Village Homes

On August 29, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1346277662 75 Exploring Restaurants Located Near Lake Tahoe Incline Village Homes

Are You considering Purchasing One of The Available Incline Village Properties? You Will enjoy Many great Dining Opportunities when You Live in Lake Tahoe Incline Village Homes. Are you interested in purchasing one of the these homes for sale? If so, you are not alone. The fact is, Incline Village properties are among the most popular properties in the Lake Tahoe area. from its pristine beaches to its gorgeous mountains, the natural landscape surrounding the homes is one to be admired. in addition, there are numerous opportunities for adventure and excitement throughout the area.

Of course, if you enjoy fine dining, you will be pleased to learn that there are over a dozen great restaurants in the area for you to select from. when you purchase one of the available Lake Tahoe Incline Village homes for sale, you will enjoy easy access to all of the following delightful restaurants.

* Austin’s Family Restaurant – serves American home cooking
* Big Water Grille – specializes in local and regional cuisines
* Ciao Mein Trattoria at the Hyatt Regency – serves Pacific Rim Italian and traditional dishes
* Cutthroat’s Saloon at the Hyatt Regency – offers American cuisine
* Fredericks Bistro & Bar – offers a variety of European-inspired dishes
* Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe Resort, Spa and Casino – serves American cuisine and seafood
* Hyatt Regency Lone Eagle Grille – offers contemporary American cuisine
* Crosby’s – Sports Bar, excellent food, breakfast, lunch and dinner.
* La Fondue Restaurant & Bar – serves Swiss fondue including appetizers, entrees, and desserts
* Lakeside Beach Bar and Grill at the Hyatt Regency Incline Village – offers barbecue and frozen drinks
* Lone Eagle Grill at the Hyatt Regency Incline Village – serves American cuisine and seafood entrees
* Sierra Caf at the Hyatt Regency – offers snacks throughout the day
* Stillwater Pool Bar and Grille at the Hyatt Regency Incline Village – offers burgers, sandwiches, and salads
* Wildflower Cafe – serves American style breakfast and lunch

If you love a fresh cup of coffee to start your day or to give you a boost in the afternoon, you might visit one of these coffee houses located near many homes.

* Mountain Grinds Coffee at the Hyatt Regency – serves Starbuck’s coffee and offers a hot chocolate bar
* Starbuck’s – serves premium roasted coffee and baked goods
* Raley’s Market – serves all types of coffee.

Regardless of what you are in the mood for, you are certain to find a great restaurant near Lake Tahoe Incline Village homes to satisfy your needs. So, if you are looking for a great place to live that is located near a variety of great dining options, consider Incline Village properties

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Idaho Mountain Express: Halstead reaches nearly 78,000 acres – August 17, 2012

On August 18, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

Friday, August 17, 2012

newsbutn Idaho Mountain Express: Halstead reaches nearly 78,000 acres   August 17, 2012

Halstead reaches nearly 78,000 acres

Smoke causes headaches for river guides, airport

By KATHERINE WUTZExpress Staff Writer

the burn area of the 78,000-acre Halstead Fire is shown by the dark shading, while the closure area around the fire is shown by the light shading. Recreationists are not allowed to raft, camp or otherwise inhabit the closed area until further notice. however, the city of Stanley was not included in the closed area as of Thursday. Express map by Tony Barriatua

the Halstead Fire near Stanley exploded over the past few days, burning 20,000 more acres of land between Wednesday and Thursday morning, with no end in sight.

in addition to causing the evacuation of Sunbeam, a small village 13 miles east of Stanley, the fire has shut down some operations on the Upper Salmon River and caused diversions and cancellations at Friedman Memorial Airport in Hailey.

Doug Fenn, owner of White Otter Adventures river-rafting company and also all of the buildings at Sunbeam, said he shut down his rafting trips Tuesday and is now just trying to keep his buildings safe.

"I can look behind me and see the plume going up 40,000 to 50,000 feet," he said in a phone interview on Wednesday. "the fire is marching toward us at a pretty good rate."

As of Thursday morning, the area along state Highway 75 from Sunbeam to lower Stanley—not including lower Stanley or Stanley proper—had been issued a 48-hour evacuation notice.

all of the campgrounds in the area north of Highway 75 and Highway 21 to Banner Summit and the Twin Peaks Saddle are closed. Though the Main Salmon River and the Middle Fork remain open, many access points are closed.

Jackie Nefzger, general manager of Mackay Wilderness River Trips, said on Wednesday that though the company is still running its rafting trips, the fires have caused some complications.

One trip was delayed by more than 24 hours due to closures, she said, and a trip on the Main Salmon had to start 17 miles upstream from its normal starting point due to a closed access point.

when asked if she thought the fire would affect the remainder of her season, Nefzger said she wasn’t sure, but she is optimistic.

"You never know. if a fire starts on the river, things might change," she said. "I hope it doesn’t, because we’re packed until the end of the season."

for Fenn, though, his season is over. He said he’s made the decision to stop the rest of his tours, which were meant to last until Sept. 2. At nearly 70 customers a day during the summer, that’s a loss for Fenn of about 1,400 paying customers this year.

"It’s a little hard to swallow on the pocketbook," he said. "That’s a big chunk. It’s a tough call. Do you keep floating the river and do what you can, or do you close and get everyone out and the buildings tucked in?"

Fenn said that he and Forest Service crews have been wetting down the buildings and clearing brush and equipment away. the Sunbeam Village Grill—formerly Grumpy’s North—is still open, but Fenn said it’s only feeding fire crews.

"we have a lot of fire trucks and a lot of crews and they feel pretty good they can defend this property," he said.

Smoke from this fire has been choking the Wood River Valley for the last couple of days, settling into the valley and refusing to budge despite sometimes-brisk winds.

Rick Baird, manager of Friedman Memorial Airport, said Thursday that the smoke is causing "significant" problems for general aviation and commercial pilots.

"we had delays, diversions and cancellations," he said, adding that SkyWest and Horizon airlines both discontinued flights into Sun Valley after 2 p.m. Wednesday.

Baird said that visibility at the airport dropped to less than three-quarters of a mile—and the minimum visibility that would allow most aircraft to land in most approaches is roughly two miles.

"in my years here, I have never seen smoke visibility this low," he said. "There were some times during the Castle Rock Fire when visibility was a challenge, but I would say [visibility now] is as bad or worse."

According to a Salmon-Challis National Forest news release, the Halstead Fire has an "extreme" growth potential and is in extremely "difficult" terrain.

the release states that the fire has the chance to grow to the east and southeast along the Basin Creek drainage and near the West Fork of Yankee Creek, as well as to the northeast in the Loon Creek drainage.

the release also states that the fire will continue to be active on the western and northern borders.

however, fire crews—including 297 personnel, 26 engines and three helicopters—will work to hold the fire to the east of Marsh Creek, east of Highway 21 and north of Stanley, also laying in lines to protect Stanley proper.

Access via Stanley River Road changes on a daily basis, but as of press time Thursday afternoon, Highway 75, Highway 21 and Boundary Creek Road to the Middle Fork remained open.

for more current information, recreationists can call the fire information center at (877) 356-8984.

the American Red Cross has set up a shelter for evacuees at the Bellevue Community Church at 3098 Cedar St. in Bellevue.

the Trinity Ridge Fire near Featherville has grown as well, reaching 69,216 acres as of Thursday morning and destroying four structures and four outbuildings.

Gov. Butch Otter issued a state disaster declaration on Wednesday that allowed the Idaho Department of Lands to work with the Idaho National Guard to support the firefight in Elmore County and across the state.

According to the Idaho Bureau of Homeland Security, Elmore County officials have also requested help from FEMA to support threatened communities.

Lisa Machnik, public information officer for the Trinity Ridge Fire, said that the few residents of the historic community of Rocky Bar near Featherville cleared the area before the fire worked its way around the town, sparing most of the community.

Though most of the structures are historic and unoccupied, Machnik said the community does have a few residents who were evacuated.

"There are some cabins and home sites there," she said, adding that some residents were temporarily allowed back into their homes during the day on Thursday to pick up their belongings.

Though neither Pine nor Featherville is under a mandatory evacuation, Machnik said that many of the residents—especially in Featherville—are choosing to leave.

"People are packing up their papers and valuables and moving out of the area," she said.

the town of Atlanta has been evacuated as well, she said.

Neither the Trinity Ridge nor the Halstead Fire has an estimated time of containment.

for more information on closures, evacuations and the fires themselves, visit inciweb.org/state/13.

Kate Wutz: kwutz@mtexpress.com

   printer Idaho Mountain Express: Halstead reaches nearly 78,000 acres   August 17, 2012 print version   email Idaho Mountain Express: Halstead reaches nearly 78,000 acres   August 17, 2012 email

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Billet Grilles for Truck Part Accessories

On August 18, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1345334461 29 Billet Grilles for Truck Part Accessories

If you are looking for great truck part accessories, you should check out how much billet grilles can add to your vehicle. these truck part accessories are great for adding a little bit to the front of your vehicle and making it stand out a little bit more. whether you want billet grilles that add more chrome to the front of your truck or you need to get a new one because of an accident or rust. having great truck part accessories will make your truck pop that much more and stand out when you are driving down the road.

Options Available for Billet Grilles Truck Part Accessories

When it comes to billet grilles, there are a lot of available options that you can find online or in the store. Generally, you will find that there are different billet grilles for different trucks. so, if you drive a Ford F-150 you will need one grille and if you drive a Dodge Ram, you will need another. you want to make sure that your grilles fit your truck and match what you are looking for. Since there are so many options available, you may be searching to find the one that you like the best.

Installation of your Grilles

Once you order and decide on the billet grille that is going to work best for you, it has to be installed. there are different ways that you can install these. Some of these grilles will bolt on and are very easy to be installed. The other nice thing with these grilles is that for most of them you don’t have to remove the old grille, which can be a giant pain. instead, you’ll be able to install a lot of these billet grilles right over the front, which is super easy and takes a lot of time and prep work off of your hands. The easier the installation, the better that it is for you and the less chance that there is for error.

When it comes to finding great grilles for your car, you want to look at all the options that are out there. there are a lot of different kinds, so look closely. with some, you may be able to take the old one off and bolt them on; with others you actually may be able to attach them over the top of the old grille which makes it really easy. Check out what great grilles there are so that you have the best truck part accessories.

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Flamenco and feasting

On August 12, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1344839476 14 Flamenco and feasting

A cerveceria and tapas bar in the Plaza Mayor, Madrid. Photo: Alamy

Sarah Maguire gets close to the heart of Spain on a tapas tour of Madrid.

It turns out Spain maybe couldn’t afford its train fleet, the most modern in Europe, but as an AVE high-speed number hurtles us towards Madrid at 300km/h, a parched landscape flashing past and a dubbed American movie playing on communal screens, questions of economics are not on our minds.

Rather, it’s tapas – those delightful, delicious morsels for which Spain has been known far longer than of its economic crisis – and how much more of it we can possibly eat.

A chef at Restaurante Botin, Madrid. Photo: Alamy

We’ve just binged our way through Barcelona and now it’s Madrid’s turn to fill our bellies. in the meantime, train attendants have come by distributing trays of tuna focaccia, nuts, olives and alcohol in an all-inclusive, airline-style service. It’s a first-class experience but right now, schmick as it is, this train is no more than a delivery system for a bunch of tapas-bedazzled Australians moving from one food orgy to another. Bring on the swordfish adobo. We’re getting hungry again.

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Spain is many things beyond its signature style of cuisine, and there has and will be much sightseeing during our five-day visit, but it is on a tapas crawl of Madrid that the insight into this sprawling, suntanned country, the land of the hanging jamon, feels at its most authentic.

Spain may have a surfeit of the finest restaurants globally – in the latest World’s 50 Best Restaurants awards it took Nos.2, 3 and 8 in the top 10 – but on this tour we visit traditional tapas bars and restaurants that have been in the same family for generations, and in one case operated on the same spot for centuries. The euro hasn’t changed one jot how they do things, from the perspective of a customer at least.

“In the era of franchises, it’s so good to have these old-school places,” says Joanna Wivell, an Englishwoman who runs the Insider’s Madrid tour company and has lived in the city for 12 years. She meets us at our hotel, the Mercure Madrid Santo Domingo, in a cavernous, 16th-century cellar unearthed by the hotel about four years ago and now a bar that opens until the wee hours. as we’ve sat there, talking with the hotel’s sales manager, Ignacio Migens, the tapas have multiplied around us, the foie gras with chocolate and sweetbread being a new experience, but others, such as the delicate, overlapping slices of the ubiquitous jamon Iberico (dry-cured ham from the Black Iberian pig), being dishes with which we are by now well acquainted.

“Here in Spain, we like to talk a lot,” Ignacio says. “We take one bite, one drink, then talk for half an hour.

“Many years ago we lived with open doors. it was a case of, ‘Come into my house and eat as you want, for tomorrow I will come to yours’.”

He tells us that 20 metres from where we are seated, about where the hotel’s restaurant is today, Spanish inquisitors once tortured non-believers. It’s quite a fact to take in between mouthfuls of prawn and potato frittata, but easy to imagine given the dungeon-like scene of our latest tapas undoing.

We strike out into the Madrid evening, led by Joanna, whose passion for Madrid is contagious; so often overshadowed by the international street cred of its cool Catalan cousin Barcelona, the Spanish capital is responsible for stealing Joanna’s heart.

“I have always felt the sense of possibility in Madrid, the hidden surprises around every corner,” she says. “Madrid feels like the real Spain to me.”

Our first stop is the Villa Rosa restaurant, where beyond its leadlight and mosaic facade we drink sangria and watch a flamenco dancer move to the singing, stomping and clapping of a seated row of men, all in folk costume; the lighting is dim and the mood almost reverent; at one point the barman shushes us quiet.

However cranky he might be, he is no patch on the barmen at La Venencia, a sherry co-operative that is a celebration of dinginess: opened in 1925, its sombre wood-and-leather interiors, which match the mood of the barmen (they don’t even take tips), have not changed since, although the posters on the walls take an observer through the years of the annual Jerez festival, held 460 kilometres away in the Andalusian city of Jerez de la Frontera, the home of the fortified wine.

The sherry is served with tapas we haven’t met before: mojama, salt-cured tuna loins that have been dried in sun and wind for 20 days; and cecina, smoked and air-dried beef from the north-west province of Leon, served with finger-size crunchy bread rolls on top. The flavours are more challenging than we’re used to. The tuna is almost fizzy. as we sip sherry, none of us really enjoying its sharpness although the time-capsule surrounds are a hit, Joanna’s ballad to Spain continues: “My father is conservative, but he really opens up here. You see Spain changing people; it’s easy to get a personal experience here.

“I lived in London for four years and felt at home after two. in Spain, I felt at home within two months; it’s very inclusive, very open.”

We soak up some of this joie de vivre at La Trucha, an exuberant tapas bar that has been run by the same family since 1963.

This eating session is done standing. The menu, all cooked to order, is painted on the bevelled glass between bar and kitchen, in which we can see the women cooks at work. The all-male wait-staff take orders from one customer after another without writing them down (“Spanish waiters are very good with their memories,” Joanna says). We eat steaming hot potato tortilla and bite-size squares of toast topped with caviar, smoked trout and cod’s liver, and no tapas stop is complete without a plate of jamon Iberico. We eat so much of this flavour-packed staple on our Spanish sojourn that it brings new meaning to pigging out. We start to laugh every time it appears in front of us.

That was the same decade in which Ava Gardner danced barefoot on the tables at the wrap party for The Barefoot Contessa. Frank Sinatra, Joanna tells us as a waiter in bow tie and jacket walks past bearing a plate of glistening pig trotters, wanted to buy Botin; The Hoff was there just a couple of weeks before our visit.

The next evening, we leave Madrid as we arrived, on a train, although this time we are headed for Paris and it is a hotel on wheels, an Elipsos Trenhotel. We will sleep on bunk beds, shower in en suites, and breakfast on chocolate croissants and omelet as the French countryside zooms by.

Our final meal in Spain takes place in the same a la carte dining car: I can’t go past a last jamon hoorah, ordering a selection of Iberian cured meats for entree.

Times in Spain have worsened since our visit, but life goes on despite demonstrations against economic crisis cuts, Joanna said from Madrid last week.

“The economy has affected many Spaniards, either their pocket or their outlook, and cutbacks have to be made,” she said.

“Despite these adjustments, the pleasure of enjoying a good wine and some tapas is still as important as it was; it’s almost part of the nation’s DNA. The need to meet, to be with friends … is not going to disappear.”

The writer travelled courtesy of Qantas, Rail Europe and Accor Hotels.

The hot Tickets for a culinary adventure

If you didn’t already know Tickets was a restaurant venture by Ferran Adria of El Bulli fame, the neat lime-green blobs on spoons would give it away.

What once was an olive is now more olive than an olive could hope to be, its juice having been extracted and reformed in the molecular gastronomy alchemy known as spherification.

Pop that blob into your mouth and the olive-flavoured explosion might knock you off your seat, if you didn’t feel committed to staying put for another 15 tapas courses.

Tickets La vida tapa, a venture by Ferran and his brother Adrian in partnership with a trio of other well-known restaurateurs, the Iglesias brothers, sits on a corner of a wide and busy road in the former theatre district of Barcelona, Paralelo. You need to book two months in advance for a seat but if you’re heading to Barcelona, you would be mad not to do the pre-planning; this is a dining experience you will not forget.

Entry, where you’ll be greeted by staff in ushers’ uniforms, is via a red carpet past theatre-style posters that promote dishes and drinks on the menu (“Tickets presents La Air Baguette de Jamon Joselito”), while the credits name the men behind the restaurant.

The theatre theme continues inside with such whimsies as a mobile cart with a green-striped canopy from which waiters serve ice-cream in delicate cones. there is the same sense of fun wherever you look: in love-heart-shaped chair backs, resin-topped tables in different colours, aircraft mobiles made from cola cans.

The restaurant is divided into individually themed cooking, eating and drinking stations: La Dolca is where the desserts are made (the lemon peel cream with toasted sesame and elderflower essence is so light it disappears before you can swallow); El Garatge (the garage), framed by hanging tomatoes, is where bocata (sandwiches) and meats (indeed, “all the products which are locked in everlasting love with grills”) are prepared.

Diners of all ages, casually dressed as is the Barcelona way, sit at tables small or large, or along bars where chefs work in front of them.

In the fresh, laid-back, noisy space, served snappily by young, handsome waiters, we eat 16 courses of divine tapas. Some, such as cheese air bags and fried fish which no longer resemble fish, have been tricked up; others are more traditional, but put them together and it is a once-in-a-lifetime flavour adventure.

Over the four-hour lunch, Lucy Garcia, Ferran Adria’s personal translator, has told us that formal dining is on the wane in Spain. “The trend is to offer more informal food that is really good quality and at affordable prices.”

Tickets has it nailed. when we get the bill, we nearly fall off our seats all over again. it has cost, with beer, wine and liqueur, just over €60 ($70) each.

Tickets La vida tapa, 164 Avinguda Parallel, Barcelona. Bookings can be made online only, ticketsbar.es.

Trip notes

Getting there

Qantas flies from Sydney to London or Frankfurt with connections to Madrid. qantas.com.

Getting around

A five-day Eurail Spain pass starts at $350 for first class, $281 for second class. Holders of any Eurail pass only need pay for a seat reservation to travel on the Elipsos Trenhotel, saving on a night’s accommodation. Otherwise a point-to-point Elipsos ticket can be bought with prices starting from $257 a person in Gran class or $235 a person in Club class, based on two people sharing. raileurope.com.au, elipsos.com.

Staying there

In Madrid, the Mercure Madrid Santo Domingo has individually themed rooms featuring murals by local artists. Rooms from $149. 1 San Bernardo, +34 91 547 0803, accorhotels.com.

In Barcelona, the five-star Pullman Barcelona Skipper is 50 metres from the beach and close to Olympic Port. Rooms from $229. 10 Av del Litoal, +34 93 221 6565, pullmanhotels.com.

Touring there

Insider’s Madrid conducts a variety of tours, including tapas, The Botin Experience and walking tours. +34 91 447 3866, insidersmadrid.com.

Eating there

Restaurante Botin, 17 Calle de Cuchilleros, Madrid, +34 91 366 4217, botin.es.La Trucha, 3 Manuel Fernandez y Gonzalez, Madrid, +34 91 429 5833.Villa Rosa, 15 Plaza de Santa Ana, Madrid, +34 91 521 3689, villa-rosa.es.La Venencia, 7 Calle de Echegaray, Madrid, +34 91 429 7313

More information

visitspain.info

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3 Stores Selling Collapsible Camping Grill That Uses Wood

On July 8, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1341766862 49 3 Stores Selling Collapsible Camping Grill That Uses Wood

There are quite a number of stores selling collapsible camping grills that use wood such as: Preparedness, Safety Central, and eBay.

Camping grill is essential equipment when having outdoor trip. since there are numerous models with diverse functionality, you need to pick the right unit that has the most benefits such as economical, versatile, and practical. The following are some of my suggested stores where you can find quality camping grills that use wood:

Preparedness

An online portal designed to meet various needs such as emergencies and other unanticipated situations. With their numerous products available, everything you need from survival, to first aid kits, to camping equipment, and to cooking gadgets like camp grill are just within reach. here are some of their on hand camp grill units with their corresponding product descriptions:

Large camp grill – Chromed-plated steel with fold up design that is 24 x 12 x 9 1/2 inches in size is a type of grill that provides large space for cooking.

Stansport heavy duty portable folding grill – With collapsible frames, this allows convenience during transport. its mesh layout speeds up cleaning process; thereby, making it more advantageous.

12 x 16 camp grill with folding legs – This heavy duty cooking device offers a lifetime guarantee, which is ideal for repetitive exposure on direct heat.

Adjust-A-grill – A fully-adjustable grill with stand is suitable for cooking various types of food. It has a sliding mechanism for easier adjustment and maneuverability. The complete temperature control is an added feature that allows even cooking.

Safety Central

Perfect campfire grill explorer – This is a simple, yet very functional tool with its knockdown and swinging feature that make cooking fast and easy. When folded, its size is 18 x 12 x 1.5 inches at 6 pounds in weight that can be stored and carried with ease.

Stansport folding pack grill – The height of the grill allows enough space for the wood to be positioned. The unit is made of lightweight materials that are portable and handy.

Grilliput portable stainless steel grill – This camping grill is made of steel that makes it durable. It has a quick assembly design that needs no tool at all.

The Rebel campfire grill – Campers have the option to use either a charcoal or wood with this new grill piece. With its 10 x 12 rack and pan, it allows full usage of the entire area.

Portable fire pit camp cook grill – It comes in round shape that weighs 1.5 pounds with a cooking surface of 13 inches. so affordable at $11.90 only, this is ideal even in unplanned outdoor activities.

eBay

Camping metal folding camp grill Ozark trail – This item can be bought at $14.99 that measure 24 x 12 x 8 in dimension. It is so versatile and heavy duty.

Campfire cooker BBQ grill – A bit pricey compared to other camp grills, this campfire cooker has the following descriptions: weighs 6 pounds and 10 ounces, 18 x 18 nickel plated rotating grill, and comes with a 2-in-1 coated vinyl bag. The adjustable feature permits freedom of movement and ease in operation.

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County skeptical of NACA’s return to Cleveland for foreclosure event: Plain Dealing

On June 28, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

11238968 large County skeptical of NACAs return to Cleveland for foreclosure event: Plain DealingAssociated Press

On Thursday, the Neighborhood assistance Corp. of America will swoop back into town for its big American Dream event, which offers assistance to homeowners trying to fend off foreclosure.

Local housing counseling agencies, who offer the same free services, are up in arms about the event, and County Executive Ed FitzGerald is urging homeowners to turn to local groups for foreclosure help instead.

The animosity between NACA and the local housing groups started in 2009, when the Boston-based NACA came to Cleveland State University’s Wolstein Center to put on a loan modification event billed as a way for homeowners to sit down with their banks and strike a deal. Thousands of people came, more than NACA counselors could handle, and many were turned way without having seen a counselor, let alone a banker.

Some homeowners who filled out paperwork at the event complained they couldn’t reach the counselors afterward to complete their loan modifications.

Local agencies were left to sherpa struggling homeowners through the process, but because NACA had already been paid through federal funds for the work of starting the loan mods, the local agencies often wound up shouldering the bulk of the work without pay.

Darren Duarte, spokesman for the Boston-based NACA, said he understands why local housing groups like Empowering and Strengthening Ohio’s People, Neighborhood Housing Services of Greater Cleveland, Community Housing Solutions and Cleveland Housing Network are irked at NACA’s return.

He blamed the problems last time around on inexperience. “We’ve held 79 events since then,” he said. “We’ve come a long way.”

Duarte said NACA ramped up staffing and changed the way it pitches the events. “We don’t promise them they’ll get a deal. We’re promising them they’ll get a chance to sit down face to face with the lenders,” he said.

The fliers, though, advertise a “same day solution.”

Says FitzGerald, “We have great concerns about the quality of services they have provided in the past . . . I think it’s a bad bet for local homeowners.”

NACA’s event runs from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday through Monday at the Cleveland Public Auditorium. Consumers should carefully read over documents before they sign.

Homeowners can get free help with loan mods, including those provided through the recent multistate servicing settlement, through local housing counseling agencies. Call 2-1-1 for an appointment. Added plus: no standing in line.

FTC sues Wyndham hotel chain

 The Federal Trade Commission smacked the owner of Wyndham Hotels with a lawsuit for repeatedly failing to protect the consumers’ credit card information against hackers — laxity the agency said resulted in hundreds of thousands of credit card numbers going on holiday in Russia.

The suit said that in 2008 hackers broke into the system at a Wyndham-branded hotel in Phoenix and got access to the Wyndham’s corporate network. Because Wyndham Worldwide Corp. failed to deal with the breach, the suit contended, hackers were able to glean data from the hotel chain’s computers twice more. The FTC said the breach of credit card information led to more than $10 million in fraudulent charges.

The suit describes a jaw-dropping lack of basic computer security, including relying on a system for years after the vendor had stopped providing security patches. The FTC said Wyndham failed to grasp the significance of reports that hundreds of employees, sometimes in a single day, had been locked out of the system — a classic indicator that hackers are guessing passwords.

Wyndham said in a statement that it had beefed up its computer security and was disappointed the FTC decided to sue it for violating its privacy promises to consumers.

The FTC provides data security tips for businesses here.

 

Commerce wins skirmish with professional finder

Unclaimed Money LLC decided to cease and desist.

Last week, the Ohio Department of Commerce warned the California money-finding company that its fees were higher than those allowed by Ohio law. The company told the state it would abide by state law, which requires finders to register with the state and caps fees at 10 percent of the money found.

People can search the state’s unclaimed funds site themselves for free at unclaimedfundstreasurehunt.ohio.gov.

Scam of the week

Many readers are reporting receiving calls from people purporting to be computer techs from “AT&T,” “Windows Plus” and other companies. The callers indicate they’ve found a problem with the user’s computer and start giving instructions for manipulating computer settings and codes. These usually are attempts to dupe people into installing malicious software. If you get a call, hang up.

Follow Sheryl on Twitter: @consumerwriter

On Facebook: PDConsumerAffairs



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Puritalia 427: A new sports car inspired by the Shelby Cobra

On June 26, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1340766064 96 Puritalia 427: A new sports car inspired by the Shelby Cobra

Can this upstart Italian company live up to Carroll Shelby’s legacy? Or will the Puritalia 427 be automotive sacrilege?

In the car world, few people are as legendary as the late Carroll Shelby, and few cars are as iconic as the original Shelby Cobra. the Cobra’s combination of a lightweight British body and a powerful American V8 made were hard to beat, and Shelby’s 50-year career building performance cars made him a household name. now, a new Italian company called Puritalia is launching a Cobra tribute, the 427. Will it live up to the legend?

The Naples-based company will unveil its new sports car on July 1, but it released this teaser image on its website. the 427 definitely looks like it was inspired by the Cobra. its round headlights and ovoid grille make the connection, although the ostentatiously sculpted side vents are more of a modern touch. the original Cobra, based on the AC Ace, was beautiful in part because of its simplicity; hopefully Puritalia won’t clutter that original shape with too much jewelry.

Under the hood, Puritalia is sticking with the original Cobra formula. the car will have a V8 which, if the name is any indication, will displace 427 cubic inches. the base model will have 440 horsepower, and an optional supercharger will boost that number to 600.

The Puritalia 427 will also have a low curb weight. the frame is made of aluminum, and the body is made from unspecified lightweight materials. Puritalia wants the car to weigh less than 2,205 pounds which, combined with the powerful V8, should make the 427 ferociously fast. After all, the same combination is what made the original Cobra so great.

The first Cobra debuted in 1962, as Carroll Shelby’s answer to the Corvette. Powered by Ford V8s displacing 260, 289, and 427 cubic inches, the Cobras were more than Corvette rivals. They didn’t just beat Chevy’s sports car on the track, they also beat Ferrari and other European marques. Today, original Cobras are some of the most collectible cars in the world, with some examples selling for millions of dollars at auctions.

Living up to all that is a tall order. the Puritalia 427 might turn out to be a good car, but it might not compare well with a legend that just celebrated its 50th anniversary this year. That’s the problem with modern interpretations of classic cars: sometimes, people want the genuine article.

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Fusion-io stuffs workstation storage into bulging hand luggage • The Register

On June 2, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1338636663 71 Fusion io stuffs workstation storage into bulging hand luggage • The Register

HPC blog Fusion-io nabbed prime real estate on the GTC 2012 exhibit floor – right inside the entryway. they took advantage of it by offering a hosted oxygen bar, complete with an oxygen bartender and a wide selection of coloured/flavoured airs. I got the lowdown on their offerings (it’s hospital grade oxygen – something I insist upon) before talking to Vince Brisebois, industry manager for Fusion’s high performance group and product manager for its new ioFX workstation SSD.

Oops… they don’t like to use the ‘D’ part of ‘SSD’. As Brisebois says in the video below, it’s not really a drive; ioFX is direct (PCI-e) attached, non-volatile memory designed to drive apps to maximum performance.

Since there are no controllers or control protocols to go through, latency is extremely low even when compared to speedy SSDs. according to Brisebois, typical SSD latency is around 1 millisecond, while ioFX latency is 0.04 milliseconds – much closer to RAM speeds.

At 420GB, it’s big enough to handle large jobs, and read bandwidth of 1.5GB/sec means that it can keep up with high performance apps like video transcoding much better than other workstation storage solutions.

What really caught my eye (aside from the coloured, bubbling vials and people sucking on tubes) was the demo system used to drive the display. It’s a complete – and highly powerful – PC built into a small, extremely rugged suitcase.

Brisebois built it because he was constantly having his systems smashed up by the airlines. he needed something that would hold the entire computer, yet fit into an overhead bin and be easy to transport. me? I might have taken a normal computer case and glued a telescoping suitcase handle on it, but as you can see, Vince’s solution is much more elegant and refined.

He didn’t make any compromises on the performance front. It’s outfitted with an Asus Rampage 4 gamer motherboard, a liquid-cooled CPU, and two ioFX memory cards configured as RAID 0 and capable of providing 3.0GB/sec read speeds. it also sports a Quadro 6000 GPU, with room for another one if necessary. a mini keyboard (signed by Woz, who is Fusion-io’s chief scientist) and compact 1,000 watt power supply complete the system.

It’s fast, quiet, and completely self-contained. they showed off its gaudy speed by streaming 12 simultaneous uncompressed 1080p video streams onto a monitor above their booth, which required 2.8GB/sec read speed.

Take a look at the video to hear more about high-end oxygen, high-end performance, and one of the best functional PC mod jobs I’ve ever seen.

I politely declined the bartender’s offer to fill a bag of air for me to use on my trip back home. but I wanted to fill my entire car with it, and thus receive the amazing medicinal benefits that can only come from flavoured oxygen. if I could have somehow consumed oxygen throughout the entire 680-mile drive, I’d probably have cured every one of my physical ailments – and most of the mental ones too – and arrived home three inches taller as well. ®

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Developers detail Hynix plan

On May 31, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1338480083 69 Developers detail Hynix plan

The developers that want to buy the vacant Hynix site in west Eugene envision transforming it into a tech hub on the hill — a $100 million investment with up to 600 employees.

They want to bring the huge computer-chip plant back to life as a pulsating data center, filled with computers, servers and networking equipment for customers all over the country.

They want to fill the six-story office building north of the plant with businesses that use or support the data center, and accommodate additional users, as needed, by further developing the 200-acre site.

“My intent is to create a tech think tank with some R&D space; we’re going to need data center space to support it,” said Simon Tusha, one of the development partners in the potential Hynix project. a data center expert, Tusha said he has been involved with more than 1,000 data center projects, including as a former strategic negotiator for Google.

Tusha, along with developer Mike McKernan, sole member of Seattle-based Real Property Investors, and other unnamed development partners, have a contract to buy the Hynix facility for an undisclosed price.

“Our intent is to close on the property,” Tusha said Friday. “We’re just going through and making sure there aren’t any unforeseen circumstances. It’s a big site. there are a lot of different systems that need to be evaluated.”

As part of their due diligence, Tusha said the developers are trying to gauge whether local governments will be supportive when it comes to key issues, such as building permits, utility rates and access to fiber optic cable.

“I’m not going to move us into a community where we have to fight with the local government,” he said. “To date it seems like the city of Eugene and Lane County would be very supportive, but if they’re not, we won’t close.”

The developers hope to start up the data center on Nov. 1, Tusha said. The data center probably would employ several hundred people, and the site’s total employment could grow to 500 or 600 people if tenants are found for the existing office building, he said.

For the data center jobs, “my preference is to do local hiring,” Tusha said. “We’re very focused on training and skill development, so I’d say we could source 70-85 percent locally.”

Former semiconductor plants have been repurposed successfully as data centers, said Sherry Garber, a founding partner of Convergent Semiconductors, a market research firm based in Monarch Beach, Calif.

Soon after Hynix closed the plant in late 2008, laying off about 1,000 workers, Garber predicted that a potential future use for the plant might be a data center.

“Texas was the first place that I saw it happen,” she said. “They like it because of the air conditioning that’s in them and the false floor. They can run all kinds of cables under those floors, so it’s a relatively fast and inexpensive conversion, actually.”

She also said with the growth in cloud computing, there’s continued demand for data centers.

Her firm estimates the number of smart phones in use will jump from 472 million last year to 680 million this year, and tablets will increase from 70 million last year to 147 million this year.

Every 600 smart phones requires one server, and every 122 tablets requires one server, Garber said, quoting Intel statistics.

With the explosion of online media, photos, medical records, archival storage, among other things, the demand for data centers is strong and growing, Tusha said.

“I think if every data center project that’s on the books is developed today and comes online, we’re still about 60 percent of what we need for capacity,” he said.

Tusha said the developers estimate they’ll spend $100 million to buy the Hynix property and renovate the buildings.

Hynix spent $1.4 billion to build and equip the Eugene plant, which opened in 1998. The cost of the factory shell was a small slice of the total cost — about $250 million to $300 million.

Eugene may have found sincere admirers in this development group, who truly appreciate the area’s cool, overcast weather.

Computer equipment in data centers generate a lot of heat, and in many parts of the country cooling is required every day of the year, Tusha said. But he estimates that in Eugene supplemental cooling would be needed only 24 days of the year, saving both electricity and money.

Eugene doesn’t have the least expensive power in the country, but it has an advantage over other parts of the country because it’s hydroelectric power vs. “brown” power generated by coal or gas, and a data center here could be very energy efficient, Tusha said.

“Our position is that the total costs of (data center) operation in Eugene are 50 percent of what it would cost in other metro areas,” he said.

If the sale goes through and the developers move ahead with their plans, Tusha would become a Eugene evangelist.

“We are making the argument that people should abandon other parts of the country or world,” he said. “We want to bring in large enterprises that have data centers that may be located in inefficient or legacy data centers, and make the argument that their processes would be much better served potentially in Eugene.”

He said the developers will reach out to giant financial services companies in New York, to dot-coms in the San Francisco Bay area, as well as local organizations, such as the University of Oregon.

“We’re really going to be focused on being a tech magnet, attracting other businesses and trying to espouse the merits of locating in Lane County, in Eugene and the greater state of Oregon,” Tusha said. “In order to do that we’re going to need a lot of help from the city, county and state.”

He said incentives for companies setting up data centers here are “pretty important” in order to be competitive with other sites.

Hynix is located in an enterprise zone, which grants companies in the zone three- to five-year property tax waivers on investments of $50,000 or more.

Tusha said the developers want to obtain state “ecommerce designation” as well, which would lower that investment minimum to $1,000.

“Small and medium businesses that might relocate their equipment might not be able to spend $50,000,” he said. “If we don’t get that (designation), areas like Hillsboro that already have it have a superior tax position to us.”

Local economic development official Jack Roberts said he has talked to the developers about ecommerce designation, which he describes as “an overlay to the enterprise zone.”

State law limits the number of ecommerce designations that can be made throughout the state, “and it’s not clear that there will actually be one available for them at this time; there could be one in the future,” said Roberts, who is executive director of Lane Metro Partnership.

“We’ve told them and they’ve understood that’s not something we can offer them at this time,” he said.

“Our sense is the enterprise zone will probably give them what they need,” Roberts said. “We believe small and medium users would meet the $50,000 (investment) minimum,” when the various computers and servers are viewed as an integrated system.

The site has adequate power capacity to support the data center, Tusha said. But additional fiber will have to be laid to connect to some exchanges in the Eugene-Springfield area — an expense to be borne by the developers, he said.

The Eugene Water and Electric Board has received several inquiries about server farms in general in the past few years, spokesman Lance Robertson said.

“We indicated we would be able to serve them,” he said. “We have the obligation to serve every customer who pays their bill.”

Power can come from EWEB’s resources, or from the Bonneville Power Administration or other sources in the broader marketplace, Robertson said.

When Hynix was operating, it got some power from EWEB at a paid contract rate, as well as “a fair amount” at a market rate that EWEB procured out in the marketplace, he said.

The region has an abundance of electricity right now, and Robertson said he doesn’t foresee any problem for at least three to five years, and perhaps longer. “They keep adding electricity sources,” he said.

Generally server farms can use up to half a million gallons of water a day for cooling — about half of what Hynix was using, Robertson said.

Other than confirming that he was working with McKernan, Tusha declined to identify the other potential development partners in the Hynix project. He said the other partners would be identified later.

“The other equity partners, including myself, would have liked to remain anonymous,” Tusha said. “Once these things are leaked we have a lot of people calling trying to sell equipment and that sort of thing and that is not of benefit to the project.”

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Town fined for contributions to PC Party

On May 30, 2012, in fan Grills Guards, by admin

1338436867 54 Town fined for contributions to PC PartyOkotoks: Elections Alberta levies $1,133 penalty

The Town of Okotoks has been fined for contributions indirectly made to the Progressive Conservative Party in recent years after Elections Alberta found the municipality