Category Archives: Uncategorized

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Drake makes surprise stop at Miami store to buy groceries for customers

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Rapper and singer Drake is dropping a ton of money while in Miami, but he’s not spending it on material things. The 31-year-old Toronto native made a surprise visit to a Miami supermarket Tuesday.

The group of shoppers inside knew the star was there, but did not know what was coming next. Customers at Sabor Tropical say Drake got on a megaphone and announced that he was paying for everyone’s groceries.

He reportedly spent $50,000 and also stopped to take photos with shoppers and the owner of the store.

“A real king when [sic] out and paid for everyone’s groceries in the store, all the while encouraging people to buy more,” shopper Guille Deza captioned a photo he took with Drake which was posted on Instagram.

Deza said people in the store were under the impression that Drake was filming the good deed for an upcoming music video for his song “God’s Plan,” E! News reports.

Another excited customer took to social media to document the encounter:

This was not the only kind act the rapper did while in Miami this week. On Monday, he surprised a student at the University of Miami with a $50,000 scholarship to the school.

He delivered the good news by arriving on campus with a giant check paid to the order of University of Miami Scholarship. He also took photos with the excited scholarship recipient, Destiny James.
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Drake visits the University of Miami to grant student Destiney James a $50,000 scholarship.
University of Miami

The university marked the occasion by posting a tweet Wednesday thanking Drake’s generosity and wishing James a bright future:

Drake’s philanthropy did not stop there. He also visited Miami Senior High School and brought with him a $25,000 donation. Drake’s apparel company, OVO (October’s Very Own), designed new uniforms for the school.
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Drake donates $25,000 to Miami Senior High School. He also gifted the school with brand new uniforms created by his apparel company OVO.
Alberto M. Carvalho, Miami Superintendent

Photos of Drake’s visit to the high school show fans swarming him, trying to touch him and take photos. Photos of the event also show a camera crew was present.

source:https://www.cbsnews.com/news/drake-miami-store-surprise-groceries-music-video-gods-plan/


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State of the Union fact check: Trump claim on automotive plants coming back was partially true

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resident Trump on Tuesday hailed automotive companies for their U.S. expansion plans, effectively taking credit for new vehicle production.

“Many car companies are now building and expanding plants in the United States — something we haven’t seen for decades,” Trump said.

That’s true and false.

Yes, several automakers have announced plans to move automotive manufacturing to the U.S. since Trump took office. Most significantly, Toyota and Mazda announced plans to build a $1.6 billion plant in Huntsville, Ala.

Some fear the potential effects of a reconfigured North American Free Trade Agreement that punishes vehicle importing.

“The president has scared car companies into assembling more vehicles in the U.S.,” University of Michigan business professor Erik Gordon said in an email.

The Toyota-Mazda joint venture in Alabama is the only brand new standalone plant announced by a major automaker since Trump’s inauguration.

And it’s not the first in decades. Several automakers have built new plants in the U.S. in recent decades, including General Motors, Toyota, Honda, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai and Volkswagen.

Trump also said Chrysler is moving a major plant from Mexico to Michigan.

Not quite. Fiat Chrysler this month announced plans to shift production of heavy-duty trucks from Mexico to a plant in Warren, Mich. The company will overhaul an existing facility but won’t build a new one.

Trump also claimed that “Toyota and Mazda are opening up a plant in Alabama, a big one, and we haven’t seen this in a long time. It’s all coming back. Very soon, auto plants and other plants will be opening up all over the country.”

The Toyota-Mazda plans, as noted above, are real. The companies plan to add 4,000 jobs within about three years.

Other new plants are in the making, but all of them were announced before Trump took office.

Also, automakers are expected to continue adding vehicle production in Mexico, according to the Center for Automotive Research.

“In Detroit I halted government mandates that crippled America’s great, beautiful auto workers so that we can get Motor City revving its engines again, and that’s what’s happening,” Trump said.

Trump in 2017 ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to renew a review process on whether stringent fuel economy regulations implemented by President Obama are appropriate.

He did not halt them, though Trump’s speech could be viewed as an indicator that the corporate average fuel economy standards will indeed be rolled back.

Whether the review of the regulations is a good thing for the industry is harder to say. In the short term, it might mean automakers reap more profits off of highly profitable pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles.

On the other hand, auto companies can’t afford to be caught flat-footed by the coming onslaught of electric vehicles and increased regulations in foreign markets.+

source: https://www.usatoday.com/videos/news/politics/2018/01/31/fact-checking-trumps-state-union-speech/109974964/


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Here’s how Porsche will adapt to the coming age of electric cars

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If the transition from air-cooled cars to water-cooled cars was enough to cause controversy among Porsche enthusiasts, the rapidly approaching era of electric cars could bring nothing less than a schism. Indeed, it’s difficult to imagine replicating the traditional Porsche experience of a manual gearbox, a clutch pedal and a tachometer in the age of one-speed transmissions and instant torque delivery, but Porsche plans to navigate this brave new world without losing sight of what made its cars legendary in the first place.

The automaker recently announced its strategy for the coming age of electric cars at the Porsche museum in Stuttgart amid celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the 356, viewed by enthusiasts as the true starting point of the Porsche legend.

“There will be a triad: plug-in hybrids, emotional sports cars with combustion engines, and sporty electric vehicles,” Porsche CEO Oliver Blume told Bloomberg. “There will always be demand for intelligent sporty mobility. At Porsche, the driving experience will always be at the forefront, but in a traffic jam or when you park a car, the driver might want to hand over control of the vehicle.”

When it comes to electric cars, Porsche will add the pure-electric Mission E to its lineup in 2019, seeking to carve out a new category for buyers, while adding electrification to the powertrain of the next-generation 911. The hybrid part of the triad is already in place in the form of the E-Hybrid versions of the Cayenne and the Panamera.

Powertrains aside, Porsche is also rapidly evolving into a much bigger automaker than it has been for most of its life. Sales in 2017 reached a record 246,000 units, with the Macan helping drive a sizable chunk of that volume. Needless to say, 246,000 is a far cry from the automaker’s output just 20 years ago, when the Porsche lineup was composed solely of coupes and cabriolets, and handmade assembly was still a major selling point.
Still, Porsche plans to “stabilize” deliveries, Bloomberg notes, to preserve the marque’s exclusivity rather than rapidly seeking even higher production volumes. The automaker apparently knows which models should be aimed at volume and which models should be aimed at the core of enthusiasts who have been with the marque for years.

“Tradition is a commitment. Without our tradition and without our core values, we would not be where we are today,” Blume said. “We plan to uphold the standard of technical excellence set by Ferry Porsche well into the future. Intelligent dynamic mobility has a great future ahead of it. And we have the solid technological expertise, creative employees and unique team spirit to be involved. We have what it takes to ensure that the Porsche brand continues to fascinate -– even in another 70 years.”

source: http://autoweek.com/article/green-cars/heres-how-porsche-will-adapt-coming-age-electric-cars#ixzz55xnHrffK


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Miami Design District Concours

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Join us for the inaugural Miami Design District Concours, a free day-long exhibition of 125+ exotic and collectible automobiles that will be judged by a panel of the country’s premier experts and historians.

Paired with world class watch brands making their American debut at “Watches & Wonders,” the Miami Design District Concours will host the world’s rarest Post War sports, exotic and racing automobiles featuring icons such as the 1967 Ferrari 275 GTB, 1988 Lamborghini Countach, 1956 Mercedes 300SL Gullwing and many more carefully selected from prominent collections from around the country.

The Miami Design District Concours is part of the “Watches & Wonders” hosted by Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie (FHH) and the Miami Design District). The “Watches & Wonders” event, running from February 16-19, will be a first of its kind in Miami, bringing together nearly two dozen of the world’s leading time piece manufactures.

source:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/miami-design-district-concours-tickets-42477980784


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Concerned About Self-Driving Cars? You’re Not Alone

Using the adaptive cruise control on his Toyota Avalon left Rich Heidebrink feeling uneasy.

“I was always nervous about getting popped from behind,” the Northwood, Ohio, man explained about the driver assistance technology that allows one vehicle to maintain a set distance behind another with the aid of sensors.

Heidebrink, 63, said he would shut the cruise function off in traffic because he was concerned that another driver would cut in front of him and his car would brake too suddenly for someone following him. It’s an experience Heidebrink mentioned as he explained his impressions about self-driving, or autonomous, vehicles.

Heidebrink, whose pride is a 1954 Chevy convertible, and his friend, Keith Fraker, 65, of Toledo, Ohio, were at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit this week and had just looked over a Cadillac CT6, which offers General Motors’ semi-autonomous Super Cruise feature.

“It might be old school, but I enjoy driving,” Fraker noted.

Self-driving cars, it turns out, are neither man’s speed. It was the kind of response the Free Press received from numerous people at the Detroit auto show. It’s a wariness informed by reports such as the fatal 2016 crash in Florida of a Tesla Model S in Autopilot mode — several people mentioned that incident — and of users’ personal experiences with technology and their continued affection for being in control of their ride.

RELATED: Autonomous technology not impacting trucking jobs in short term, Gov. Rick Snyder says

“At home, how many times does your computer crash?” asked Joe Wisniewski, 69, of Fenton. Wisniewski said he is “not interested at all” in driverless cars, and he dismissed the possibility that the vehicles would be in wide use any time soon.

Wisniewski’s wife, Paula, might be more willing than her husband to give one a try, but not right away. She’d prefer to let automakers get the bugs out first. However, she suggested that driverless cars would probably be safer than drunken drivers.

As automakers push aggressive time frames for introducing driverless vehicles, the outreach needed to convince the public that the technology represents a positive development appears still to be wanting.

RELATED: Self-driving car crash highlights tricky legal question

Numerous surveys, such as the J.D. Power 2017 U.S. Tech Choice Study, which showed an increased wariness of self-driving cars, have reflected a disconnect between industry enthusiasm and the public’s attitudes toward a driverless future.

Self-driving car boosters often promote the technology as a way to cut down on the nearly 40,000 highway fatalities every year in the U.S., and it’s possible that message is starting to get through.

A AAA survey released this week found that although 63% of U.S. drivers said they would feel afraid to ride in a self-driving vehicle, the percentage is down from 78% last year.

“Americans are starting to feel more comfortable with the idea of self-driving vehicles,” AAA Automotive Engineering and Industry Relations Director Greg Brannon said in a news release. “Compared to just a year ago, AAA found that 20 million more U.S. drivers would trust a self-driving vehicle to take them for a ride.”

Still, reactions to the technology often run to the negative.

Earlier this month, Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety released the results of a survey the group had commissioned that found 64% of respondents were concerned about sharing the road with driverless cars, an attitude shared across the country.

The unease continued with questions regarding safety exemptions for driverless cars and allowing them to operate without equipment that would let a human take control. Those concerns come — as the Free Press recently reported — as General Motors has asked for an OK to test its latest autonomous Chevrolet Bolts without steering wheels, accelerators or brake pedals.

The advocacy group said its survey should be a wake-up call to Congress as it considers self-driving vehicle regulations. The group said the survey shows the public supports government oversight of driverless car testing.

RELATED: Safety advocates say not so fast on driverless cars

Part of the concern for groups such as Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety is a belief that mistakes from rushing the technology to market and high-profile incidents, such as the 2016 Tesla crash, will hinder acceptance of what those groups consider to be a potentially life-saving technology.

As a highlight of that phenomenon, another Tesla crash just this week was generating headlines. A Model S that might have been operating in Autopilot mode crashed into a parked firetruck in California. No injuries were reported.

Attitudes about driverless cars are clearly not all negative. At a breakfast luncheon for women professionals last week at the Renaissance Center, the majority of those in attendance during a panel discussion about technology raised their hands to signal they were excited about the prospect of driverless cars.

Philip Le, 48, of Washington Township does not share that enthusiasm.

Le, who was walking past a display for a self-driving Ford Fusion hybrid at the auto show, was not convinced such vehicles will make driving safer, in part, he said, because humans react faster than machines when it comes to driving.

“For me, I think it’s just dangerous,” Le said.

That Fusion, according to staff answering questions about the display, was used by Ford to test reactions to having a self-driving car deliver Domino’s Pizza last year in Ann Arbor.

Monique Dotson, 53, of Westland looked at the display and described it as the future. But she is not completely sold on the idea.

The potential use of driverless cars on public roads raises many questions, such as how they react in ice snow, and creates a “heightened level of anxiety,” she said, before noting her unease at the prospect of riding in one.

“It’s almost like you sit in there with a blindfold on because you don’t know what’s going to happen,” Dotson said.

Dotson’s 14-year-old son, Trevor, is less concerned about the potential for problems, and assumes the technology will be perfected in six or seven years.

He’s excited about the prospect of driverless cars, but he’s more focused on something that he expects to begin later this year — the process of getting his driver’s license.

Back at the Cadillac display, Joi Sessor, 50, of Detroit weighed her feelings about driverless cars and decided she prefers to do her own driving. She said she worries about cybersecurity and the potential for hackers to cause problems. She recalled the notorious 2015 hacking of a Jeep Cherokee that left the vehicle crawling along a highway in the St. Louis area as traffic zoomed by.

“I’m still nervous. (I’m) not ready to relinquish control,” she said. “I don’t trust the security of the technology.”

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Source: http://www.ttnews.com/articles/concerned-about-self-driving-cars-youre-not-alone


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(3 Dodge Chargers) Miami to Jacksonville

Let’s face it: Two-door pony cars aren’t practical, and full-size sports sedans are expensive. The Dodge Charger, a rare breed with ample room for the family and affordable power for fun, lands somewhere in the middle. The rear-wheel-drive Dodge boasts two available Hemi V-8s that deliver either 370 or 485 horsepower, while the standard V-6 produces up to 300 horses and can be had with optional all-wheel drive; all three engines are backed by an eight-speed automatic transmission. Unrefined interior materials and a cornucopia of in-your-face appearance upgrades make it the antithesis of near-luxury rivals. But its mix of performance and practicality is unique in its class. While it may be a bit brash for some tastes, the Charger is a certified value for those who want four doors for haulin’ people and a V-8 for haulin’ ass.
source:https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2017-dodge-charger-in-depth-model-review


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2017 Range Rover from Miami, FL to Atlanta, GA

Even the Sybarites couldn’t have dreamed of this: a rolling luxury palace, trimmed from massaging seats to ceiling in sumptuous leather, capable of reaching 100 mph in just 11.1 seconds, all for the low, low price of . . . fine, it costs as much as a house. But with features like these, who can complain? In truth, not every Range Rover is as opulent or as fast as the model simply named Supercharged. But even the lower, V-6–powered rungs on the Range Rover ladder are still undeniably luxe—leather seats, real wood trim, and a glossy, feature-rich infotainment system are all standard. And while they lack the mystique brought by the upper trims’ burbling V-8 engine and reclining rear seats, they still have the instantly recognizable face and tapered rear profile that practically everyone can identify as a status symbol. It’s rare for form, function, and image to mesh this well.

source:https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2017-land-rover-range-rover-in-depth-model-review


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