tagged w/ steering
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Car Desk to mount your laptop
Laptop computers are necessities in business, especially for those whose work takes them by car between customer and division locations. Between visits, a user must often use the laptop to prepare for an upcoming visit or to process the results of a just concluded one. In addition, the user may need to communicate with his home location to check and respond to messages received in his absence. When seeking to use a laptop in a car, the user encounters serious difficulties. Most importantly, there is the need to present the laptop keyboard at a comfortable and ergonomically desirable angle and position and the need to present the display in such a manner as not to lead to vision or muscle strain. What is Ergonomics? Ergonomics comes from the Greek words “ergos” meaning work and “nomos” meaning natural law. Ergonomics is essentially fitting the task to the worker and the product to the user. The benefits of ergonomics include improved comfort and productivity as well as reduced injuries and illnesses. Ergonomics is important in offices, industrial areas, and most important, the use of a laptop in a parked automobile!
A healthier way to get the job done.GO TO THIS LINK TO BUY NOW
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SWWS is new to the... more
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These sport cars can be quite practical and reliable high-performance vehicles to suit high status communities and car enthusiasts.These sport cars can be quite practical and reliable high-performance vehicles to suit... more
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A satellite-guided back-seat driver? A new system combines real-time navigation with radar safety tech to help a driver decelerate or brake into curves
Nissan has made another stride toward that strange but often-promised future: cars that drive themselves. A new system set for release in Japan links information from a car's real-time GPS navigation with existing radar-guided safety tech to help drivers make smooth turns on curvy roads. The Navigation-Cooperative Intelligent Pedal uses GPS mapping data to detect an oncoming bend, then strategically decelerates or applies the brakes. Here's how it works: When the nav system indicates a curve is looming, the accelerator pedal physically moves upward. Then the system activates the brakes. The point is to reduce a driver's workload on winding roads, such as Japan's notoriously curvy mountain highways.
The Navigation-Cooperative Intelligent Pedal works along with Nissan's new Active Stability Assist system, which synchronizes braking, steering and engine responses. The system monitors a driver's steering and acceleration/braking patterns, and steps in with either braking or the application of engine torque to each of the four wheels to help smooth vehicle responses. During braking, the system judges the distribution of force to each of the four wheels depending on the radius of a curve. The point, Nissan says is to help a driver feel more in control.
Nissan says both systems will be introduced on the new Fuga, a car US buyers know as the Infiniti M, in Japan in fall 2009. No word on a US release. Sounds like it may come in handy more in Japan than in the US, unless your morning commute is climbing Pike's Peak. Wake me up when it can cross-reference the caffeine level in your bloodstream, and apply the brakes in front of the nearest Starbucks.A satellite-guided back-seat driver? A new system combines real-time navigation with... more
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