Tuesday, November 29, 2011

PAUHauto: Toyota Fun-Vii



TOKYO - Presiden syarikat Toyota Motor Corp, Akio Toyoda memperkenalkan kereta konsep futuristik yang memiliki bentuk menyerupai sebuah telefon pintar gergasi dalam satu majlis di sini semalam.




Dinamakan Fun-Vii, beliau menggelarkan kereta konsep tersebut sebagai "sebuah telefon pintar bertayar empat".



Kereta itu berfungsi seperti sebuah komputer peribadi dengan pemandunya boleh berhubung dengan orang lain dengan mengetuk panel pintu kereta tersebut.



Pintu kenderaan itu dilengkapi skrin besar dengan fungsi sentuh yang beroperasi seperti sebuah telefon pintar.

"Sebuah kereta perlu mempunyai daya tarikan," kata Toyoda.



Beliau turut memperkenalkan sebuah skuter yang boleh ditunggang sambil berdiri yang dinamakan Winglet pada majlis berkenaan.

Monday, November 28, 2011

PAUHinfo: Glass Bridge of Death



In Zhangjiajie National Forest Park in China, there exists a tourist attraction that is guaranteed to scare the Hell out of you.


Located on the massive vertical cliffs of Tianmen Mountain in Hunan Province, China, and rising 1,430 from the ground is a 60-meter-long bridge constructed of 2.5-inch thick glass. At only three feet wide, this walkway encircles the mountain, offering thrill seekers a chance to soil themselves. 




Those that are brave enough to walk the path are required to wear cloth covers over their shoes, in order to make the glass easier to clean. To me it sounds as if it would make it even more terrifying due to the lack of traction. 


Beautiful views of the mountain are made slightly safer by the glass guard rail, but that does little to temper the utter fear one must experience when traversing what I have affectionately dubbed “The Glass Terror.”

Saturday, November 26, 2011

PAUHnews: Bila Pilot Terkunci Dalam Tandas Di Udara



25/11/2011 NEW YORK: Penerbangan pesawat Delta Airlines dari Carolina Utara ke New York kecoh seketika apabila juruterbangnya terkunci dalam tandas kira-kira 30 minit sebelum mendarat.


Media tempatan melaporkan, juruterbang terbabit bergegas masuk ke tandas selepas tidak dapat menahan dirinya membuang air sehingga selamat mendarat.


Insiden itu menjadi gempar apabila pembantu juruterbang menyangka berlaku rampasan pesawat selepas seorang penumpang “dalam loghat asing” meminta izin masuk ke kokpit.

Dia segera menghubungi menara kawalan bagi memaklumkan kejadian berkenaan.


Selepas beberapa ketika, penumpang terbabit berjaya menyampaikan mesej mengenai keadaan juruterbang itu kepada pembantunya, sekali gus meredakan keadaan.


Tidak dapat dipastikan bagaimana juruterbang berkenaan selamat keluar dari tandas dan pesawat itu berjaya mendarat.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

PAUHnews: Selamat Jalan Hentian Bas Klang


Satu masa dulu, Hentian Bas Klang atau turut dikenali sebagai Terminal Bas Pasarama Kota begitu gah. Dirasmikan pada 10 November 1968, bangunan itu bukan saja lokasi bas ‘berlabuh’ mengambil dan menurunkan penumpang, tetapi juga tempat meletak kereta bertingkat pertama didirikan di ibu kota.



Upacara perasmian bangunan berkenaan diadakan dengan gilang-gemilang. Letupan mercun yang diikat sepanjang 15 meter memeriahkan pembukaan bangunan terletak di Jalan Sekolah (kini Jalan Sultan Mohamed) berharga RM997,000 itu.


Selepas empat dekad mencurah bakti, bangunan yang canggih pada zamannya kini tidak lagi selari dengan kepesatan pembangunan di ibu negara.


Bangunan lama berwajah kusam itu akan menyembah bumi akhir tahun ini bagi membolehkan kerja pembinaan stesen My Rapid Transit (MRT) Pasar Seni bawah tanah yang baru.

Kemudian, terminal bas baru yang lebih moden akan dibangunkan semula di tapak sama selepas projek MRT selesai dijangka pada 2016.


Sejak 1 November lalu, Hentian Bas Klang yang sebelum ini digunakan 74 bas yang membuat 260 pusingan dan mampu menampung 5,000 penumpang sehari itu tidak lagi sesibuk seperti kebiasaan. Semua bas dipindahkan operasinya ke Pudu Sentral.

Kini cuma bas RapidKL yang masih mengambil dan menurunkan penumpang di situ, tetapi cuma di luar bangunan iaitu di Jalan Sultan Mohamed.

Meninjau ke dalam bangunan bersejarah berkenaan yang gelap, kelihatan beberapa penumpang duduk santai sementara menunggu hujan teduh.


Dengan bantuan cahaya suram dari luar bangunan, notis penutupan kelihatan di beberapa sudut premis itu. Semakin jauh memasuki ruang terminal bas yang dipasang pita penghadang, kelihatan seorang lelaki menyusun majalah dan surat khabar. Lelaki itu, R Many, 60, masih berniaga di lot kedainya biarpun tahu bangunan berkenaan ditutup.

Mustahil hatinya tidak terusik apabila dimaklumkan bangunan berkenaan akan dirobohkan. Bukan saja Many yang juga peniaga paling lama di situ yang mengalami perasaan itu, tetapi semua warga kota atau individu yang pernah menggunakan terminal berkenaan. Pastinya ramai individu mempunyai kenangan tersendiri mengenai bangunan itu.


Selepas lebih empat dekad ‘berumah tangga’ di situ, Hentian Bas Klang ibarat rumah keduanya. Setiap hari dari jam 6 pagi hingga 11 malam, Many dan adiknya, R Rajakumari, 49, bergilir-gilir menjaga kedai.

“Dulu kawasan ini pasar basah sebelum Terminal Bas Pasarama Kota didirikan. Ia antara bangunan tercanggih di Kuala Lumpur yang bukan saja hentian bas, tetapi tempat letak kereta bertingkat, medan selera, restoran dan pusat hiburan. Dulu ada enam lot kedai di sini, tetapi selepas itu jadi 16 kedai.


“Hendak kata sedih kerana bangunan ini dirobohkan, tidaklah... cuma saya berharap mendapat lokasi berniaga sesuai selepas tempat ini ditutup,” katanya.

Many berkata, dia akur dengan arahan menghentikan operasi perniagaan di hentian bas berkenaan. Namun, hasrat berpindah ke tapak niaga lain terpaksa ditangguhkan sehingga dia mendapat lokasi yang sesuai.

“Pada mulanya saya bercadang berniaga di luar sana (sambil menunjukkan ke arah Jalan Sultan Mohamed), tetapi hari ini hujan lebat, sudah tentu saya tidak boleh meletakkan majalah dan surat khabar di luar.


“Sementara pelanggan masih datang ke sini untuk berteduh, saya ambil keputusan berniaga di sini. Penumpang tentu akan ke kedai untuk membeli bahan bacaan, minuman atau makanan ringan ketika turun naik bas di sini,” katanya.

Peniaga gerai makan, Raziah Mohamad, 56, yang berniaga di bawah jejambat di hentian itu sejak 20 tahun lalu berkata, bermacam pahit manis dilalui sepanjang tempoh berkenaan.

Dia menyaksikan pelbagai perubahan hentian bas berkenaan iaitu daripada sebuah kawasan yang sering menjadi tumpuan sehingga kurang mendapat perhatian.


“Pelbagai pengalaman pahit manis saya lalui sepanjang berniaga di sini. Sebelum ini, saya berniaga di tingkat atas, tetapi kemudian dipindahkan ke sini.

“Semakin lama semakin kurang orang menggunakan hentian bas ini. Dulu tempat ini di bawah kendalian Dewan Bandaraya Kuala Lumpur (DBKL) sebelum diserahkan kepada pihak swasta.

“Memang sayang hendak tinggalkan kawasan ini kerana di sinilah tempat yang menjadi mata pencarian saya dan suami membesarkan tiga anak. Apapun, kami terpaksa kerana memberi laluan kepada pembangunan,” katanya.

Penyelaras Trafik RapidKL, Kamarul Azhar Sulaiman, 39, berkata sejak ditugaskan di Hentian Bas Klang dua tahun lalu, dia berkesempatan bertemu ramai kawan lama yang kebetulan mengunjungi tempat itu.

“Sejak berhijrah ke Kuala Lumpur 12 tahun lalu, saya terputus hubungan dengan rakan lama yang berasal dari Kuantan. Bagaimanapun, sejak ditugaskan di sini, saya terserempak dengan ramai rakan lama di sini.


“Tempat ini menyimpan banyak memori, terutama pada zaman bas mini. Ketika remaja dulu, apabila datang ke Kuala Lumpur (dari Kuantan), inilah tempat yang dituju terlebih dulu,” katanya.

J Jayaganesan, 30, sibuk mengambil gambar kedai gunting milik ibunya, Vinnie Salon, ketika penulis menghampirinya. Menurutnya, dia merakam kenangan sebelum bangunan itu dirobohkan.

“Walaupun ibu baru empat tahun berniaga di sini, tempat ini banyak meninggalkan kenangan buat kami sekeluarga. Bapa dan ibu sama-sama membuka kedai gunting rambut ini. Setahun selepas itu, bapa meninggal dunia dan ibu menyara hidup dengan pendapatan daripada perniagaan ini. Selepas bangunan ini dirobohkan nanti, hanya gambar yang tinggal sebagai kenangan buat kami,” katanya.


Pemilik kedai gunting, M Tharmalingam, 63, berkata memori di Hentian Bas Klang tetap terpahat di ingatan walaupun bangunan itu dirobohkan nanti.

“Enam tahun berniaga di sini, saya mendapat ramai kawan di kalangan pemandu bas, konduktor, pemilik kedai dan penumpang. Mula-mula mereka menjadi pelanggan saya, selepas itu jadi kawan.

“Saya terpaksa menutup perniagaan kerana selepas penutupan bangunan ini 31 Oktober lalu, tiada lagi pelanggan datang. Memang sedih mahu meninggalkan tempat ini, tetapi saya perlu berniaga di tempat lain untuk meneruskan kehidupan,” katanya.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

PAUHauto: Subaru BRZ



Subaru has finally given us the first glimpse of how its rear-wheel-drive BRZ sports car is shaping up with the BRZ Concept STi, which was revealed at the Los Angeles Motor Show.


The new model is part of a tie-up with Toyota and shares many of its components with the upcoming FT-86. Much of the chassis was engineered by Subaru –  along with the 2.0-litre flat-four Boxer engine – but Toyota's fuel-saving direct injection system will also feature.


Leaked specs reveal that Toyota's model will boast 197bhp – and although there are rumours that the Subaru BRZ could have around 250bhp, company sources wouldn't confirm this.


Visually, the two models boast a very similar profile, but Subaru will differentiate the BRZ from its Toyota sibling with a more aggressive bodykit and Subaru's family face. Every body panel on the BRZ concept will change slightly for production, although the car will look pretty much identical to the one you see here.


Company sources are keen to point out that the BRZ is very lightweight - it's expected to tip the scales at around 1,150kg – and despite a relatively modest power output, it should do 0-60mph in less than seven seconds with a top speed of 140mph.

PAUHnews: 9-seater school bus with 64 people crashed



16/11/2011 BEIJING: Nineteen people, 17 of them children, were killed in a collision between an overloaded school bus and a truck in northwestern China on Wednesday, local authorities and state media said.


Two adults were among those killed in the accident, which happened at 9:40 am in Yulinzi township in Gansu province, an official surnamed Du from the Gansu safety bureau told AFP.

The bus was from the local kindergarten, the official Xinhua news agency said.


A photograph posted on China National Radio’s website purportedly of the accident scene showed a badly damaged orange bus—its front section crushed from the impact—and a red truck on a road.


The vehicles were facing each other and were surrounded by debris.

The school vehicle was only designed to carry nine people, according to a witness quoted by China National Radio.


An unspecified number of injured have been taken to the local hospital and the cause of the accident is under investigation, reports said.


The fatal crash was the latest on China’s notoriously dangerous roads, where drivers often flout traffic safety laws.

PAUHinfo: HAL Robot Suit for Workers



The Hybrid Assistive Limb, which is also known affectionately as HAL, is the creative brainchild of Dr. Yoshiyuki Sankai, a professor at the University of Tsukuba.

The first HAL was developed in the early 2000s and was attached to a computer. The robot suit was cumbersome and impractical because the battery alone weighed nearly 22 kilograms (48.5 pounds) and required two people to attach it.


After much trial and error, the recently developed HAL-5 weighs only 10 kg (22 pounds).

Professor Sankai, under the patronage of Cyberdyne, has developed the latest HAL suit to insure the safety of nuclear power-plant workers at Fukushima in carrying the extremely heavy tungsten plates that can act as a barrier against high levels of radiation.


HAL is considered the latest step in a new academic field dubbed cybernics.

“Humans can feel discomfort when the ‘robot suit’ is added to the body as it acts as a sensor, and also as equipment to control the whole body … I strongly felt the need of an academic system that includes a number of fields combined. I have named and established this academic system ‘cybernics’… to exploit the future by a hearty science technology,” said Sankai.


According to Cyberdyne, this latest and most streamlined HAL robot suit supports the weight of the prohibitively heavy protective clothing and enables workers to do their jobs more effectively as they are not constantly fighting the burden of their protective armor.

This marks a tremendous breakthrough in “defensive” clothing. Previously, robot suits worn at radiation sites were effective against only the weakest types of radiation. The reason for this concerns the weight required to actually stop hard radiation.


Before this new HAL, the usual method of dealing with high radiation levels was to enter such areas only briefly in order to remain below dosage levels that were considered unsafe.

So far, HAL has not been utilized at the Fukushima site, as the current method of simply keeping workers out of highly radioactive areas has worked well to date.


But Sankai is not a man who gives up easily. His endless vision demands an expansion of the human mind to develop new technologies to insure a meaningful life for all.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

PAUHnews: Man killed after quarrel for toilet



MOSCOW, Russia - A Russian man was arrested after shooting dead a neighbour during an argument over whose turn it was to use a shared toilet, a police source told the Interfax news agency on Tuesday.
Toilet war!

The man, 37, who had already served a jail sentence for murder, confessed to shooting a 49-year-old guest of his neighbour in a communal flat in eastern Moscow, after an argument about whose turn it was to use the toilet.
Moscow.

The killer was captured by traffic police around 100 kilometres (60 miles) from Moscow as he attempted to flee, the police source told Interfax.
Russia.

The Investigative Committee, which investigates murders, was unable to immediately confirm the report to AFP.
Bolshevik Revolution.

Moscow still has around 50,000 rundown communal flats, where neighbours share kitchens and bathrooms. Some have as many as eight bedrooms, with each room housing a single person or a whole family.
Communal flats in Moscow.

Communal flats appeared after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, when the comfortable apartments of middle-class and wealthy families were nationalised and used to house workers, while the original owners were often left with just one room.