Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

AA Unveils Bold New Logo, Livery

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 18 Januari 2013 | 23.23

advertisement

Click Here!

Marketing Experts Weigh In on AA's New Look

Marketing experts say it's about time American Airlines updated its image.

More Photos and Videos

The world-famous silver bird of Fort Worth-based American Airlines is getting a bold new makeover.

American Airlines CEO Thomas Horton debuted the airline's new livery in a recorded video on the airline's website at 9 a.m. Thursday. Two hours later, Horton hosted a news conference at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, where a 737 with the new livery, pictured above, was on display.

The old livery, which has been in use since the 1960s, relied on the plane's metallic fuselage for much of its look, along with iconic red, white and blue stripes that stretched the length of the fuselage.

Instead, there will be a silver, mica-painted plane with an American flag emblazoned on the tail.

"Since the polished metal look was no longer an option [due to the composite skin of new aircraft on order], the importance of the paint selection became critical to honoring American's silver bird legacy," the airline said in a news release.

Ahead of the wings, the word American in big, thin gray letters along the fuselage will be easily read from the ground. Closer to the cockpit on both sides of the fuselage, the company's new eagle logo looks forward, toward the direction of travel. The look can be seen in the photo above and in the gallery to the below, left.

The new logo will debut on Jan. 31 with a flight from DFW to Brazil.

"Our new logo and livery are designed to reflect the passion for progress and the soaring spirit, which is uniquely American," said Virasb Vahidi, American's chief commercial officer. "Our core colors -- red, white and blue -- have been updated to reflect a more vibrant and welcoming spirit. The new tail, with stripes flying proudly, is a bold reflection of American's origin and name. And our new flight symbol, an updated eagle, incorporates the many icons that people have come to associate with American, including the 'A' and the star."

American hopes to have 25 to 30 percent of its fleet outfitted with the logo change by the end of year. By the end of next year, most of the fleet should be outfitted.

Horton said the timing of the new livery went well with shipments of the Boeing 777-300ER coming into service. A shipment of 59 Boeing 737s and 777s will become part of the fleet by the end of the year.

The airline also has composite aircraft on order -- the Boeing 787 and planes from Airbus.

"Since placing our landmark aircraft order in July of 2011, we've been building anticipation toward a moment in time when the outside of our aircraft reflects the progress we've made to modernize our airline on the inside," Horton said. "While we complete the evaluation of whether a merger can build on American's strengths, we remain steadfast in each step we take to renew our airline, a step we take with great respect for our name American. Today marks important progress in that journey as we unveil a new and updated look for the first time in more than 40 years."

The makeover comes at a time when the company is still evaluating whether a merger with US Airways could benefit the company. Even with a merger, some analysts believe the new look would help signify a reinvented American Airlines and a signal that the brand is here to stay.

"It's a new day and they are restructured, reimagined, reinvented, they certainly want their customers to know that," said Jeff Millet, of Holmes Millet Advertising.

After the reveal Thursday morning, travelers at DFW Airport said they liked the new look but said that what the airline does next to emerge from bankruptcy matters the most. The pilots and flight attendants unions shared the sentiment.

"We'd prefer that the focus be on fixing AA's systemic network, revenue and cultural problems rather any cosmetic issues such as painting schemes," Allied Pilots Association spokesman Tom Hoban said.

"APFA is excited about the change this means for our employer," said Leslie Mayo with the Association of Professional Flight Attendants. "We hope this rebranding is the first of many steps toward making American Airlines a company that we can be proud to work for and one that can grow and compete in today's marketplace. That can only happen with a merger inside bankruptcy. A merger is the best path forward for our company, our industry, the employees and the traveling public, and APFA hopes to celebrate an announcement shortly."

"We applaud our friends at American as the new brand elements and livery mark the culmination of a significant amount of work and coordination, and clearly those efforts have produced a compelling result," US Airways said in a statement. "As American continues its restructuring, today's announcement represents the ongoing evolution of both the brand and the company, and we look forward to seeing the new American brand across their planes and around the world."

Horton said Thursday that the switch to the new brand may take years to filter down to all planes, airports and terminals, but that the switch would happen soon at hubs in DFW, New York, Miami and Chicago.

DFW Airport's Terminal A will also feature the new look when it is complete in early February.

Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the Boeing 777-300ER has a composite skin. The Boeing 777-300ER is an aluminum plane. NBC 5 regrets the error.

NBC 5's Kendra Lyn, Ray Villeda and Christina Miralla contributed to this report.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

YouTube Sensation Writes Her First Book

Christine Lee, NBC 5 Grand Prairie Reporter

Sarah Churman of Mansfield was born deaf but grabbed national headlines when video after she received a ear implant showed her hearing sound for the first time. Now she's written a book called "Powered On."

Sarah Churman Inspires Others

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A North Texas woman who was born profoundly deaf and now hears clearly in both ears has written a book in hopes of inspiring others.

Sarah Churman became a YouTube sensation in 2011 when video of her reaction to getting her first hearing device implant went viral.

She is signing her memoir in Mansfield this week.

Keith Craker drove from Mesquite to meet the woman he said inspired both him and his wife.

"If you're having a downer day, it feels like you're going to have a downer day forever. And one of the beautiful things about the video is that it shows you that every day, miracles do happen," he said.

Churman was born with genetic abnormality. In September 2011, an implanted hearing device allowed her to hear clearly in one ear. In March, her second ear received the same operation.

"They turned the other one on, and I realized, 'Oh my gosh, this is like 10,000 times better to have two instead of one,'" she said.

The mother of two said she now hears her children clearly.

"The morning after I was activated, I was sitting in the kitchen floor, crying, because I was watching them having a little tea party and listening to all their little antics between each other and stuff," Churman said.

She said it was a humbling experience to write her first book and document her journey.

"I try to blanket -- not just the hearing-impaired community, not just people with disabilities -- but just society in general," she said.

Churman also said companies are starting to include the pricey procedure -- which costs $30,000 per ear -- into their insurance plans. She said she hopes the trend will continue.

Churman will be signing copies of her book on Saturday from noon to 2 p.m. at the Texas Trust Credit Union located at 1900 Country Club Dr. in Mansfield.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Former Haltom High Teacher Accused of Sex With Students

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Former Haltom High teacher Tonya Flink is accused of having sex with four of her students. She has been indicted is and is free on bond.

Teacher Indicted on Improper...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A Tarrant County grand jury has indicted a former teacher at Haltom High School who is accused of having sex with four of her students.

According to a September 2011 search warrant, parents of a Haltom High graduate and former student of Tonya Flink reported to police that their son was living with her at her apartment. They told police that they believed the relationship began while their son was a senior in high school.

In the same month, investigators learned of other relationships, according to the warrant.

According to the report from police, the former student in question admitted that the relationship began when he would stay after school and Flink would help him with his grades. Flirting led to Flink "pushing herself onto him," according to police.

Flink would go on to tell the student that "she loved him," that she "liked young Hispanic kids like him" and that their eventual sexual relationship involved "everything you could imagine," police said in the warrant.

Police also reported that they found evidence that Flink made at least 850 phone calls to one of the students in question over a period of a few months. Investigators also reported that she bought clothes for some of them and that she went to the home of one of her students and secretly knocked on his back door so she could meet with him.

According to police, Flink resigned from her position as a computer technology teacher at Haltom High in August 2011, shortly before police began their initial investigation.

Flink went on to teach for a time at Carter Riverside High School in the Fort Worth Independent School District, but resigned from her position long before the district ever learned of her alleged involvement with students, a district representative said.

Flink, 39 is free after posting $10,000 bond. She is due in a Tarrant County courtroom next week, according to her attorney.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

1 Dead in Hit-and-Run Along I-30 in Dallas

Keaton Fox, NBC 5 News

One person has been killed in an apparent hit-and-run on the frontage road near Dallas' main post office Friday morning.

1 Dead in Hit-and-Run Along I-30 in Dallas

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

One person has been killed in an apparent hit-and-run on the frontage road near Dallas' main post office Friday morning.

Dallas police were called around 5:35 a.m. of a body in the road east of Beckley Avenue on the frontage road.

The frontage road east of Beckley was closed, but it was not affecting traffic on Interstate 30.

When police arrived, they found the body laying in the roadway.

Police say they don't know what kind of vehicle may have hit the person.

The victim appears to be a Hispanic male in his early 20s.

Dallas County Deputies are interviewing a witness to the incident.

Deputies on scene said the investigation was in the early stages and they couldn't release other information.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Hockey's Next Threat: Climate Change

advertisement

Click Here!

The first puck of the 2013 NHL season finally drops Saturday after a 113-day labor dispute wiped out 510 games -- nearly half the entire season. But now that labor peace has been restored, something a little more surprising -- and much more difficult to solve -- threatens the long-term future of hockey: climate change.

Hockey was born more than 150 years ago in Canada, where the defining image of childhood is kids playing hockey on a frozen pond. Those kids serve an important purpose to the NHL: From the ponds come the next generation of hockey players and fans.

But as the average temperature across the globe has risen, the outdoor skating season in Canada and the northern U.S. has begun to shrink, as temperatures cold enough to keep the ice safely frozen becoming rarer and rarer.

David Phillips, a senior climatologist at Environment Canada, says the message from the data is loud and clear.

"It's not as cold and white as it used to be," he said. "If you look across the country, the one season that has shown truly dramatic changes in the last 65 years are winters."

The NHL is aware of the threat posed by climate change, and players have tried to raise awareness. In 2006, the Boston Bruins' Andrew Ference spearheaded a carbon-neutral movement with the David  Suzuki Foundation, getting more than 500 players to buy carbon offsets for all the travel they do during the season.

The NHL runs NHL Green, a web site dedicated to raising awareness of issues such as global warming. Headlines on the site warn of impending doom: Canada's Rinks Now Need Cooling, and Pond Hockey in Peril.

Across the whole of Canada, the average winter (December through February) temperature has risen  about 5 degrees, said Phillips. The increase has been most severe in Northern British Columbia, the Yukon and Northwest Territories, where the temperatures have jumped more than 9 degrees — making a frozen pond much rarer.

The rise in temperature has shortened the outdoor hockey season by as much as 15 days, according to a study released last year by Nikolay Damyanov at McGill University's Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences.

The Suzuki Foundation in Canada has been fighting climate change since its inception almost 20 years ago, enlisting NHL players like Ference to help promote its cause. It's been a difficult fight -- even though 98% of Canadians believe climate change is real, the government was recently ranked fourth-worst in the world in terms of environmental policy.

"Here in Canada we're quite strong in natural resources," said Jean-Patrick Toussaint, head of science projects at the Suzuki Foundation, who noted that Canada was the first country to withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol. "Not only water, but we've also got the tar sands, and this has become a top priority for our current government, to make sure that there's continuous economic growth."

The problem does cross the border. Outdoor hockey is popular in America, too, as evidenced by the the NHL's Winter Classic, an annual outdoor showcase.  Five of the top six-rated regular season games since 1975 have been Winter Classics.

Last year, though, even the Winter Classic was threatened. The NHL had to delay the game between the Rangers and Flyers at Philadelphia's Citizens Bank Park until later in the day to ensure temperatures were low enough to keep the ice frozen

Rising temperatures have endangered the U.S. Pond Hockey Championships in Minnesota since their inception in 2006, founder Fred Haberman said.

"Last year was one of the worst winters we've ever had for outdoor hockey," Haberman said. "If we'd tried to have the tournament last week, we would have had to cancel because it rained — it was 40 degrees.

"When I arrived in the Twin Cities (24 years ago), I was playing a minimum of 10 to 12 weeks outside. Today, we're lucky if we get eight."

Not only does the shortened outdoor hockey season deny aspiring NHLers countless hours of practice time, it also stunts their development because they grow accustomed to the perfectly groomed ice of indoor rinks, and so are less adept at handling bad hops.

"It's on these outdoor rinks where kids can just play and experiment, develop their skills without even realizing it," said Joe Pelletier of Greatest Hockey Legends. "Minor hockey is so structured nowadays that kids are essentially taught the game. But out on their own on the frozen ponds, kids actually learned the game. And the game was better off for it."

Ultimately, framing global warming as a hockey problem may be what forces Canada to confront the issue. If Canadians realize that climate change is slowly corroding not only the quality of hockey and the amount of hockey they can play in their backyard, they might force the government to act.

"The threat from climate change... Canadians are not worried about skinny polar bears," said Phillips, the climatologist at Environment Canada. "It's about, 'Gee -- will we have a white Christmas and will we be hockey players?' When it comes right down to it, it would probably drive us to action if people understood it in that way."


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Presented By:

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
       
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

© 2013 Pheedo, Inc. All rights reserved.


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

2 Shot, 1 Injured in Oak Cliff

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5 News

Police are searching for the gunman after two people were shot and a third was injured in an early morning shooting in Dallas Friday.

3 People Injured in Oak Cliff Shooting

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Authorities are serching for a gunman who shot two people and injured a third at a Dallas home Friday morning.

Police said a woman was leaving a home on the 2100 block of Stovall Drive in Oak Cliff at about 2:30 a.m. when she was approached by the gunman.

Authorities said the gunman had been trying to date the woman, who rejected his advances.

Two men went outside of the home to see what was going on. A fight soon erupted and then gunshots rang out.

Police determined that one man did all of the shooting, first with a handgun, then he returned with a semi-automatic rifle. Bullet holes were found in the home and approximately 19 shell casings are scattered in the street and yard of the home.

Shattered glass hit the woman in the head. She is speaking with investigators.

Paramedics said one of the men from inside of the home was shot several times all over his body. He is in surgery. 

The second man was shot in the leg, according to paramedics. He is expected to be OK.

There were two little girls and a teenager inside the home. They were not injured.

Police found a semi-automatic rifle down the street, but did not find the gunman or a friend who'd been with him. Police believe the shooter lives in the neighborhood.

The woman apparently didn't know his name.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

1 Dead After Hit-and-Run in Johnson County

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

Godley police are investigating a deadly hit-and-run along FM 2331 near CR 1230 Friday morning.

1 Killed in Johnson County Hit-and-Run

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Godley police are investigating a deadly hit-and-run along Farm-to-Market Road 2331 near County Road 1230 Friday morning.

Police said they received a call at about 1:30 a.m. about a one-car crash. When officers arrived, they saw a woman in the road who had been struck.

The person who hit her did not call 911 or stop to help. The hit-and-run is now a criminal case.

The woman, who was later identified as 49-year-old Carrie Fitzgerald, was driving a Chevrolet pick-up when she lost control on the unlit two-lane undivided highway and rolled over, according to authorities.

Officials said the woman was laying in the roadway when she was hit by the hit-and-run driver.  The medical examiner told police it may be difficult to determine if the woman was killed in the first crash or if she died after being run over.

Police say they have no witnesses at this point. 

Based on skid marks seen by officers, the driver that hit the woman might have been driving an 18-wheeler, according to police.

Authorities said alcohol does not appear to be a factor.

The Texas Department of Public Safety is also involved in the investigation.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Couple Glues 39,000 Pennies to Bedroom Floor

advertisement

Click Here!

Like many young couples, Ryan Lange and Emily Belden were looking for inspiration while deciding how to renovate the bedroom of their Chicago home.

That inspiration finally came from a quick glance at a jar of change.

"We'd been looking up options and were thinking about being green when I said we should just tile the floor in pennies," Lange, a entrepreneur and self-described design freak, told NBC Chicago.

Belden wasn't completely on board at first, but before she could put her two cents in, the project was off and running.

"I came home one day and found a small corner was done, so I thought 'I guess we're doing it,'" she recalled.

Thus began four months of painstaking work they dubbed "pennying," which involves laying down a special glue that acts like grout and individually placing the pennies heads up on the floor of the 380 square-foot room in Chicago's South Loop neighborhood.

It turned into a nightly form of relaxation for the pair — accompanied by "Spotify Premium and pinot noir" — but it does have drawbacks. Handling that many dirty pennies turns your hands pitch black. But all in all, they consider it time well spent.

"Once we were halfway done, we were kind of over it, but I knew it was something that one day we could look back and laugh at it," Lange said.

An estimated 38,903 pennies were used to completely cover the floor, which was then sanded down to a shiny copper sheen and cemented in with a clear coat as smooth as a sheet of glass. They spent close to $1,000 on the project, which made for a lot of trips back and forth to the bank for more pennies. And created more than a few odd glances from the tellers. Pennyfloor.com

"After we told them what we were up to they started tracking the project themselves, and I was always passing my iPhone through the glass window to show them pictures," Lange said.

Within the bulk of pennies came some rare finds — a 1944 WWII 440 steel penny that was created due to a copper shortage, and a 1873 penny featuring an Indian head instead of Abraham Lincoln. Both pennies are worth enough money to pay for the project, but they also ended up on the floor.

"It's turned into a fun party game where we challenge our guests to find the rare coins," Belden said.

The couple has been posting the photos on their social media accounts and created a blog called ThePennyFloor.com about the project.

"A friend pointed out that thousands of people have now seen the inside of my bedroom, which kind of creeps me out a bit," Belden said.

And in case you're wondering, they're buying their home, not renting, which means no pennies lost in the form of a deposit check if they decide to move.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger