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Fiat recalling more than 18,000 2014 Fiat 500Ls

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 16 Maret 2014 | 23.41

DETROIT — Chrysler Group is recalling 18,092 Fiat 500L cars in the U.S. because the transmission shifter can be delayed or stop working.

Fiat 500Ls from the 2014 model year are affected. The cars were made between April 5, 2013, and Jan. 22, 2014, at the company's plant in Serbia.

According to documents posted Saturday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, cold temperatures can affect signals sent between the car's main computer and the gear shifter. If that happens, the shifter may not shift out of park or the response may be delayed, increasing the risk of a crash.

Chrysler says no accidents or injuries related to the defect have been reported.

Fiat dealers will replace the shifter module and update the software starting next month. The company will notify owners.


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CNN's primetime ratings surge, but for how long?

CNN's beleaguered primetime is doing something unexpected: climbing in the ratings.

Over the past few days, on several occasions, the Time Warner-owned cable-news outlet has trumped its rivals among viewers between the ages of 25 and 54, the demographic most coveted by advertisers. To be certain, Fox News Channel remains the most-watched cable-news network, but CNN is enjoying an uptick.

For two nights, CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360" has won more viewers in the 25-to-54 demo than Fox News' "The O'Reilly Factor," according to data from Nielsen. On Thursday, Cooper attracted an average of 454,000 viewers in the demo compared to O'Reilly's 429,000, according to Nielsen. On Wednesday, Cooper won an average of 431,000 viewers in the demo, Nielsen said, compared to O'Reilly's 386,000.

On Thursday, "Erin Burnett Outfront" at 7 p.m. on CNN notched more 25-to-54 viewers than Greta van Susteren on Fox News at the same hour. And "Piers Morgan Tonight," the 9 p.m. program that CNN has already said will be canceled imminently, won more viewers in the demo than Megyn Kelly did on Fox News at the same hour. Fox News triumphed handily over CNN's second week of "Chicagoland" at 10 p.m., but CNN's lineup from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. also beat MSNBC's in the demo in every hour last night (MSNBC had more total viewers at 10 p.m. than "Chicagoland").

CNN's victory is a partial one at best. Fox News Channel won primetime overall on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, according to Nielsen, with its 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. lineup averaging more in total viewers and viewers between 25 and 54 than either CNN or MSNBC. And MSNBC's primetime lineup averaged more viewers overall than CNN's on Tuesday and Wednesday.

The question will be whether CNN's results are being boosted for the short term by breaking-news coverage of the recent disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, or if CNN's recent focus on primetime documentaries is gaining traction.

Like a broadcast network showing the finale of a beloved series or the annual Super Bowl, CNN's audience tends to swell during breaking-news moments that grip a good part of the nation. But the network has not been able to keep those viewers once the noise around recent big stories has died down.

CNN's New Primetime Faces?" href="http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/lawyers-lemon-and-real-life-are-these-some-of-cnns-new-primetime-faces-1201127868/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> CNN is in the midst of a weeks-long experimental effort in primetime, testing a legal-issues program, a new spotlight on weekend primetime anchor Don Lemon, and more hours of a group of documentaries and docu-series it has commissioned or acquired.

Some of those series have performed well. The Sunday premiere of "CNN Orignal Series: Death Row Stories" won more viewers in the 25-to-54 age range in the 9 p.m. hour than Fox News and MSNBC combined, though, again, Fox News had more viewers in that hour overall.

On Tuesday, "Weed 2: Cannibis Madness," a special report led by Dr. Sanjay Gupta at 10 p.m.,notched 354,000 viewers between 25 and 54, and 144,000 viewers between 18 and 34 - more in both categories than either Fox News Channel or MSNBC. That marked the first time CNN has notched more than 300,000 people in the 25-to-54 demo since an episode of the docuseries "The Sixties" aired January 30th. Fox News still had more viewers overall during that hour.

Others have not performed as robustly. "Chicagoland," a heavily promoted series Allstate's CEO Will Promote New CNN Series 'Chicagoland'" href="http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/in-ad-pact-allstates-ceo-will-promote-new-cnn-series-chicagoland-1201124349/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">that won ad support from Allstate, has come in second to Fox News Channel Thursdays at 10 p.m. in both overall viewers and viewers between 25-and-54 for both its weeks on the air. And while it has won more viewers in the demo than MSNBC on both weeks, MSNBC had more viewers overall.

© 2014 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


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'Veronica Mars' donors beset by digital download glitches

It's a Marshmal-tdown!

Fans who donated $35 to get Warner Bros.'s "Veronica Mars" into theaters this weekend in exchange for perks including a free digital download of the film complained loudly enough about technical problems receiving the movie that the film's director acknowledged the difficulties Friday.

"Please know that Warner Bros. have given Customer Support a lot of freedom to help make things right, so if you're having issues, please let them know," he wrote to the film's ardent fan base-known as Marshmallows-on the movie's Kickstarter page.

Various media reports late Friday suggested Warner Bros. was issuing refunds to donors dissatisfied with the digital downloads. The studio has yet to issue a statement on the matter.

Fans took to Kickstarter and elsewhere on the Internet to grouse about all sorts of glitches that made downloading a copy of the film difficult or impossible. Doubly embarrassing for Warner Bros. was the crux of the problem stemmed from restricting the free downloads to Ultraviolet, a digital locker system that counts the studio as one of its earliest backers, and Flixster, a movie app owned by Warner Bros.

Thomas defended the choice of Flixster in his response to fans.

"As you'll see in the original FAQ on our Kickstarter page, we've always planned to include Flixster as a digital distribution platform. But I also know that many of you use iTunes, Amazon or other platforms, and would prefer to claim your digital copies on your favorite service, so we hoped we'd also be able to arrange for more options. Unfortunately, it just wasn't possible. In the end, Flixster was the best option for getting the digital movie reward out to all of you, worldwide, at the same time."

(C) 2014 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


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Honda recalling 886,815 Odyssey minivans

DETROIT — Honda Motor Co. is recalling 886,815 Odyssey minivans in the U.S. because a fuel pump cover can deteriorate and cause a fuel leak.

Odysseys from 2005 through 2010 model years are involved. The recalled minivans were made between June 23, 2004, and September 4, 2010.

According to documents posted Saturday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the cover on the fuel pump strainer can wear down from exposure to high temperatures and acidic chemicals, like those found in fertilizers. Fuel leaks can cause a vehicle fire.

Honda says no fires or injuries have been reported.

Honda dealers will repair the vehicles for free, but the company says replacement parts may not be available until this summer. It will notify owners of the recall next month.


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Silicon Valley billionaire buys record life policy

SAN FRANCISCO — An unnamed Silicon Valley billionaire has purchased the world's most valuable life insurance policy.

The man who cobbled the deal together said Saturday that it took seven months and 19 insurance companies to put together a deal that surpasses a $100 million policy sold to Hollywood mogul David Geffen in 1990.

"No one company can afford to take a $201 million hit," said Dovi Frances, the financial adviser who represents who he calls a "well-known billionaire."

The Guinness Book of World Records announced the surpassing of Geffen's record on Thursday. Guinness officials spent about three months reviewing records, Frances said.

"It was worse than any audit you can think of," he said.

Guinness credits Frances with the record for selling the policy, surpassing United Kingdom life insurance salesman Peter Rosengard who helped put together Geffen's policy.

Frances is president of Santa Barbara-based S.G. LLC. The firm has represented the billionaire since he responded to a direct mail solicitation in 2010.

Frances said the billionaire wants to remain anonymous for two reasons: privacy and keeping the news from his benefactors.

"He wants his next of kin to keep working hard," Frances said.

Frances said the billionaire purchased the insurance to help his heirs avoid paying a 45 percent inheritance tax upon his death. Frances also said, generally speaking, that many super-wealthy people are taking out big loans because interest rates are low. Those loans are to be paid in full immediately upon death, further cutting into a billionaire's cash holdings.

"Most billionaires have their value tied up in hard assets and maybe don't have so much cash immediately available for such a big hit," Frances said.

Frances said that the annual premium is in "the low, single digits of millions of dollars." He said the insurance companies benefit from the deal by immediately investing the premium, and their risk is if the billionaire dies too soon.

Frances wouldn't disclose the billionaire's age.

Several billionaires have connections to Frances' firm, including Google Chairman Eric Schmidt and Palantir Technologies co-founder Joe Lonsdale. Frances declined to discuss identity of the policyholder. Elon Musk, the founder of Paypal, Tesla Motors and other startups, declined to discuss with the San Jose Mercury News whether he was the policyholder.

Forbes reports that California can lay claim to 111 billionaires, with about a third of them considered high-tech investors.


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If brake account is accurate, dealer dropped the ball

I have a 2003 Buick Rendezvous. After the dealer did a brake job, the red "Brake" warning light on the dash came on, along with an audible alarm. The dealer said they didn't cause it, don't know why it's doing it and don't know how to fix it. They said I could disconnect the wire to the radio speaker but they would not do this for me.

Really? Even without hearing both sides of the story, it's hard for me to believe an authorized dealer would suggest a car owner ignore a brake warning light and audible warning signal. Beyond this, how a dealer could tell you they don't know what or why the warning light is on without checking the car is just as questionable.

Typically, there are three reasons the red "Brake" warning light comes on: low brake fluid level in the reservoir, the parking brake still engaged or a problem with the hydraulic brake system.

The dealer should have checked fluid level in the brake master cylinder reservoir, checked that mechanical components of the parking brake or its electrical switch are not sticking and, most important, scanned for any brake system, ABS or TCS (traction control system) fault codes.

For the dealer to have serviced the brake system, then deny causing the brake warning light to illuminate without any investigation and to suggest that you ignore the light and disable the audible warning is, frankly, almost unbelievable.

My daughter has a 2004 Saturn Ion that has a problem starting when overnight temperatures drop to zero or below. She turns the key and it just goes "Click, click, click," or starts to turn over, then stops. She leaves it sit for 15-20 minutes and then it starts right away. During warm weather it starts fine. Can you help?

Check the battery terminals, connections and cables. The "Click, click, click" is typically a sign that the battery is weak or connections are so poor that not enough amperage reaches the starter motor to crank over the engine. The electrical resistance through poor connections during several starting attempts may actually warm up the connections and battery enough to enable an engine start.

Load-test the battery itself. An aged battery operating in subzero temperatures may well be the culprit.

My granddaughter has a 2008 Chevy Uplander with 65,500 miles. In early January during a nice spell of weather that exposed some of our famous potholes, I hit one. Shortly after that the "Service ABS System," "Service Traction System" and "Service Stability System" warning lights came on in a blinking rotation. Because the weather has been so bad recently, I'm hoping to get some advice on what to look for before crawling under the car. The brakes work fine and I'm still driving the car.

Have a shop plug in a scan tool and identify the specific C-series DTC fault codes relating to this issue. The most likely cause is a damaged wheel speed sensor or harness. The information gathered by these sensors and fed to the electronic brake control module determines if ABS or TCS function is appropriate. If the signal from one or more wheel-speed sensors is absent or inaccurate, a fault code is generated, the systems are disabled and warning lights illuminate.

You probably won't have to crawl under the car. The scan tool should identify which wheel speed sensors are at fault. You can access the sensors and their harnesses by removing the specific wheel in question.

Paul Brand, author of "How to Repair Your Car," is an automotive troubleshooter, driving instructor and former race-car driver. Readers may write to him at: Star Tribune, 425 Portland Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. 55488 or via email at paulbrand@startribune.com. Leave a daytime phone number.


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Coders launch careers

A local training company is churning out a new crop of developers to help staff rapidly growing tech companies starving for talent.

"We take them from absolute novice to hireable junior developer," said Dan Pickett, co-founder of Launch Academy, a full-time, 10-week crash course in Web development.

"There's just such a strong demand for engineering talent in Boston."

Launch Academy, tucked in a nondescript Chinatown building, is in the middle of its fourth class of "launchers," people who have decided they want to go all-in and become software engineers.

"Our goal is to teach them every aspect of Web development," Pickett said.

Students, who pay $12,000 in tuition, tackle daily assignments and challenges to acquire the skills to become fully functioning Web developers.

Pickett said 94 percent of the summer and fall graduates have found jobs in software development, with an average salary of $65,000.

"They look at our program, that is expensive, but in relative comparison is a real savings, and has a real clear return on investment," Pickett said.

The average salary for a software engineer in Boston, according to job-tracking site Glassdoor.com, is $75,000.

"At the end of the day it's an investment," said Julissa Jansen, who gave up her job at a nonprofit to enroll in Launch Academy. "You're hoping once you graduate you get a job that will make up for all that I paid for."

Even with high starting wages, finding good talent is hard, employers said.

"It's been really, really tough to find talented individuals," said Jeremy Barron, a vice president for Cambridge-based 3PlayMedia.

"These are jobs that are available now and we companies can't find people to fill them."

Keith Webber, a former tech recruiter who is a current Launch Academy student, has already seen the demand for engineers.

"The demand for developers is so high that every single tech company is hiring, no matter what," Webber said.

At Launch Academy, students are gambling that they will land one of these prime jobs after graduating.

At the end of each 10-week session, Launch Academy holds a career day, inviting local companies to interview graduates.

Ryan Grimard, vice

president of engineering at AdHarmonics, said the company is about to offer a job to a Launch Academy grad for the sixth time.

"They basically just spent 12 hours a day, six-plus days a week, trying to learn as fast as they can and grasp as much engineering knowledge as possible," Grimard said.


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BostonĂ¢€™s winning war vs. bedbugs

Boston seems to be slowly winning its battle against bedbugs more than a decade after the scourge broke out.

The number of complaints about the tiny, blood-sucking pests has dropped 16 percent, from 410 in 2012 to 344 last year, the Department of Inspectional Services said.

"A lot of the decrease in cases is due to education," said John Meaney, director of ISD's Environmental Services Unit. "A lot of companies now have bedbug specialties. A general pest-control company won't be able to do it."

Although now-banned pesticide DDT all but eliminated bedbugs by the end of World War II, they re-emerged more than 10 years ago with a vengeance.

"Bedbugs are equal-
opportunity pests," said Jack Tracy, principal health inspector at the Boston Public Health Commission. "They don't care if you're rich or poor. They don't transmit disease, but they're a public health nuisance."

One of the worst cases Tracy said he has ever seen was reported by a disabled veteran whose Mattapan home became infested last June after a relative with a severe case of bedbugs came to stay with her.

"I had lived in my house for 20 years and never had this problem before," said the 47-year-old woman, who asked that her name be withheld. "It got so bad, I didn't even want to lie in my bed. I was going to go to a shelter just so that I could get some sleep."

An exterminator told her it would cost at least $3,500 to get rid of the insects, which she couldn't afford.

So she found Tracy and Meaney, who contacted the New England Pest Control Association to see if any of its members would be willing to do the work for free.

Last week, HouseWorks in Newton took apart the woman's bed and emptied her drawers and closets. A Malden laundry service put her clothes and bed linens in industrial dryers. And Environmental Health Services in Norwood heated the home to as much as 148 degrees for up to six hours to kill the insects and eggs.

My Brother's Keeper, a Christian ministry in Easton and Dartmouth, donated new mattresses as well as new bed linens.

"We wanted to give back to someone who had given to our country," said George Williams, staff entomologist at Environmental Health Services.

The Inspectional Services Department estimates the work totaled more than $5,000, but cost the veteran nothing.

"It was just a blessing that God put all of these people in my life at a time when I was really in need," she said.


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Will missing jet prompt change in aviation system?

NEW YORK — The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 has exposed wide gaps in how the world's airlines — and their regulators — operate. But experts warn this isn't likely to be one of those defining moments that lead to fundamental changes.

For financial and technological reasons, and because of issues tied to national sovereignty, the status quo is expected to prevail in the way passports are checked, aircraft are tracked at sea and searches are coordinated.

In an age of constant connectedness, it's almost inconceivable to lose a 209-foot-long airplane for more than a week, or be in the dark about what happened onboard around the time it went missing.

The reality is that large portions of the globe don't have radar coverage. Over oceans, pilots fill in those gaps by radioing air traffic controllers at routine intervals with position updates. And while planes record sounds in the cockpit as well as speed, altitude, fuel flow and the positions of flaps, that information isn't shared with anyone on the ground. Crash investigators only get access to the data on the recorders after combing through the wreckage.

Numerous experts have said it is time to update tracking abilities and use satellite links to provide real-time feeds on the operation of planes and conversations within the cockpit.

However, transmitting data by satellite from all 80,000 daily flights worldwide wouldn't be cheap.

Airlines made an average of $4.13 in profits per passenger last year and $2.05 in 2012, according to International Air Transport Association, the industry's trade group. Any additional costs would eat into those slim profit margins. Some experts say planes don't crash frequently enough — let alone disappear — to justify the cost.

If such information were to be streamed live, there would be major concerns about privacy says Robert Clifford, a personal injury lawyer in Chicago who has been involved in several aviation lawsuits.

"Once it's broadcast, the data from a plane would essentially be considered public access material — something that aircraft manufacturers, pilot unions, operators and even accident investigators don't want," Clifford says.

There's also a question of who would receive and control that data. There are concerns that an airline, plane maker or government worried about its reputation could meddle with the information.

"You can't assume that there would not be strong economic interests to tamper with information," says James E. Hall, former chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board.

A compromise solution is to create deployable black boxes — data recorders similar to the voice and data recorders currently in planes. During a catastrophic event, they would break away from the tail, have their own homing devices and ideally be found quickly. But given the confusion over the Malaysia Airlines jet's flight path, it's unclear if these boxes could help.

Then there's the search: The Malaysian government has been widely criticized for how long the search has taken and for its release of contradictory information.

So why aren't American investigators, who have a long history of dealing with plane crashes, taking charge? NTSB investigators and experts from Boeing are on the scene providing technical assistance. So are U.S. military ships and planes. But politics and customs dictate that everybody takes a back seat to the local government.

The practice dates back to a December 1944 convention on international civil aviation in Chicago. Many of today's rules of the sky were formed at that meeting, including one that puts the country where a crash occurs in charge of the search and investigation. If the airplane is registered in another country — which isn't the case here — that government is entitled to appoint observers to be present at the inquiry.

Hall, the former NTSB chairman who now heads the law firm Hall & Associates, says it is time for the International Civil Aviation Organization — part of the United Nations — to set up an international team of investigation professionals.

"We can't permit a situation to continue where we don't have competent, independent people in charge of an investigation from day one," Hall says.

However, Kenneth J. Button, director of the Center for Transportation, Policy, Operations and Logistics at George Mason University, notes that even U.S. investigators have made mistakes in past disasters. Further, he can't imagine countries such as the U.S. ceding the investigatory powers they currently have to some international group.

"I think the Malaysian authorities may be unfairly blamed for a little of this," Button says. "They're getting a lot of information in and are handling it as best they can. Similar issues have arisen in most other countries."

Flight 370's disappearance also uncovered another lapse: passenger passports were not checked against Interpol's database of 40 million stolen or lost travel documents. The fact is, most countries don't run passports through the international policy agency's computer system.

"It is not extremely unusual," says Rafi Ron, a former chief of security at Tel Aviv's airport and now head of New Age Security Solutions. To run the checks, countries would have to update software and link computer systems. "We've left a substantial loophole. There is only one thing behind it: cost."

Without a computer link, it is hard to tell if a passport is stolen or a counterfeit. Ticket and gate agents don't have much training is spotting fakes.

"Airline personnel only glance at the name to see that it matches the boarding pass and that the person presenting the passport looks similar to the person in front of them," says Douglas R. Laird, former director of security at Northwest Airlines and now head of Laird & Associates, Inc. "With a long line of folks this becomes a real issue. They need to board the plane as soon as possible."

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Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.


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Dubai refinancing deal reached on $20 billion owed

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Dubai has reached an agreement with Abu Dhabi and the United Arab Emirates' central bank to extend repayment of $20 billion of debt it incurred in the lead up to the global financial crisis, the country's official news agency reported Sunday.

Dubai built up more than $100 billion of dollars in debt to local and international lenders during a rapid building boom that turned the Arabian city from a fishing village into a bustling global business hub with a skyline full of modern skyscrapers. Despite its ambitious plans to keep growing and building, Dubai struggled to repay its loans as the global financial crisis battered its economy and property market.

Dubai is one of seven emirates in the UAE, whose economy is forecast to grow by around 4.5 percent this year. Abu Dhabi is home to nearly all of the 42-year-old federation's vast oil reserves and much of its wealth.

The UAE's official WAM news agency reported that the latest deal gives Dubai five more years to repay the debt at a fixed interest rate of 1 percent. The term is renewable.

The debt consists of a $10 billion loan from the oil-rich emirate of Abu Dhabi, which is also the UAE's capital city, and another $10 billion in central bank bonds.

WAM reported that the agreements are part of "continued efforts to boost the competitiveness of the U.A.E. economy on both regional and international levels."

Dubai has made considerable progress in sorting out its financial crisis since 2009. Mega projects that were either put on hold, significantly slowed or not initiated during the financial crisis are coming back to life again.

Many of Dubai's state-linked companies remain heavily indebted. In recent months, some companies have announced plans to pay back some of their debt ahead of schedule.


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