Gear for Sale
- Atlantis a2384yl anchor stake(US $51.54)
- Kwik tek ahtr-12bl airhead two rider bling tube rope(US $31.99)
- Johnson evinrude 200-225-250 hp ficht 586492 — stator assy(US $212.48)
- Atlantis a7459pfw lanyard with whistle - sea-doo - black(US $33.20)
- Kwik tek a-2 grapnel pwc anchor system(US $49.99)
- Atlantis a2382 pwc anchor & bag - navy(US $67.85)
One Lap of the Web: Motorcycles in revolt
Mon, 21 Apr 2014-- Danny Lyon photographed the Chicago Outlaws at the height of the counterculture: Following the gang on his Triumph, Lyon published his candid, brutal shots in 1968 with the title "The Bikeriders." Vice explains why Lyon's book mattered: He rode with them, documented their personal conversations and ultimately glorified the gang and their "existential struggle to be free." The book is due for re-release by the Aperture Foundation. -- Kim Boyle built this gorgeous custom 1978 BMW R100/7 on a shoestring budget, proving that you can't put a price on talent and taste. The as-yet-unnamed bike wears an old-school BMW roundel and some lovely details, including a headlight screen, a seat from a Ducati Monster and a custom 2-into-1 exhaust welded from 32 pieces of tubing.
Now Porsche catches the SUV Coupe bug with plans for a Cayenne Coupe
Tue, 06 May 2014Porsche are planning a coupe version of the next Cayenne (current Turbo S pictured) No one thought the BMW X6 would sell; after all, who would want an SUV with a compromised coupe roofline? But it seems plenty of buyers do – the BMW X6 sells at twice the rate BMW predicted – which is why we’re getting an X6 clone in the new Mercedes GL Coupe – likely to be the Mercedes MLC – heading for a Mercedes showroom near you sometime soon after being previewed by the Mercedes Concept Coupe. Now, Porsche are apparently playing the SUV Coupe game with plans for a coupe version of the next generation Cayenne in 2018, according to Autocar, to make sure BMW and Mercedes don’t have things all their own way.
How Google's autonomous car navigates city streets
Tue, 29 Apr 2014Google's self-driving car has been on the road for five years now, at various levels of autonomy. From the ease and relative serenity of California's arrow-straight highways, the car drove hundreds of thousands of miles with a greater level of concentration and mastery than the wandering attention spans of humans could accomplish. In 2012, Google shifted from the freeways to the cities, navigating a far more convoluted set of challenges: the slow-speed chaos that comes with any city, any suburb, any place with people and cars in it.