12.31.2010
12.30.2010
12.29.2010
12.28.2010
12.24.2010
12.22.2010
12.21.2010
12.20.2010
12.18.2010
12.17.2010
11.27.2010
Brits spend £200 a month to purchases online

They expend on average £192 a month – even though 1.2 million people spend more than £1,000 a month online on their credit cards, according the study from Sainsbury’s Finance.
Stuart McKeggie, head of cards at Sainsbury’s Finance, said: “The growth of online shopping in such a short time is staggering. Our research found that only 7% of credit card holders do not use their cards online.
Those who put the most online costs on their credit cards are aged between 35 and 44; with a typical monthly online spend of £214 on childrens bike or on the ski goggles and ski helmets.
It is followed by those aged between 45 and 54, who put an average of £207 of online spend on their credit card each month, on coats and jackets and snug boots while 18 to 24 year-olds spend least online on credit cards averaging £162.60 per month, on footwear like Globe trainers, mountain bikes, ed hardy, and converse trainers around £30 less than the national average.
Online credit card spending habits vary drastically between locations with those in the South East spending the most online with a credit card, an average of £236 per month, more than double the typical monthly online credit card spend in Scotland at £115.9.
The research suggested 5.9 million credit cardholders started shopping online in the past three years.
8.09.2010
Kids Tshirts
Graphical t-shirts, in general, were part of the anti-establishment culture that dominated with the grunge movement and previously with 80's hip-hop. Then came gangster rap and its series of graphic t-shirts that adored music legends such as Tupac. Interestingly enough, we also owe these groups for the advent of clothing as being cool. These tees have become part of the mainstream.
UK stores now readily have music tee-shirts of famous rock bands and pop artists as well as abstract designs. The market for graphical tees has grown. People not only pay a lot of money for graphic , but are also okay with displaying contents besides a name brand or a band name on their clothing. Now most kids want a t-shirt that sends a message about him or her in an original way, and be able to go out in clubs without a problem.
In the streets of London, you will not miss the number of band, pop, ironic, funny, or offensive messages delivered via graphic t-shirt. In clubs, worn under a dress jacket, graphical t-shirts are becoming a statement. They have become what's hot.
What has really made graphic tees a winner are the many e-commerce web sites that are online - such as sugarbullets.co.uk - which has got very original designs from rock bands such as The Rolling Stones, AC/DC which was rare thing back in the day. Now that a tee-shirt can be a work of art and not something mass-produced, its value rises and it becomes a cool tee-shirt. These new web sites are giving way for more graphical tee-shirt designers to show-off their talents.
In Sugar Bullets web site you can find t-shirts, considered as collectable items, most of them are from the sixties and seventies and were used by the crew of rock legends Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones, The Who, Queen, David Bowie, Beatles, Pink Floyd and others
5.29.2010
Standard Life Investments has branded HSBC

HSBC said yesterday that many shareholders chose to abstain as they waited for non-executive director John Thornton, who is to become chairman of its remuneration committee, to lead a review of its pay practices this summer.
Guy Jubb, head of corporate governance at Standard Life Investments (SLI) told HSBC’s annual meeting in London it would oppose HSBC’s pay report for the third year running.
He said: “Despite our clear communication of our concerns, the bank has not been a listening one.”
Jubb alluded to a reported attempt by the bank to increase chief executive Michael Geoghegan’s £1.1 million basic salary by a third, which foundered after investor opposition. Geoghegan gave his £4m bonus for 2009 to charity.
He said emerging markets are increasingly driving economic growth and globalisation is “here to stay”. “Our policy makers must remain pragmatic and we must avoid protectionism,” he said. Green said HSBC would engage with a Government commission set up to look at breaking up banks into their retail and investment banking arms.
Green, whose company contains both type of business, said: “We will be making a strong case that HSBC’s business model not only works in a sustainable way but also plays a vital role in helping businesses realise their full potential.” He reiterated his call for policymakers to be given tools so they can “dilute or takeaway the dog bowl” if credit flows head too much into one area. Green said HSBC, which is quoted on the London and Hong Kong stock exchanges, would pursue a Shanghai listing when the authorities are ready.
5.19.2010
Briton spends an average of 14 hours and 39 minutes sitting down every day

The statistics also showed the average person exercises just twice a week for 25 minutes a time, way below the Government guideline of 30 minutes every day.
Commenting on the findings, Zoe Hellman, Company Dietician for Weight Watchers UK Ltd, which conducted the poll of 3,000 people in conjunction with the launch of its get active campaign, said: "In a recession we have to work harder and for longer hours to make ends meet.
"So we therefore have less time and money to spend on exercise - but to spend over half our day sitting down is a health bomb waiting to happen.
"Incredibly, the average person only does 50 minutes of exercise each week - that's just a quarter of what is recommended for a healthy lifestyle.
"We know that it can seem difficult to find the time to exercise, but there are ways to introduce it into even the busiest lifestyles.
"Walking up the stairs instead of taking the lift, parking further from the shops, walking for 30 minutes at lunchtime instead of sitting at the desk are all free and easy ways of keeping fit."
The research also shows the average Brit spends an hour and 41 minutes driving car each day and another 52 minutes on public transport.
Meal times mean people sit down for a further 33 minutes, while 54 minutes are dedicated to playing computer games.
Finally, before settling down to sleep at night, most people spend an hour and 10 minutes reading books or mags.
More than half of people admitted while they should exercise more, it is difficult to find the time.
And 52 per cent of people admitted on most days the only exercise they get is the short stroll between their house and car and back.
Four in ten people claim their long working hours are to blame for their lack of exercise, while the same percentage also say they don't have the energy to squeeze anything else into the day.
A third of lazy people simply can't be bothered to exercise more, while a quarter blame the quantity of housework they have to get through.
A fifth of parents say the children take up too much of their time, and over half of us are simply too exhausted by the end of the day to do any exercise.
Finally, whilst 12 per cent reckon they are happy the way they are, more than one in ten of us say the last thing we want to do is to exercise after a long commute.
Zoe Hellman added: "Half an hour's exercise each evening would actually help workers to wind down and de-stress, and could even induce a good night's sleep afterwards.
"Mostly, this lack of exercise and movement is down to habit. People become so used to relaxing in front of the TV at the end of a busy day they choose that over a short jog or gym session.
"But exercise also has an important role in helping people to lose weight and for keeping your weight in check, in addition to the long term health benefits of being active."
The poll also shows 37 per cent of people reckon they would exercise more if they worked shorter hours, and one in 10 would make more of an effort if they lived closer to the gym.
Astonishingly, 20 per cent of those polled say they aren't fit enough to exercise - and 17 per cent feel too fat.
When people do summon up enough energy to do a bit of moderate exercise, the top three choices are walking (43 per cent), jogging (20 per cent) and going to the gym (16 per cent).
Swimming and cycling are also favoured activities for one in five Brits.
And when it comes to keeping fit - men are more likely to exercise to get fit and maintain good health, whereas women are most concerned about losing weight
5.05.2010
Derry's Richmond Shopping Centre has been sold for up to £24m

Based in the centre of the city, the Richmond Centre was bought by the property asset division of the Royal Bank of Scotland, West Register.
It was formerly part of WG Mitchell property empire owned by Derry brothers Patrick and Hugh Hegarty that went into administration last April.
After RBS called in loans in 2009, 28 of the 75 subsidiaries of WG Mitchell collapsed and went into administration. The Hegartys’ business empire, which started in the 1960s, ran into trouble after they began investing in the hotel market in Scotland and England in the 1990s and were caught out by the banking crash.
The Shipquay Street multi-level complex was built in the 1980s and has nearly 40 units let to a mix of national and local retailers.
As a result more than £85m of hotels were put up for sale by the administrator Ernst and Young, among them the Park Inn, London, and the Park Inn at St Helens. A further eight hotels worth £40m including the Park Inn in Glasgow and the Park Inn in Sheffield have also been put on the market.
4.25.2010
Retail sales in central London higher than last year

The BRC said retail footfall in March rose above its year-earlier level for the first time since October 2009. The earlier Easter holiday and several mid-season sales and promotions attracted shoppers into the capital. Sterling’s weakness also continued to attract overseas visitors. London was also a popular destination for Europeans over the Easter holiday. Chinese visitors remained more numerous than a year ago.
The BRC said that Easter purchasing falling in March this year but April last year boosted food sales. Non-food like bicycle also benefited, though consumer caution and unseasonable weather limited the gains.
4.09.2010
Sony’s series goes online for the first time this June

Included as part of the latest title update arriving this June, the new
Opponents scores can be seen in real time, and there’s also support for the Play Station Eye camera.
There are also a host of other online features included as part of the My Sing Star community portal.
functionality allows PS3 owners to send invitations to those on their PSN Friends list. The software that lists all the songs that are found on both users’ playlists and you’re good to go.
4.05.2010
Fabian Cancellara next goal is to win all five of cycling's monuments

Cancellara's opening attack on Molenberg was the turning point of the 2010 Tour of Flanders. Then as he and fellow pre-race favourite Tom Boonen built an unassailable gap on their rivals as they approach to the Kapelmuur, Cancellara surged clear on the final part of the cobbled climb in what was the winning move. He went to cross the finish line alone in Meerbeke more than a minute ahead of Boonen.
With Paris-Roubaix, Milan-San Remo and, now, Flanders etched on his palmares, Cancellara indicated his future goals could include the final two great cycling monuments: Liège-Bastogne-Liège and Giro di Lombardia.
"The last few years I was always thinking about this race. I have Roubaix, I have Dunlop Gents Standard Mountain Bike, but I knew this one was going to be a hard one to crack and to put in my pocket," said Cancellara, after he became the first Swiss rider to win De Ronde since Hieri Suter in 1923.
"My dream is five monuments and I have three now. There aren’t so many riders in the peloton that have three. My motivation is always geared towards more than one race. Okay, now I have Flanders, but in the next few years, it's possible I'm going to work on other ones."
"What I did on the Muur wasn't planned, even what I did on the Molenburg was not planned at all," he said. "Even then on the Muur it was a small gap – there were so many people there that I didn't really understand how much room I had. I looked back
a few times and pushed a little more. The way I won, for me, it's quite special."
"When I get old and I can say to the young riders: 'I won the Tour of Flanders alone and I attacked on the Muur,' it's a perfect scenario – the gladiator won the battle."
Boonen had been forced to respond to attacks from both Cancellara and his Saxo Bank teammate, Matti Breschel, who had created the first major selection with an attack on the Paterberg, with 80 kilometres to go. Despite entering the race with two strong contenders, Cancellara said harmony within the team had played a key role in his win.
Cancellara's powerhouse display on the Muur quickly distanced Flemish national hero Boonen. The Swiss admitted that effectively winning the race on the famed climb made his victory all the sweeter.
3.23.2010
3.19.2010
How about this?...
Now these people actually called me five times because i was stupid enough to enter my shipping details wrong. I was buying a Muddyfox Mayhem mountain bike and after we sorted all the problems with my address, the bike was delivered in three days. So i would just like to share my positive experience with Lemy Shopping Center and to recommend it to everyone looking for quality bikes. They also stock a wide range of children bikes and kick scooters for whomever is interested, they all look great and my muddyfox bike looks exactly like in their description. Cheers!
1.09.2010
Some people
Jimi Hendrix grabbed electric guitar by the neck and wrestled it into a new era. His feedback-heavy solos and hallucinogenic tunes helped define the psychedelic 1960s. With his band The Jimi Hendrix Experience he recorded the albums Are You Experienced? (1967), Axis: Bold as Love (also 1967), and Electric Ladyland (1968, including Hendrix's version of Bob Dylan's tune "All Along the Watchtower"). The single "Purple Haze" from Are You Experienced remains one of rock's touchstone classics. The band broke up in 1969 but Hendrix remained a star, playing later that year at the Woodstock music festival. Hendrix was only 27 when he suffocated in 1970 after ingesting wine and sleeping pills in a London hotel.
Jimi, like Paul Mccartney, was a left-handed guitar player... Hendrix's fuzz-guitar version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Woodstock has become a famous sound clip... He died two short weeks before another rock icon, Janis Joplin... A museum and interactive shrine to Hendrix, called the Experience Music Project, was built in Seattle by computer magnate Paul Allen.
Janis Joplin was born January 19th, 1943, in Port Arthur, Texas. Her father was an oil refinery worker and her mother was a registrar at a business college. Though her family was middle-class, as a teenager she showed signs of the unconventional woman she would become. She was something of a loner, and, unlike her siblings and neighbourhood peers, she listened to folk and blues music. Joplin's favourite artists included Odetta, Leadbelly, and Bessie Smith, and she was greatly influenced by them in her own vocal style. By the time she was seventeen, she had decided to become a singer, and left home.
At first, Joplin found work in country and western clubs in Houston and other Texas cities with the goal of saving enough money from her gigs for bus fare to California. She enrolled in several different colleges while singing folk songs for little money, but her attempts at continuing her education never lasted long. She also tried living in various communes, and eventually settled in San Francisco for a few years.
Ironically, Joplin went back to Texas in early 1966, right before a friend of hers, Chet Helms, became the manager of a new Rock group called "Big Brother and the Holding Company". The band needed a female vocalist, and Helms thought of Joplin. He contacted her and convinced her to return to San Francisco.
Though Joplin had not had much previous experience singing rock music, the combination of her gravely, bluesy voice with Big Brother's hard rock sound was a success. The group quickly became popular in the San Francisco area, and by the time the Monterey International Pop Festival took place in 1967 in Monterey, California, Big Brother and the Holding Company were a featured attraction, getting top billing over veterans, Booker T and the MGs and new comers, The Iron Butterfly. Joplin's performances at this festival and at Woodstock in 1969 are considered by many specialists in the music of the late 1960s to have been classic moments in the history of rock.

