Friday, August 2, 2013

Godin 5th Avenue Acoustic

The laminated, Canadian wild cherry, godin 5th avenue acoustic guitar is a flashback to the 50s in looks, but has been designed to play like the guitars of today. The 5th Avenue has more projection and volume in the low and mid tones than original archtop acoustic guitars, giving it the sounds that you want for yesterday's music, but more importantly, the music of today as well. It will play exactly how you want it to, but it won't cost you anything near as much as you would expect. The quality of this archtop can't be enied and the price will leave you wondering how you got such a steal.

Classic Bose Wireless Soundlink

Ever since I purchased my first real iPod, that first one with the video on it that had 80 GB of storage space, I have had some sort of Bose mobile speaker system. While the technologies of the mobile devices have moved on considerably since then, so have the Bose mobile speaker systems. When I first started out it almost always had to be docked so every time I went on to the newest technology I was risking the loss of my great Bose system designed for such devices. As you can imagine this could get a little expensive for those of us that wanted to bring our portable music studio to every party with them, which is exactly what it was like with 10,000 songs and a Bose system. You can't beat the sound and the size of showing up at a party with it and limitless music.

Now we have much better tech with products like the classic bose soundlink wireless mobile speaker at guitar center. This is where you can connect Bluetooth devices instead of docking. Making it much more versatile to work with all your mobile devices that support Bluetooth. Tablets, laptops, and your music devices. Portable DJ Booths just keep getting easier for the party traveler.

July was Quite the Month for Auto Sales

The August 1st reports for company sales were popping in at record highs for all kinds of car manufacturers. In light of a 50 straight month increase in manufacturing numbers the auto manufacturers were pulling in record numbers as well. You know what that means...well eventually...in a few years. That housing should start trending upwards quite a bit again finally I suspect and the cashiers nc real estate will get some more of my business.

The AIADA reported that July 2013 was a successful month for the U.S. auto market as all of the largest manufacturers saw double-digit gains. Subaru led the way with a 42.9 percent improvement from July 2012, thanks to record sales of the Forester, Outback, and Impreza. Honda sales were up 21.3 percent, Nissan’s were up 16.8 percent, and Toyota saw an improvement of 16.2 percent to outsell Ford for the first time since March 2010. Customers had plenty of reasons to buy in July, including rising incentives. According to Edmunds.com, incentives were up 10 percent from July 2012 for an average of $2,463 per vehicle.