Features include MSRP and dealer invoice prices, specifications and reviews, standard and optional equipment, and buying and leasing advice. Readers get access to toll-free car-buying service.
Quicken is money management software. It allows users to bank online, track 401K contributions and earnings, set up accounts and enter transactions, pay bills, and transfer funds. Users can also create reports to analyze finances and even develop a budget. Quicken is the most popular personal finance program available. Currently over 14 million people use Quicken to control their finances. The new features of Quicken X include expanded web capabilities, improved tax planning, a beefed up web site for financial planning, and a planning for the future feature that helps calculate mortgages, saving for college, buying a car, and retirement planning.
This buyer's guide presents MSRP and dealer invoice prices and reviews for new cars, and includes standard and optional equipment, specifications and reviews, and buying and leasing advice. A toll-free car buying service is also offered.
Thoroughly revised and updated for 2002, the guide that has helped thousands of car and truck buyers choose the right vehicle is now better than ever. Includes full-color photos plus easy-to-read comparison charts, graphs, and specifications.
With the passing of acclaimed artist Michael Paul Smith comes a final printing - each book numbered in tribute. Smith's Elgin Park is a lot of things: a mid-century utopia, a fantastical world, and an optical illusion. This imaginative town was composed entirely of miniatures, delighting audiences worldwide when his photo series went viral, attracting more than 90 million views on Flickr.
A legend in the car industry reveals the philosophy that's starting to turn General Motors around. In 2001, General Motors hired Bob Lutz out of retirement with a mandate to save the company by making great cars again. He launched a war against penny pinching, office politics, turf wars, and risk avoidance. After declaring bankruptcy during the recession of 2008, GM is back on track thanks to its embrace of Lutz's philosophy. When Lutz got into the auto business in the early sixties, CEOs knew that if you captured the public's imagination with great cars, the money would follow. The car guys held sway, and GM dominated with bold, creative leadership and iconic brands like Cadillac, Buick, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, GMC, and Chevrolet. But then GM's leadership began to put their faith in analysis, determined to eliminate the "waste" and "personality worship" of the bygone creative leaders. Management got too smart for its own good. With the bean counters firmly in charge, carmakers (and much of American industry) lost their single-minded focus on product excellence. Decline followed. Lutz's commonsense lessons (with a generous helping of fascinating anecdotes) will inspire readers at any company facing the bean counter analysis-paralysis menace.
Discusses how to set up defenses against hackers and online con artists, encryption methods, anonymizer software, spam, viruses, identity theft, firewalls, and ways to safeguard online purchases.