BMW, the German luxury automaker, unveiled its first mass-produced all-electric car, to the world on Monday. The BMW i3 flaunts the signature BMW kidney-shaped grille; but what's underneath the hood is unlike its more traditional siblings. The vehicle …
OneMedical seems to be positioning itself as “concierge medicine for the masses” – an “affordable luxury,” as Howard Schultz of Starbucks Starbucks might put it. For a yearly … (I will discuss health and wellness gadgets in a future post. Update: here.).
West Midlands Police recover stolen top cars worth £2.5m. More than 100 stolen cars worth £2.5 million have been recovered in a West Midlands Police crackdown on luxury vehicle theft. Tweet. A special unit has been set up to … Most of the cars were …
Nonetheless, pondering about all the luxury presents, clothes and toys this privileged baby will be showered with is mildly entertaining, including what baby gadgets his parents and nannies will have at their disposal during these first few months …
After the thunderous success of Minority Report a decade ago, HUDs (Head-up Displays) have become very popular with luxury, and high-end cars. Now, you can get these in your car too at affordable prices, thanks to Garmin's newest offering. … It also …
… starts, Hawke's Point luxury self-catering apartments in Carbis Bay, on the Cornish coast near St Ives, has open-plan layouts with floor-to-ceiling sea views, white French antique-style furniture, Villeroy & Boch crockery and Bose and Nintendo Wii …
Investors were worried that its ad business was not migrating to mobile gadgets as quickly as its user base. Facebook urged patience. In the April-June quarter, Facebook derived 41% of its ad revenue from mobile advertising. That is up from zero in the …
If an ordinary image is worth a thousand words, then this one deserves a tome: a Thai Buddhist monk, fully decked out in saffron robes, reclining on the plush leather seats of a luxury jet, gold-tinted aviator glasses framing the familiar shaved head …
A survey by the online travel agent found that using gadgets eats up two days of a holiday on average for 90% of Brits, whether it's using social media or taking 'selfies'. The online study, which included responses from 2,000 adults plus fieldwork and …