Archive for June, 2009

Interview with Brian Miller Vice President of Midwest Precision, Inc.

Posted in Uncategorized on June 29, 2009 by future man

what is your personal history/experience in CNC and manufacturing:
I have worked in sheet metal manufacturing for about 16 years. 5 of those years were as a machine operator of cnc punch and laser equipment, with some manual machines for good measure. From there, I forayed into the CAD/CAM programming of those machines, along with cnc water jets, as well. I have been in sales and management for about 8 years, now. Through the course of selling our services to OEM’s and other contract manufacturers, I have seen most methods of manufacturing products available. The latest process I witnessed was the rotational molding of plastics.

What is it like running a small business in the manufacturing sector:
I really enjoy manufacturing. Being a manufacturer is not what I aspired to be when I was a boy, but my dad tricked me into working for him (not really!) and it turned out to be in my blood. Now, I just naturally begin dissecting things when I look at them.

In today’s economy, however, manufacturing is in a downturn. Unless you are heavily associated with certain markets, such as the military or infrastructure, you are experiencing some heartburn, right now.

how do you feel the current economy and world affairs will effect manufacturing in america?
The economy is not very good for manufacturing as a whole. There are certain fields or markets that still have requirements, such as the Department of Defense (DOD), Medical Supplies, and Infrastructure, to name a few. What usually happens is that the companies that were not as efficient as they should have been will go away, and those companies that survive will be stronger and have a period of growth. I guess that’s the free market at work, but it is certainly not painless, even for those that survive. We have had to lay off some workers and it is hard for those on either side of the lay off.

what is some advice you have for people getting started in your field
It depends on what level you are starting. If you have never been in manufacturing before, a good vocational school is a good place to start. A person could get exposure to various areas of the field; such as manual machinist, cnc machinist, sheet metal mechanic, plant operations, manufacturing engineering, process engineering, etc.
If that is not an option, I would interview at a manufacturing facility that offered a documented training program while working. Documentation is important because it provides the structure for goals and objectives concerning both education and pay. There are companies that are willing to train the right people. Those companies will need to have evidence of your reliability, such as a good list of references. They will want to know that there investment in training will have a return. Some will even require contracts with reimbursement clauses.

what are some tips you have for cad programming
As every program system is different, I will address methodology. As a job shop, one of our challenges is that we have to keep track of customer names, part numbers, and revision levels. To over come this, be sure to use a good filing system, if your system does not use a database for its shape files and coded files. Use a good naming convention for your files, as well. If you use certain operating software on the machines, it may relegate you to a very simple and limiting naming system (such as 4 numbers, like Fanuc.) Keeping your files orderly will facilitate your ECO’s (Engineering Change Orders) or whatever documented process you have for handling part revisions when they happen (not if.)
I have taught several people how to program machines that they have never operated. Although this is not the ideal situation, it is most easily overcome by having the programmer shadow the operator as much as possible and when faced with new setups, always ask the operator how she or he would like to receive the file and ask their help in developing the program. An operator can kill a perfectly good program, if they are not on board with the approach.
If your CAD software offers the use of construction lines, use them. Plotting holes or part features by coordinates can be tedious, even for the most focused and methodical programmer. Construction lines help catch mistakes during the part building process and avoid reprogramming or even scrap.

What are some tips you have for gcode programming
I have only performed a little of this style of programming. Though I can read the code and write simple programs, my expertise is in CAD/CAM. I will say that ALL operators should be able to read their machine’s code. Being able to analyze a program “Matrix style”, or through reading the code on the screen, is essential for proper program vetting and operation.

What do people come to you for and why?
Our specialty is welded fabrications. We have focused on the CNC cutting for many years (laser, waterjet, and punching), but in Oklahoma, there is a lot of manufacturing. Where we used to be unique in our cutting solutions, there is now a laser on every corner. To compete, we have to do more than just cut the parts. We have to add value with such processes as forming, welding, installing hardware, paint or powder coating and packaging.

Do you have any experience with DIY projects,

I assume this is Do It Yourself? I don’t really have any experience with this.

what cad-cam software do you recommend and use and why
Our CAD/CAM systems include: SolidWorks, MetalSoft, SmartCAM, Trumpf’s ToPs 100, Mazak’s FG CAM and Smart System. We use SolidWorks for our 5-axis laser and checking any parts that we design, including fixtures for cutting, welding, or assembly. The other software is for our flat cutting machines. Although we use 3rd party software in some cases, I always recommend using the software that is either made specifically for the machine or recommended by the machine OEM. In the case of Trumpf’s ToPs laser software, we have seen a measurable increase in productivity due to ease of use and compatibility. Not only is it easier to use for our programmers, it is able to maximize all of the features of the machine. Prior to the acquisition of ToPs, our machine operators would start reworking the program, as soon as they got it. Even though the dimensional aspects of the program would be good, there were significant nuances to the cutting methods required to most efficiently cut a part.

what is the most challenging part you have made
Our very first 3D project for our 5-axis laser was the hardest part we have ever done. Called a spar, the part is an extruded tube shape that required slots and cut outs down the side, all at differing angles. It required several thousand dollars for a fixture just to orient and restrain the piece. In hind-sight, cutting our teeth on this project was not the best idea, but everything else was down hill from there!

Brian Miller
Vice President of
Midwest Precision, Inc.
Tulsa, OK
[link]

CNC and DIY Hand-Machined Musical Instruments

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on June 22, 2009 by future man

The first DIY solid body guitar made by Les Paul in the late thirties was so basic he called it “The Log.” Plagued with feedback and resonance issues trying to convert an acoustic guitar to an electric, Paul switched his focus to the solid body design, aided by a little bit of larceny. Late one night, he and a few friends stole a fence post. He attached some pickups and strings to it, plugged it into a phonograph and made history. When audience response to a man playing a fence post wasn’t quite ecstatic, he sawed an acoustic guitar in half and attached the sides to his log, and never looked back. Today, the original Log is in the Smithsonian. [http://invention.smithsonian.org/resources/online_articles_detail.aspx?id=346]

The guitar has come a long way since then, and involves far less fence post steeling. Dozens of companies emerged produced electric guitars for legendary rock bands like The Beatles to small time garage groups. Technical advances have affected all instrument making, even in the classical field: it is rare to find an artisan who will handmake a violin a la Stradivarius in the 21st century. Manufacturing equipment is the name of the game in instrument production, but the different between hand-operated machinery and CNC  machinery is a big question for musicians hoping for top quality instruments.

The Fender Example

The Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, the oldest electric guitar producer, opened a custom guitar shop in 1987. The demand for custom-made Fender guitars soon exploded, and in order to fill orders, the company turned to CNC machining for production. Because the CNC files can be saved and used later to fit specification, it allows Fender to produce bodies, necks, and other parts quickly, expertly, and with little variance. Traditionalists might be opposed to so-called “handmade” guitars being run through computer machining equipment, but, as Fender points out, even early guitars were machined using state of the art equipment available in the 1920s and 1930s.

Because Fender opened up to the new technology, they were able to corner a part of the custom-made guitar market before any of their competitors. But they were not the only ones to turn to CNC. CNC is very much the standard in custom guitar production, from small time hobbyists making their own axe, to entrepreneurial professionals marketing their services locally or through the internet. CNC machines can be very expensive, but the fact that they provide economy of space, materials and time make them desirable for different scales of operation.

The “Handmade” Option

For large operations like Fender’s, CNC is practically the only option. But for smaller craftsmen, hand operation can add to the sense of artisanship quality the customers are looking for. While no custom guitar producers are shaping wood by hand with a whittle, they are using hand-operated machines and their own eyes and talents to produce guitar bodies. The amount of focus, time and energy ensures a high quality instrument, but one which will take longer to produce. And while specificity and exactitude can’t be reproduced over and over by a human craftsman, the originality and uniqueness of each instrument is guaranteed. Many musicians look for the human care devoted to their instruments, and so talented luthiers (stringed-instrument makers) can charge high fees for their services.

These artisans, though, will never be able to parlay their custom talents to large scale operations. There is only so much time in a day, and CNC machining greatly speeds up an already long process. Making one custom guitar can take up to a year, even if CNC machines are involved, and dedication on the part of the custom manufacturer can increase if he is hand-machining.

Firebug Hacks: Security

Posted in Uncategorized on June 22, 2009 by future man

Using Firebug to better understand the web- click on images for full size.
Firebug is a plugin for Firefox that has revolutionized web development. For many it has come to replace the Web Developer plugin for Firefox. Someone who works in internet advertising/media or web development should understand how webpages work. This intro to Firebug will cover some basic and interesting features of the tool. There seems to be too much emphasis on link building plots and SEO gimmicks that make a website into a house of cards. Nothing beats good site design and understanding of the web.

Pen Testing

Firebug is a good program for pen testing. Here is a website for a television station that will only show you the content if you are from a specific country. Client side validation should only be used for end user convenience such as making fields required on forms. Sadly many programmers use client side validation for much more. Here is a way you can find if your javascript programmer slacked off rather then using server side validation with Ajax and post requests. If you insist on using client side validation, obscuring the code to make it hard to understand adds at least some layer of protection. Other client side issues inlcude using “display:none” to hide elements which simply be set to display:visible in firebug. Another Firefox plugin used in pen testing from a the POST/REQUEST angle is Tamper Data.

Here is another example of bad client side validation. This site forces you to give up your email to view the content. This give uses the Built in javascript command line. Any javascript entered into the command line will run on the page, since javascript is weekly typed and runs one at a time, whatever you type will overright any previouse rules. This is a great way to debug your javascript.  you can also game sphinn like this,  the crappy SEO site where spammers hang out and stroke each others ego’s. another site where you can do this is Twibbs.com, the twitter directory. get yourself on the home page!

Design with CSS and HTML

Click the inspect element button and hover over the CSS box model or element, when the element is active a blue border will surround it. While the inspect element button is depressed wherever you mouseover on the page will be shown in the code in the firebug window . Now look at the style tab on the right side of the console. You can edit the CSS by clicking on the style rules, there is an autocomplete feature similar to Dreamweaver, you can cycle through the variouse autocomplete suggestions by pressing tab. This is for editing existing style rules on the page. The change appears instantly. Creating a new style rule is a little less intuitive and feature rich. You have to first click on the CSS tab, then click the “edit” button. The css will now be editable similar to a simple text editor, without the autocomplete feature.

  • At the top of the Firebug window you will see the CSS heierachy, you can mouse over this to drill down to your specific element and have a visual of how your box models and div wrappers fit together.

  • Creating Mockups

    Firebug can be used with Dreamweaver and Photoshop in the design and layout of your page, pages can initialy be coded in Dreamweaver then tested and fine tuned in Firebug, so you can edit on the fly, with instant previews in your browser. It can also be used to gather inspiration from other websites, by exploring their design.
    Quick Custom Templates
    A) Find a template layout that you like.
    B) Replace the images to this template with your own images that you create in Photoshop,
    C) Change the HTML and CSS in Firebug untill you get your exact look, start with editing color values and your layout with relative positioning and floated divs.
    D) Return to step B untill fine tuned

    Network Load: Yslow and Net Tab

    Yslow is a plugin developed by Yahoo for Firebug, the plugin analyzes your site for 34 best practices (as decided by Yahoo) divided into 7 categories; the page is then given a grade from A to F. A website should load fast for both users and search engines and this plugin helps you optimize your page for speed. YSlow is a combination of a DOM tree crawler and a packet sniffer. The DOM tree contains all the elements that might make up a web page. YSlow has a built-in DOM crawler and also pulls data from the NET panel to monitor different network requests.

    Running YSlow.

    Go to the YSlow tab and click run test, you do not want Yslow to automatically run whenever a page opens because it is memory hog and can cause the browser to freeze Do not run it on more than one site at once and restart your browser after running a test, or your browser may end up running at 1,000,000 K. Once your site is graded you can click to for an explanation and solution on speeding up your site. You can also monitor your network load in detail with the network tab; here you see all the GET and POST requests and the HTTP status code for each one. You can also see the size of each request, how long each request took to load and the order in which they were processed. You can expand each request for a detailed look at each individual header. To see the total network usage from one content type you can sort the files by, CSS, Javascript, XHR, Images and Flash. By sorting you can tell if it is one kind of file that is causing problems. Another interactive features include being able to mouse over the status code and if the request is for an image you will see the image pop up.

    Yestermorrow 2009 Summer Lecture Series

    Posted in Uncategorized with tags on June 18, 2009 by future man

    All lectures begin at 7pm, are free, and open to the general public. Held at Yestermorrow, Route 100, Warren, VT. Directions. Questions? Call 802-496-5545


    June 24
    Jeff Parsons (bio)
    What Were We Thinking?
    Reflections on how Place, Personality and Process Influence Furniture Design at Beeken Parsons

    Hear about and view images of pieces, material procurements & processing, and design process of the fine furniture produced at Beeken Parsons, based in Shelburne, VT.

    July 1
    Joel Glanzberg (bio)
    Patterns: Key to Sustainable Communities
    Living in a technological world we often try to address every problem with technological solutions. These solutions are often generically applied. Every place is unique and living. Every problem is connected to every other problem. Trying to solve them in isolation merely moves the problem. In order to understand communities and how to address community issues systemically, they need to be understood as a whole. This can only be done through understanding patterns.

    July 8
    Jacob Deva Racusin (bio)
    Bridging the Gap: Bringing Together the Worlds of Natural and Green Building
    The modern natural building movement has been growing slowly but steadily for decades across the globe, yet much misunderstanding still remains about its form, function, purpose, and potential. The growth of the green building movement has helped increase awareness of energy efficiency, building performance, and ecological sensitivity. Developments in natural building and design in our cold climate are addressing these concerns, while continuing to support core issues of social and ecological justice and affordability. Come find out how the natural and green building movements can—and must—learn from and work with each other to reach mutual goals.

    July 15
    John Ringel (bio)
    Thoughts on Designing Additions: From Context to Content and Intention to Invention
    An “addition” attempts to transform an “existing condition”–with its unique history—into a new configuration for the present owner’s future aspirations. The Design has to account for the existing context with all its foibles, implications and technical challenges. The Design has to articulate the present intentions both stated and implied. The Design becomes an invention—a product of the imagination—that will be a future owners’ existing condition. This lecture will reflect, with examples, on some of the speaker’s experiences “adding on” to numerous residences over the years.

    July 22
    Matthew O’Connell (bio)
    Continuous Transformations:
    Something Old, Something New in Making Next Generation Buildings

    This talk will present highlights from twenty years of transforming buildings and discuss the specific mechanics of integrating the design and construction processes with examples from collaborations that produced dynamic environments at various scales, from rooms to buildings and landscapes.

    July 29
    Dan Reicher (bio)
    The Power of Information in a Clean Energy Economy
    Dan will discuss his 20+ years of experience in business, government and non-governmental organizations focused on energy and environmental technology, policy, finance and law. He serves as Director of Climate Change and Energy Initiatives at Google.org.

    August 5
    Li Ling Young (bio)
    Residential Energy When the Energy Runs Out: Beyond Energy Efficiency
    You’ve replaced all your lightbulbs with compact fluorescents, insulated your water heater and sealed air leaks in the basement. What’s next? In this presentation we’ll discuss why energy tinkering is not enough. Come hear about the leading edge of energy efficiency. You’ll be invited to think about your next steps to reduce your reliance on purchased energy, the best places to spend your energy dollars, and what happens when one takes energy efficiency to the extreme—or maybe logical—conclusion.

    August 12
    Melinda Moulton (bio)
    Redevelopment of Burlington’s Waterfront:
    A 25-Year Journey of Green and Social Design & Construction
    Melinda Moulton, the CEO/Redeveloper of Main Street Landing, will share with you her 25-year journey creating a healthy, vibrant, and socially conscious environment on the Burlington Waterfront. From developing a “team approach to design, development, construction, and management” Melinda has taken a unique and unchartered course in creating over 250,000 square feet of built environment on the shores of Lake Champlain.

    August 19
    Buzz Ferver (bio)
    Beyond Compost: Advanced Uses of Compost and Geotextile Materials
    Learn about advanced uses of compost and geotextile materials for stormwater treatment, urban gardening, building “living” retaining walls, greenroofs and more. Join compost visionary Buzz Ferver for a night of pictures and stories on how compost can help restore and regenerate the built environment.

    August 26
    Mark West (bio)
    Pressure Building (Concrete Falls in Love):
    Flexible Fabric Molds for Forming Cast Concrete Structure and Architecture
    Mark will describe a wide range of simple techniques for forming concrete in inexpensive fabric sheets. For the past 20 years, he has developed a series of unique and efficient fabric formwork methods for constructing reinforced con­crete columns, beams, trusses, walls, precast panels, and thin-shell vaults and panels. This work has been developed from a sculptural practice as well as fundamental structural (and construction) logic and is focused on extraordinarily beautiful and practical de­signs given by the natural deflections offered by simple flat sheets of fabric loaded with concrete.

    I recently did a workshop with this lady, if your into green things like this post your going to want to check this out. I never believed in this crap until I met this women on a business trip. To top it off she looks like the Oracle from the Matrix.
    Edy K hypnosis in ohio



    Giving up your Data to the Cloud?

    Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on June 12, 2009 by future man

    IT TURNS OUT THE PROBLEM IS THAT WHEN I PAID GOOGLE TO RENEW THE SITE, THEY NEVER REALLY DID.  OR DID SO LATE.  ANYWAY THE DOMAIN WENT ON GODADDY AFTERMARKET THE WHOLE AND WAS ON THE WHOLE TIME WITHOUT MY KNOWLEDGE FOR THE PAST MONTH.  NO ONE CONTACTED ME ABOUT THIS AND I HAD NO ADMIN SCREEN TO TELL ME.  THE DOMAIN WAS RECENTLY SOLD ON THE GREEDY GODADDY AFTERMARKET FOR 107 DOLLARS. I AM IN THE PROCESS OF EITHER BUYING IT BACK AND CONTACTING GODADDY. (PAYING A 65 DOLLAR BROKER FEE)

    as I post from a WordPress hosted blog…

    please vote for this on reddit

    It all started when I started my little arts and culture blog on blogger, http://www.thegonzojournal.blogspot.com, I was a freelance journalist in my spare time, writing on issues ranging from technology to the art. Eventually I wanted cultivate my own media outlets one of these was a culture blog I started on blogspot http://www.thegonzojournal.blogspot.com. I started getting a ­lot of traffic and people really liked my writing, so I decided to spring for a custom domain address. It would cost ten dollars and as long as I set it up through the backend of the Blogger Dashboard, Google would handle everything for me. Google would purchase the domain from Godaddy and act as the middleman while giving me no access to the server settings of a usual Godaddy account. They would simply point the nameservers for the domain to the blogspot servers I figured this would be a sure way to keep what Pagerank I already had. All I had to do was type the desired address in a little input field. “Wow this couldn’t be better or easier I thought.”

    Things went very nice for a year, I had the advantage of not worrying about my large database of blog posts and Google handled everything with 99% uptime; my site started getting recognized and had lots of inbound links and great SEO value. This all changed when it came time to renew my domain. I procrastinated until about 2 or three days before my domain would expire, I did not think this would be a big problem. I paid for two years this time around and everything went through, with a receipt from Google. The Whois information was updated to having my domain expire in 2010 and everything else on Whois stayed the same, I was registered through Godaddy/Domains by Proxy. Unfortunately it must have taken the Google team a while to process that I made the payment and the page started redirecting to one that said “this page parked free by Google Apps.” I could then and even now can still log into the backend of my Blogger dashboard and access, update and edit my blog posts. Shortly after I got this first warning sign, I got contacted by a person asking to buy my domain, apparently it had been placed on a watch list of available high pagerank (PR 4) domains by Godaddy. I resubmitted the site, filled out a contact form to Google and whether this did anything or not my site was back up in a few days. Webmaster tools gave no indication that anything was wrong at any point in this process showing all paged indexed.

    Phase 2 of the problem started when the site stopped showing up in Google, (see help link here http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Google+Apps/thread?tid=41bd8853577bd706&hl=en) this only lasted for one day but it told me something was still going on with the hosting. The next day I was back in the SERP’s and ranking great as usual, this went on for another week until my site was down again. First it gave the ubiquitous “This Page has Been Parked Free by Godaddy,” then a few hours later it would redirect to the default search engine page by my host Roadrunner, “Sorry we can not find this page.” I checked the Blogger dashboard and under the little input field where I get to type in my custom domain, it read…

    The DNS record for your domain is not set up correctly yet. If you just purchased this domain the set up process may take up to a day.”

    This is when I knew that DNS hijacking had taken place. The next day my New York city music blog for all the eccentric techies, freaks and artists in New York was redirected to a one page spam site. I picked up on something suspicious when I looked at Google Analytics for the time period that my site was de-indexed from Google. The only visits to my blog were coming from a “site:” command somewhere in India. There was nothing I could do, I had given up my life and soul to the great cloud computer in the sky run, run by what I thought was the ironclad braniac team of Google. I have no access to FTP, server settings or DNS, Google handled all of that for me through Godaddy. I only hope that when Matt Cutts gives his presentations at WordCamp on why we should blog, encouraging us all to start up blogging, that he cares enough about his company’s own blogging software and security. Or maybe this is why he uses WordPress? My only hope is that I get this message to someone at Google to take a look at the DNS settings and problems on their stealth servers, as it would be hard to know which server to redirect back to in the first place even if I could Hijack the NS records myself. I still believe Google is one of the best companies ever, besides it’s too late to turn back now. Google If you can read this SEND HELP!

    trying to contact Google through any of this has been futile, i have spent hours scouring for contact information on phone, email, and support ticket forms,

    blogger dashboard

    It all started when I started my little arts and culture blog on blogger, http://www.thegonzojournal.blogspot.com, I was a freelance journalist in my spare time, writing on issues ranging from technology to the art. Eventually I wanted cultivate my own media outlets one of these was a culture blog I started on blogspot http://www.thegonzojournal.blogspot.com. I started getting a ­lot of traffic and people really liked my writing, so I decided to spring for a custom domain address. It would cost ten dollars and as long as I set it up through the backend of the Blogger Dashboard, Google would handle everything for me. Google would purchase the domain from Godaddy and act as the middleman while giving me no access to the server settings of a usual Godaddy account. They would simply point the nameservers for the domain to the blogspot servers I figured this would be a sure way to keep what Pagerank I already had. All I had to do was type the desired address in a little input field. “Wow this couldn’t be better or easier I thought.”

    Things went very nice for a year, I had the advantage of not worrying about my large database of blog posts and Google handled everything with 99% uptime; my site started getting recognized and had lots of inbound links and great SEO value. This all changed when it came time to renew my domain. I procrastinated until about 2 or three days before my domain would expire, I did not think this would be a big problem. I paid for two years this time around and everything went through, with a receipt from Google. The Whois information was updated to having my domain expire in 2010 and everything else on Whois stayed the same, I was registered through Godaddy/Domains by Proxy. Unfortunately it must have taken the Google team a while to process that I made the payment and the page started redirecting to one that said “this page parked free by Google Apps.” I could then and even now can still log into the backend of my Blogger dashboard and access, update and edit my blog posts. Shortly after I got this first warning sign, I got contacted by a person asking to buy my domain, apparently it had been placed on a watch list of available high pagerank (PR 4) domains by Godaddy. I resubmitted the site, filled out a contact form to Google and whether this did anything or not my site was back up in a few days. Webmaster tools gave no indication that anything was wrong at any point in this process showing all paged indexed.

    Phase 2 of the problem started when the site stopped showing up in Google, (see help link here http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Google+Apps/thread?tid=41bd8853577bd706&hl=en) this only lasted for one day but it told me something was still going on with the hosting. The next day I was back in the SERP’s and ranking great as usual, this went on for another week until my site was down again. First it gave the ubiquitous “This Page has Been Parked Free by Godaddy,” then a few hours later it would redirect to the default search engine page by my host Roadrunner, “Sorry we can not find this page.” I checked the Blogger dashboard and under the little input field where I get to type in my custom domain, it read…

    The DNS record for your domain is not set up correctly yet. If you just purchased this domain the set up process may take up to a day.”

    This is when I knew that DNS hijacking had taken place. The next day my New York city music blog for all the eccentric techies, freaks and artists in New York was redirected to a one page spam site. I picked up on something suspicious when I looked at Google Analytics for the time period that my site was de-indexed from Google. The only visits to my blog were coming from a “site:” command somewhere in India. There was nothing I could do, I had given up my life and soul to the great cloud computer in the sky run, run by what I thought was the ironclad braniac team of Google. I have no access to FTP, server settings or DNS, Google handled all of that for me through Godaddy. I only hope that when Matt Cutts gives his presentations at WordCamp on why we should blog, encouraging us all to start up blogging, that he cares enough about his company’s own blogging software and security. Or maybe this is why he uses WordPress? My only hope is that I get this message to someone at Google to take a look at the DNS settings and problems on their stealth servers, as it would be hard to know which server to redirect back to in the first place even if I could Hijack the NS records myself. I still believe Google is one of the best companies ever, besides it’s too late to turn back now. Google If you can read this SEND HELP!

    Former GM, BMQ and AUDI Exec hired by Tesla Motors

    Posted in Uncategorized on June 10, 2009 by future man

    By Joe Brown

    Tesla LogoLast year Tesla Motors came out ahead while much larger American Manufactuers suffered.  They also scored one of the big manufactueres top executives,  Chrysler’s Mike Donoughe as Tesla’s new Vice President of vehicle engineering and manufacturing. Now they’ve scored big again with the hiring of highly-respected and former GM, BMW and Audi exec, John Walker. Tesl

    Tesla also hired an exec in the communications department from YouTube, Ricardo Reyes. Finally, a spokesperson from Tesla recently said they will be looking to hire 150 more employees–most in engineering from the automotive industry.