The big-engine bike manufacturer has opened its first three dealerships and is planning to launch two more this year in the country of 1.2 billion people where motorcycles are far and away the most popular transport.

The Milwaukee-based firm, which has been battling weakening U.S. sales, is hoping to exploit what it sees as a virgin market for its heavyweight bikes in the world’s second-largest two-wheeler market after China.

“We see this incredible motorcycling culture here that is waiting for this new category of heavyweight motorcycles,” Anoop Prakash, managing director of Harley-Davidson India, who fell in love with the bikes when he was a U.S. mar

Read more…

July 17th, 2010Apps, Apps, and More Apps

They have become a filter for our world. Through them we can access information, games, entire virtual worlds.

Not the internet, nor our computers, not tablets or laptops – just little programs on our phones. Millions of little programs.

What are the real numbers behind these programs, and why are there so many of them?

OnlineMBA takes a look.

Press reports today say that the Department for Transport’s list of cuts includes an accelerated timetable for raising the qualifying age for the English bus passes scheme.

Since April 2008, older people and some disabled people have been eligible for free off-peak bus travel. There is a strategy for increasing the qualifying age in line with the raising of the state pension age, so that it will be 65 for men and women by 2020.

Every Department has to send the Treasury a set of cuts that would achieve 25 per cent savings and a set that would achieve 40 per cent. To

Read more…

Pat McFadden, the Shadow Business Minister, made a thoughtful speech to the Fabian Society this morning. He resolutely defended the last Labour Government’s economic record, questioned the Con-Lib decision to “cut faster and deeper than we (i.e. Labour) would”, rubbished the idea that the UK was in a similar economic position to Greece and made the case for active industrial policies in pursuit of growth. It’s well summarised by Sunder at Next Left.

It was all good stuff. The controversial bit came in the following two sentences: “‘Fight the cuts’ is a tempting slogan in Opposition, and there are indeed some that must be fought. But if that is

Read more…

Subscription software offers some cost-saving opportunities for the typical small business. 

 

Where more traditional software limits the number of computers it can be used on—requiring a separate license for your home computer and for your office computer—many subscription software options simply require that you have enough user names for each employee that will be using the software. 

 

More often than not, subscription software is web-based, allowing you access to the tools you and your business need from any computer with an internet connection.

 

The reduction in cost goes beyond just the number of licenses.