
Posted on: 05/16/2012
Traffic Advisory In Effect May 18th-20th in Asbury Park, NJ
Driving to the Bamboozle Festival in Asbury Park, NJ is NOT advised as parking at the site is very limited. Please choose one of the following alternatives to get to your destination.
NJ Transit will be adding trains both north and south bound for all 3 days, with the last northbound train leaving around 2:05am on Friday & Saturday and 1:05am on Sunday/Monday. Last southbound train leaves around 2:50am all three nights. Please visit http://2012.thebamboozle.com/travel for more information about train schedules. Please be advised the walk from the Asbury Park NJ Transit Train Station to the festival grounds is approximately one mile through downtown and along the Asbury Park Boardwalk.
Bike Parking is FREE. Beat the traffic and ride your bike into town! Lock up your bike at our “Stump Lot”, located at the intersection of Lake Ave and Heck St, a short walk from the Asbury Park Boardwalk. For a map of Asbury Park, please visit http://tiny.cc/cu5cew
Offsite parking is free and will be available at Monmouth Park which is just off Exit 105 on the Garden State Parkway. Bamboozle Express Shuttles will run to &… 
ATTENTION PHILLY MUSICIANS, I am now the booking agent for a small bar called “The Wonder Years” located at 100 Girard Ave. on the border of Northern Liberties and Fishtown and they are looking for me to book either solo or two person acoustic/electric acts, a small band or DJ’s for Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. The place holds about 30 at the bar and there’s like 6 tables. Pay will be guaranteed plus based on draw but $100-$300 for the night and more if the bar ring is good. Anyone who would be interested in playing a show there please contact me at (201)290-4254…You can also e-mail me at TimMcguire@njcomputerdoctors.com.
This is a small dive bar that holds about 100 people Im guessing so it should not be that hard to pack the place, and if the place is packed and they ring well at the bar they are willing to pay 10% of the ring for the night….This is a great little dive bar that has drink specials everyday of the week. They also have $1.50 pints of Yingling all-day everyday!!!!
Stay tuned for a new Website Design, WordPress Blog and Facebook page for “The Wonder Years”….
The Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles has approved an application for a license by Google Inc. to test autonomous vehicles on Nevada public roads, DMV announced this week.
It is the first license issued in the United States, and by granting Google’s application is puts “Nevada at the forefront of autonomous vehicle development,” DMV said.
After drive test demonstrations along freeways, highways and neighborhoods in Carson City on the Las Vegas Strip, DMV’s Autonomous Review Committee reviewed Google’s safety plans, employee training, system functions and accident reporting mechanisms and approved the application.
DMV is now creating the state’s first autonomous testing business license and license plates for the Mountain View, Calif.-based search giant. The license plates displayed on the test vehicle will have a red background and feature an infinity symbol on the left side.
“I felt using the infinity symbol was the best way to represent the ‘car of the future,” DMV Director Bruce Breslow said in a statement. “The unique red plate will be easily recognized by the public and law enforcement and will be used only for licensed autonomous test vehicles. When there comes a time that vehicle manufactures market autonomous vehicles to the public, that infinity… 
By: Jonathan Rick | Mashable
Jonathan Rick is a director at Levick Strategic Communications. He contributes to Levick’s Bulletproof Blog. Follow him @jrick.
Why do search engines always rank certain websites so highly? Sure, their content might be great, but their search engine optimization is definitely awesome. Indeed, for many sites, the search-engine spiders that crawl the web deliver a third or more of their traffic.
So crafting key parts of a page, like a headline, is critical. Perhaps the most famous example comes from the Huffington Post, which in February reeled in readers with the ingenious bait: “What Time Is the Super Bowl?”
In protest, writers for publications such as The Washington Post, The New York Times, and The Atlantic each took turns slugging the SEO punching bag. The headlines describe their complaint: “Gene Weingarten Column Mentions Lady Gaga.” “This Boring Headline Is Written for Google.” “Google Doesn’t Laugh: Saving Witty Headlines in the Age of SEO.”
In other words, algorithms don’t appreciate wit, irony, humor, or style. As reporter Steve Lohr put it, they’re “numbingly literal-minded.” Yes, it is one of the definitive 21st century truisms that in addition to writing for eternity, or for one’s mother, today’s… 
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