Electric towel rails


(a) About $70 a day?
(b) About $2 a day, and Electric towel rails
for a car that's plastered with ads - basically a moving billboard?
7. You want to buy an electric car. Would you pay:
(a) About $30,000?
(b) Nothing, and Electric towel rails
in exchange for being hooked into a contract for the electricity to power it?
If you scored mostly As, and Electric towel rails
then you believe in paying your way. You work hard for your money and you choose carefully how to spend it, and Electric towel rails
with no catches or gimmicks. You loathe ads, and Electric towel rails
you're suspicious of change and are most likely to be a baby boomer or older.
If you got mostly Bs, and Electric towel rails
then you are a 'freek'. You're probably Generation Y and have grown up with the internet and its expectation of getting things for free. You don't mind advertising, and Electric towel rails
as long as it's entertaining and relevant - or there's something in it for you



ARNHEM, The Netherlands, Nov 16, 2008 (PR Newswire Europe via COMTEX) ----ARCADIS (EURONEXT: ARCAD), the international consulting, design, engineering and management services company, announced today that it will modernize the safety system for the Rotterdam subway network. The company, commissioned by U.S. corporation General Electric (GE), will design and test the safety system and manage the migration from the old to the new system. GE will deliver the software and the installation. GE is working on behalf of Rotterdam Electric Tram company (RET) for a total contact amount of EUR 62 million. The ARCADIS share in this assignment amounts to more than EUR 5 million. The project is expected to last through to 2014, the company announced on Sunday