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Decemeber 03, 2006
At Alternate Propulsion we recognize that privacy is important. We are not in the business of selling personal information. This document outlines the types of personal information we receive and collect when you use our services, as well as some of the steps we take to safeguard information. We hope this will help you make an informed decision about sharing personal information with us.
Personal information and other data we collect
- APMC collects personal information when you register for an APMC service or otherwise voluntarily provide such information. We may combine personal information collected from you with information from other services or third parties to provide a better user experience, including customizing content for you.
- APMC uses cookies and other technologies to enhance your online experience and to learn about how you use our services in order to improve the quality of our services.
- Our servers automatically record information when you visit our website or use some of our products, including the URL, IP address, browser type and language, and the date and time of your request.
Uses
- We may use personal information to provide the services you've requested, including services that display customized content and advertising.
- We may also use personal information for auditing, research and analysis to operate and improve our technologies and services.
Your choices
- We offer you choices when we ask for personal information, whenever reasonably possible.
- You may decline to provide personal information to us and/or refuse cookies in your browser, although some of our features or services may not function properly as a result.
- We make good faith efforts to provide you access to your personal information upon request and to let you correct such data if it is inaccurate and delete it, when reasonably possible.
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Alternative Fuel News 
| GM Envisions Networked Mini Cars for City Streets | | Posted on: 2010/03/25 | | Submitted by:: | 
As drivers await the arrival of General Motors's much-anticipated Chevy Volt plug-in hybrid car later this year, GM unveiled an electric vehicle of an entirely different stripe on Wednesday at the World Expo 2010 in Shanghai. The company's Electric Networked Vehicle (EN-V) is a mini electric vehicle built for two, unless you are using it to go shopping, in which case you might have room for yourself and a bag of groceries. |
| 3 Tesla workers die in East Palo Alto plane crash | | Posted on: 2010/02/19 | | Submitted by:: | Elon Musk, chief executive officer of Tesla, said it was a "tragic day" for the company. While the coroner could not identify the victims, the electric-car maker confirmed that they worked for the company.
The plane was owned by Doug Bourn, 56, a senior electrical engineer for Tesla who holds commercial pilot and flight instructor licenses. Neighbors on the cul-de-sac in Santa Clara where Bourn lives said they had not seen him since Tuesday evening.
His plane came down in several pieces on Beech Street, about 200 feet from where it hit the power lines. Although no one on the ground was hurt, damage was extensive. |
| Car Bodies Could Store Energy Like Batteries | | Posted on: 2010/02/09 | | Submitted by:: | | As battery manufacturers race to produce more efficient lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles, some scientists are looking to make the cars themselves a power source. Researchers are currently developing a new material that can store and release electrical energy like a battery. Once perfected, scientists hope the substance will replace standard car bodies, making vehicles up to 15 percent lighter and significantly extending the range of electric vehicles. |
| IBM, researchers get 24M DOE supercomputer hours to develop controversial lithium air battery | | Posted on: 2010/01/28 | | Submitted by:: | The Department of Energy and IBM are serious about developing lithium air batteries capable of powering a car for 500 miles on a single charge - a five-fold increase over current plug-in batteries that have a range of about 40 to 100 miles, the DOE said.
The agency said 24 million hours of supercomputing time out of a total of 1.6 billion available hours at Argonne and Oak Ridge National Laboratories will be used by IBM and a team of researchers from those labs and Vanderbilt University to design new materials required for a lithium air battery. The calculations will be performed at Oak Ridge and Argonne, which house two of the world's top ten fastest computers, the group said. |
| Drivers flag worries over brakes on new Prius | | Posted on: 2009/12/29 | | Submitted by:: | | It took Bob Becker by surprise. As he approached an intersection on New York City's West End Avenue, not far from his home, he began to brake his 2010 Toyota Prius. But then the hybrid hit a pothole and suddenly, says Becker, it felt like the brakes weren’t working.
“It was a sensation of losing control,” said the 39-year-old human resources executive. It was all the more disconcerting as the light had changed and pedestrians were starting to cross the street. “The first time it happened on that corner it scared the hell out of me. I wasn’t sure I could stop in time.” |
| Can Urine Rescue Hydrogen-Powered Cars? | | Posted on: 2009/07/09 | | Submitted by:: | 
It takes a lot of energy to split hydrogen out from the other atoms to which it binds, either in natural gas or water. Which means energy analysts are skeptical about the overall energy balance of cars fueled by hydrogen.
Now, as Ariel Schwartz of Fast Company reports, Ohio University researcher Geraldine Botte has come up with a nickel-based electrode to oxidize (NH2)2CO, otherwise known as urea, the major component of animal urine. |
| SAHİMO Hydrogen Vehicle Travels 568 Kilometers on 1 Liter of Fuel | | Posted on: 2009/07/08 | | Submitted by:: | | Students from Turkey’s Sakarya University have unveiled a remarkable attempt at creating Europe’s most fuel efficient vehicle. The SAHİMO is a hydrogen powered vehicle that is capable of traveling 568 kilometers on 1 liter of fuel (about 353 miles on a quarter gallon). The students’ ultimate goal is to trek SAHİMO across 3,000 kilometers of the Australian Outback on just 3 liters of fuel in the inaugural 2009 Global Green Challenge. And you thought you were getting good mileage out of your Prius! |
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