Archive for October, 2008

Cdn Bank economists foresee little growth: ‘different from a typical recession�

Monday, October 6th, 2008

David Friend
Other

TORONTO – Economists from Canada‘s Big Five banks expect little or no growth in the near future, warning Monday that the domestic economy’s current gloom will deepen into something worse than a recession.

The word “recession” wouldn’t describe the deep structural problems affecting everything from the U.S. housing sector to the Canadian oil industry, said Bank of Nova Scotia chief economist Warren Jestin.

“You have to invent a new word to describe what we’re in now,” he said after the banks presented their perspectives at the Economic Club.

“It’s being driven through the financial markets into the real economy. All of those things suggest that it’s entirely different than what you might expect from a typical recession.”

In their most recent economics forecast, Scotiabank economists predict recessions for both the U.S. and Canada, economic slides that will require central bankers in both countries to cut interest rates by at least a full percentage point.

All agree that a slide in commodity prices bodes ill for the Canadian economy, which is heavily dependent on the production and export of oil and gas, metals and minerals.

Drops in oil and metals prices have hit the already teetering Toronto Stock Exchange hard. On Monday it took an agonizing 1,200-point fall before recovering somewhat to sit around 700 points in the red as oil dropped to trade around the US$90 mark.

And Bank of Montreal economist Doug Porter said prices will continue to take a beating over the next year, dragging Western Canada‘s formerly booming economy in particular down with them.

“You’re going to be seeing Western Canada come back down to the rest of us with a thud, especially if commodity prices keep doing what they’ve done in the last three months,” he said.

“It’s almost as if the markets are pricing in a much harder landing for commodity prices. I think that’s reasonable if you don’t get some thawing in the credit markets relatively soon.”

Porter said the direction of Canada‘s economy depends on whether the financial-sector troubles in the United States start to settle down.

“At this point, if this kind of volatility keeps up, I think we’re looking at a much more serious downturn than the mild recession that most of us are talking about,” he said.

“Over the next month, that’s what bears watching.”

The cautious outlook was echoed by Don Drummond of TD Bank, who said the Canadian economy won’t see any growth until late 2009.

Drummond told the Economic Club audience that even at that point there will be only a gradual recovery.

“I think the credit system is going to be mucked up for quite some time, even if it improves somewhat,” he said.

Jestin remained on the more optimistic side of the loonie’s direction, predicting that it will hold above the 90-cent threshold as it weathers the financial downturn.

“I still think the fundamentals on the Canadian currency – those that initially drove it through parity and kept it quite strong by recent history-are largely intact,” he said, pointing out that Canada’s trade numbers still look favourable compared to many other developed countries.

Craig Wright, chief economist at RBC Financial Group, held a more pessimistic view on the dollar, predicting it would slide “just under” 90 cents by the end of next year. The loonie was down 1.78 cents to 90.68 cents US Monday morning.

“For Canada, exports are going to be a continued challenge by weakness in the U.S., but we’re still relatively bullish on the Canadian economy,” he said.

Porter told the audience that it’s tough to provide an accurate outlook on the economy given the unpredictability of capital markets.

“Trying to do a economic forecast in this kind of turmoil is a bit like trying to put a value on your house while the kitchen is on fire,” he said.

“You just don’t know how long the fire is going to go on for, or how much damage it’s going to do.”

British officials could begin scanning Internet records

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Sun

The British government is considering a $24-billion plan to monitor the e-mail, telephone and Internet browsing records of every person in the country. It would involve the creation of a mammoth database to store hundreds of billions of pieces of communications traffic and its supporters say it would become one of the security services’ most comprehensive tools in the fight against terrorism. Britain‘s internal security service MI5 has to apply for warrants to intercept specific e-mail and website traffic, but under the new plan, networks could be monitored live by the government listening post. Security officials claimed that live monitoring was necessary to pick up terrorist plots.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Terry David Mulligan & Jason Priestley in Naramata hosting “The Juice” TV Show

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Other

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Without a bylaw, election signs stay

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Tony Gioventu
Province

Dear Condo Smarts: With the call of the election in September, many owners started erecting signs on the common property for their preferred parties and candidates. We received a notice from council last week advising that they all had to come down. Owners are now sending notices around threatening to sue each other and take a physical stand if anyone touches their signs.

Can you help us quickly put an end to this dispute before it gets out of hand?

— MB, Delta

Dear MB: Over the next eight months we have three elections: federal, municipal and provincial. Elections legislation regarding signs is covered in the Canada Elections Act. Provincial legislation is silent on the matter of signage, but with respects to strata lots, does anyone really want to test the waters on limiting freedom of expression and risk a human-rights complaint?

The strata can prohibit or limit signage on common property; however, it does require a bylaw to do so. In cases where there is no such bylaw, council is beyond its scope of authority to order sign removal.

According to Canada Elections Act 322. (1): No landlord or person acting on their behalf may prohibit a tenant from displaying election advertising posters on the premises to which the lease relates and no condominium corporation or any of its agents may prohibit the owner of a condominium unit from displaying election advertising posters on the premises of his or her unit. Permitted restrictions: (2) Despite subsection (1), a landlord, person, condominium corporation or agent referred to in that subsection may set reasonable conditions relating to the size or type of election advertising posters that may be displayed on the premises and may prohibit the display of election advertising posters in common areas of the building in which the premises are found.

To sum up: Election signage bylaws may limit or prohibit the size, type and location of signs on common areas. They may also reasonably limit the size of a sign displayed from a strata lot, but not prohibit signs displayed from the strata lots. My advice: Avoid disputes and the competition of “whose sign is bigger.”

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominium Home Owners’ Association (www.choa. bc.ca). E-mail him at tony@ choa.bc.ca.

© The Vancouver Province 2008

Three Harbour Green 277 Thurlow – Luxe details justify the pricetag

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Kate Webb
Province

Computer-generated renderings show the high-end design elements and gorgeous views that will come standard with homes at Three Harbour Green.

The modern, curving island countertop comes in stainless steel or Corian.

The bathroom and spacious walk-in dressing room have superb lines and modern elegance. These luxurious pads come with all the trimmings, meaning there’s no need for upgrades unless the buyer wants hardwood floors instead of the porcelain tiles.

Most of the appliances are Miele, including convection, spped and steam ovens, a gas cooktop stove, coffee maker with warming drawer and a dishwasher.

The facts

What: Three Harbour Green, an 81-unit, 31-storey highrise of apartment and townhouse residences

Where: West Cordova and Thurlow Street, Vancouver.

Developer: Aspac

Sizes: Two to four bedrooms, from 1,820 sq. ft. to 3,670 sq. ft.

Prices: $1.98 million to $7.55 million

Open: Presentation centre with virtual tours open at 1055 West Hastings St., 18th floor, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday.

More info: www.aspac.ca

– – –

Stocks and bonds may plummet, but a $22-million penthouse in Coal Harbour is forever.

At least, that’s the thinking that must be driving deep-pocketed buyers to the sales centre for Three Harbour Green, a highrise of 81 luxury suites in developer Aspac’s final project in exclusive Coal Harbour (Not to worry, all you single-digit millionaires, most units are in the $2- to $7-mill range).

Here’s the background: It’s been 15 years since Aspac, in a joint venture with Marathon Realty, bought up all the waterfront property from the Westin Bayshore Hotel to the Pan Pacific Hotel.

Now, with the Vancouver Convention Centre under construction right next door to the building site and the rest of the neighbourhood complete, Three Harbour Green is drawing all eyes as the last vestige of seaside property in Coal Harbour.

“When Three Harbour Green is done, that’s Coal Harbour finished,” says Lance Brown, vice-president of marketing for Aspac. “For location, there is nowhere that can compare with this, being where it is on the water.”

The inspiration for this tower of prestige is a combination of the North Shore mountains it faces and fine Italian decor.

“Most of the interior design is coming from Italy, because they’re the best” says Brown. “In terms of style and finish, there’s nobody who can touch the Italians.”

The exterior of the building will be clad in deep-green granite, as well as the floor-to-ceiling windows buyers have come to expect from a financial-district address.

Most of the homes are two or three bedrooms, with a range of floor plans to choose from. On the main floor are townhouses with rooftop decks, which the architect designed as an homage to the tumbling boulders and crags across the water.

On higher storeys, the sprawling suites are generally only two or three to a floor.

Each home comes with a set of state-of-the-art systems that further justify the price tag. For example, Lutron controlled lighting systems will allow owners to customize their lighting preferences at the touch of a button.

In the kitchen, dual-tone cabinetry designed by Pininfarina for Snaidero of Italy has been co-ordinated with a modern, curving island countertop, which comes in a choice of either stainless steel or Corian (engineered stone).

Most of the appliances are Miele, including convection, speed and steam ovens, a gas cooktop stove, hood fan, coffee maker with warming drawer and a dishwasher. The only exception is a sub-zero refrigerator.

These pads come with all the trimmings, meaning there’s no need for upgrades, unless the purchaser wants hardwood floors instead of the porcelain tiles and wool carpets that come standard throughout.

The spa-style bathrooms boast Italian vanities by L’O di Giotto, Flaminia free-standing or deck-mounted bathtubs, and basalt or marble tile flooring and wall tiles with thermostatically controlled in-floor heating.

Another up-to-the-minute architectural element is the covered balconies which, in most suites, can be accessed from either the living-and-dining room or the family room. With sliding glass doors and gas fireplaces, each perch will offer a warm respite from rainy-winter cabin fever.

“Everybody likes outside space, and that’s all very well, but in Vancouver you don’t really want to be out there for seven to eight months of the year,” says Brown, “so this way you can be out there and be covered — and the fireplace, without wasting too much electricity, acts like an outdoor heater.”

These homes also come with peace of mind. Forget your average parking garage — each unit enjoys its own private underground garage, complete with storage. In addition, a 24-hour full-service conçierge will be stationed on site, as well as evening security patrols and a range of high-tech security and surveillance systems.

Although not officially launched, Three Harbour Green is more than 20-per-cent sold.

Aspac’s in no rush to liquidate — its final Coal Harbour project won’t be ready for move-ins until 2012.

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

Richards – 1036 Richards, new 18 storey, 226 unit tower to be built by Aquilini

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Sun

Interior of Richards show room. Glenn Baglo/Vancouver Sun

Eggersmann cabinetry and panelling exemplifies functional and structural design mastery, room enough for thousands of cans of soup in a kitchen and for a fridge in the living room, a result of open-plan design.

All involved in a new-home project went outside at Richards, at Bob Rennie’s suggestion, for the inevitable sales-centre shoot. He wants you to know that Richards is a Yaletown opportunity. Th at’s why he led Sun photographer Ian Lindsay, t wo Rennie Marketing Systems associates, president Tracie McTavish and project manager Greg Zayadi, and an Aquilini Investments executive, Barry Savage, down to the loading docks of the old warehouses of Mainland Street. ‘ . . . we are really trying to sell proximity,’ Rennie says. ‘ Walk the life. This is a walk-the-life location, walk to work, walk to everything. This is right in the middle of getting to work and getting to a beer and getting to the seawalls. Whether you’re jogging or drinking or working, we can get you there.’ From the left in the photo, McTavish, Rennie, Zayadi and Savage.

The Richards sales centre is flanked by two homes from Vancouver’s early days. They will be rehabilitated by Aquilini Investments and relocated, from their Richards Street sites to Helmcken Street sites. They are for sale. By city hall’s count, 16 residences like them remain downtown. Three of them are located around the corner from the Richards site. Moving the t wo Richards Street homes there ‘ will form a representation of an early, historic, end-of-block development pattern once common in the area,’ in the words of a city hall document. The to-be-relocated residences were built in 1907 and 1908. Their rehabilitation gains Aquilini Investments more square footage than the zoning permits. ‘I think, these memory points are good, very good,’ Bob Rennie says of the Richards heritage component. ‘It costs more to restore those houses than they can sell for. The city works very closely with developers. When it comes to putting back and retaining part of that older fabric, they’ll let you build more new fabric.’ This is probably also the place to acknowledge one loss Richards will bring to the city. The Richard’s on Richards night club will come down to make way for the Richards building. The new-home project’s logo is based on the nightclub’s logo, Rennie reports.

VANCOUVER – The latest glass-tower-residency opportunity downtown is a proposition that is equally basic and elegant.

A European-sourced mastery of small-space residency or, perhaps more accurately, domestic activity, is one part of the proposition.

A shortage of rental properties around Metropolitan Vancouver and of developable properties downtown is the other part.

As the organizer of the Richards sales and marketing campaign, Bob Rennie, points out, the smaller-apartment vacancy rate locally is less than one per cent and has been since 2006.

Four per cent is the comparable vacancy rate in other Canadian metropolitan areas, as the national housing agency, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., notes.

Further, properties downtown on which builders and developers can erect rental homes are few and far between, Rennie says.

This dearth not only signals that 20 years of supplementing the original industrial and commercial purpose of the downtown peninsula with a residential purpose has claimed most of the properties there are to claim, he says.

It also signals a concern at city hall and a determination to limit the conversion of downtown properties from industrial and commercial use to residential, he says.

(It won’t hurt anyone considering a downtown property purchase – commercial, retail or residential – to have a look at city hall’s “Metropolitan Core Jobs and Economy Land Use Plan” home page. The web address is too long and ugly to publish here. Just get yourself on to city hall’s home page, vancouver.ca/, and then root around.)

”To sell real estate now, we have to look at fundamentals,” Rennie says. “And one of those fundamentals is how much product is really out there.”

By his count, about 500 homes are for sale in downtown Vancouver for less than $500,000, 200 of them for less than $350,000.

”That’s it. For a city like ours. . . We’re at a time when everybody is looking for fundamentals and nobody has better fundamentals than downtown, for the investor or the homeowner.”

At Richards, 60 per cent of the homes are being sold for less than $500,000, in another town, perhaps, an astounding sum, but here, a bid for affordability by a long-time builder and developer and his broker.

”It’s Yaletown,” Rennie says, of the most likely Richards prospects. ”It’s young buyers who want to be in the city and we wanted to hit that affordability level for them.

”And you can’t deny that investors are attracted to Vancouver.

”With rental rates going up, it makes sense. I would love to put in the article an observation about this investor who we all raise our eyebrows at: without the investor there is no rental inventory being supplied to our market.

”And we’re seeing a lot of pressure on [rental] rates right now. Without that investor, there would be even more pressure.”

Another fundamental component of the Richards proposition is the developer, Francesco Aquilini, the owner of the Vancouver Canucks.

His involvement means that Richards buyers are buying from ”not only a developer who’s been around, but a developer who’s going to be around” and, further, a developer ”with a brand to protect and we’ve seen developers in this market who have no brand to protect.”

That ”brand,” in Rennie’s opinion, is more than the Canucks and GM Place, the NHL club’s arena.

”You can’t say the name Aquilini in this city without talking about the Vancouver Canucks, of course.

”But they’re doing this project, they’ve assembled this block, which is one of the rarest blocks left in Yaletown.

”And they’re doing Maynard’s in Southeast False Creek. They’re going through the master planning for General Motors Place, with office, retail and residential. They’ve got a building coming up in Kelowna. They’re a force to be reckoned with.”

Aquilini Investment’s Kelowna project is a 24-storey, 201-residence building.

The company is one of at least four property owners working with city hall to create a new entertainment district around GM Place.

The Maynards Block development will add 245 residences in two new buildings to the city’s housing numbers, while preserving and restoring the old Maynards Auctioneers building.

The interior designer of record for both the Maynards and Richards new-home projects is Mona Foreman of Sheffield Design Studio.

Kitchens in both new-home projects will demonstrate storage and cooking-and-cleaning efficiencies that suggest commercial purposefulness.

Working with Inform Interiors of Vancouver, the sole Canadian distributor of Eggersmann cabinetry from Germany, Foreman has designed kitchens that minimize the aggravations of preparing dinners and cleaning up.

The above-the-counter storage will be shallow. The below-the-counter drawers will have internal dividers. There will be a pantry, and an appliance ”garage” behind a roll-up door.

There will be, in other words, no reason to misplace anything in a Richards kitchens, no hunting through storm-tossed drawers and black-hole storage for a missing ingredient or tool.

Harvey Reehal of Inform Projects Inc. employs a memorable pointer when talking about the Richards kitchens: The more than 102 cubic feet of storage in each kitchen will accommodate 4,350 cans of soup.  

Inform Projects is an Inform Interiors division that specializes in the design and supply of European kitchen and bath cabinetry. The Living Shangri-la households in Vancouver and Toronto will reside in homes with Eggersmann cabinetry, for example.

”The Eggersmann kitchens for the Richards project are, in a way, the heir to the unique virtues of European living,” Reehal said in an interview.

”There, smaller spaces are not uncommon. There, living spaces have been designed for efficiency, but without compromising attitude and esthetics.”

In the product-rich Vancouver new-home market, ”the smallest gradients of quality – esthetically and functionally” matter when a potential buyer compares opportunities, he says.

” . . . Eggersmann provide several necessary elements for the contemporary Vancouver homeowner: forward designs for kitchen storage, modern, even transitional esthetic statements, a commitment to environmental responsibility, and a tool suitable for multicultural cooking trends.”

The appliances will be worthy of that sensibility, of course. Two other German companies will supply them: Blomberg,  the fridges and dishwashers, and AEG, the cooktops and ovens.

Don’t think of a Richards homes as a home located at the intersection of Richards and Helmcken streets.

Think of it, instead, as an address located at the intersection of the formidable and the fundamental.

Vital Statistics:

Richards

Project location: downtown Vancouver

Project size: 226 apartments and townhouses, 2 detached heritage homes

Residence size: Apartments, 553 sq. ft. – 885 sq. ft.; townhouses and penthouses, 1,168 sq. ft. – 1,315 sq. ft.

Prices: Apartments, $399,000 – $775,000; townhouses and penthouses, $886,000 – $1.5 million

Sales centre: 1066 Richards, between Helmcken and Nelson streets

Hours: noon 5 p.m., Sat – Thu

Telephone: 604-688-2875

Web: richardsliving.com

Developer: Aquilini Investment Group

Architect: LDA Architects

Interior design: Sheffield Design Studio

Occupancy: Fall, 2011

Printers get the all-in-one treatment

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Sun

MFC-6490W ALL-IN-ONE PRINTER, BROTHER INTERNATIONAL CORP

OREGON 400T GPS, GARMIN

PT-AE3000 HOME CINEMA HD LCD PROJECTOR, PANASONIC

MFC-6490W ALL-IN-ONE PRINTER, BROTHER INTERNATIONAL CORP., $350

Brother has launched its new “professional series” of all-in-one printers for small- and mid-sized businesses and home offices. The lineup starts with the $180 MFC-5490N, followed by the $250 MFC-5890CN with the MFC-6490W at the high end. The top-of-the-line wireless version delivers the standard printing services plus it has 11-by-17-inch printing and copying, scanning and faxing capability. That, combined with wireless networking and dual paper trays that hold up to 400 sheets, makes it an all-around office work horse. It ships with high-yield ink cartridges, which deliver double the ink of regular cartridges, plus four separate cartridges so you only have to replace the colour and keep a lid on printing costs. www.brother.ca

ROBOT NAUGHTY RAYMOND USB MEMORY KEY, $180, SWAROVSKI AND PHILIPS

It’s just a two-gig USB memory key but the name alone has to be worth some of the high price tag. That plus the fact it’s not just any utilitarian memory device but a cheeky little guy who doubles as a pendant or a charm. Raymond’s black body is set with crystals and his little LED ears light up when you transfer data. Too cute. A little bauble for the not-so-geekish geek on your gift list. www.swarovski.com

OREGON 400T GPS, GARMIN, $640

Garmin’s Oregon series of handheld GPS devices brings the latest in high tech to hiking, boating and other outdoor adventures. The high-resolution three-inch screen lets users tap or drag through menus and options making GPS navigation as simple as operating your iPod touch. In several versions, including the the Oregon 400t for hikers; the Oregon 400i; the Oregon 400c for marine chart coverage, the Oregon 300, and the Oregon 200 at the low end of the series at $480. For a comparison of features, go to buy.garmin.com

PT-AE3000 HOME CINEMA HD LCD PROJECTOR, PANASONIC, PRICING NOT YET ANNOUNCED

The successor to the PT-AE2000 is arriving in stores and it brings a new level to that home-theatre experience. Mounts on a ceiling or can be put on a high bookshelf to deliver full high def 1080p and it incorporates a “frame creation” technology for sharp and clear images, especially with large-screen viewing of fast-moving sports viewing and action movies. www.panasonic.ca

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

North American & International Economic Highlights

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

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Home prices in most Lower Mainland markets slip below 2007 levels

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

Derrick Penner
Sun

Detached home prices in September slipped below 2007 levels in most markets across the Lower Mainland. Vancouver Sun files

METRO VANCOUVER – Detached home prices in September slipped below 2007 levels in most markets across the Lower Mainland in the environment of declining sales and rising inventories, local real estate boards reported Thursday.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reported that its so-called benchmark price for a typical detached house has declined 5.8 per cent since May and, at $726,331, resting 1.6 per cent below September 2007.

The year-over-year price changes vary by market from up 3.6 per cent in Richmond where the benchmark was $$754,481 to down 20.4 per cent in Port Moody where the benchmark was $619,891 in September.

Total sales of all property types recorded through the Multiple Listing Service were 1,585 across the REBGV area in September, down 43 per cent from September a year ago.

REBGV September new listings, meanwhile, were up 29 per cent to 6,142 from the same month a year ago.

 “After five years of unprecedented increases, housing prices are beginning to realign,” Dave Watt, REBGV president, said in a news release.

 “Although the economic situation in the United States has affected consumer confidence globally, the consensus view remains that our local housing market is underpinned by solid economic fundamentals.”

 In the Fraser Valley, the September average MLS detached home price of $522,816 was 2.4 per cent below the average price in the same month a year ago.

Year-over-year price changes on detached homes ranged from up 4.3 per cent in North Delta to down 6.3 per cent in Abbotsford.

Total MLS sales of all property types across the Fraser Valley declined 26 per cent in September to 980 compared with the same month a year ago.

Meanwhile the Fraser Valley‘s inventory of unsold homes rose to a new high of 12,379, up 56 per cent from the same month a year ago.

“Although our economic fundamentals remain solid, it’s fair to conclude that the U.S. financial situation is affecting consumer confidence here,” Kelvin Neufeld, president of the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board said in a press release.

“People are closely following what’s happening south of the border, they’re watching the financial markets and in some cases [are] delaying big-ticket purchases that they feel aren’t essential right now.”

 

Sony Portable Sat Nav receiver & Go Mobile Pro Office (front seat office with printer)

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

A look at some worthwhile road companions

Lowell Conn
Sun

Joutecís T-Eye ADR3000 is braced for your next accident.

1 Sony satisfies September swoon: These are the dog days of car gadget reviews, a desolate landscape with few new entries as manufacturers prepare for their Christmas launches. And so we tip our hat to Sony for helping us to maintain our word count with two strong releases in two straight weeks.

This time, the manufacturer provides early GPS holiday cheer with the NV-U94T portable satellite navigation receiver featuring Bluetooth technology and audio/video playback. Utilizing POSITION Plus technology, the product features multiple sensors recording car position to provide uninterrupted co-ordinates in the event of GPS signal interference.

The 4.8-inch widescreen offers Gesture Command, letting users control the system via finger movements.

Unfortunately, it will not interpret static gestures, so any hope of flipping the bird to signify the address of an ex-girlfriend or ex-boyfriend will not work. $399; visit sony.ca.

2 Bond braces for an accident: Joutec’s T-Eye ADR3000 is an obscure device for people who are eagerly awaiting their next accident.

Why else equip the vehicle with a product that features an internal and external camera, a GPS receiver providing speed and direction information, a built-in G-sensor to detect impact and a recorder that tracks all of this stuff in a 40-minute loop on a supplied SD Card?

As soon as an accident is sensed, the device marks and stores the data for later retrieval via the T-Eye Player software, which arrives with the unit. $455; visit maplin.co.uk.

3 Front-seat office: The innovative new Go Mobile Pro Office appears to operate under the auspices that the vehicle, if properly outfitted, is just another office — but on four wheels.

This product arrives as a small suitcase that opens up to feature an inkjet printer, a swivel laptop arm and an internal 400-watt power inverter that can be powered by plugging into the car’s cigarette lighter adapter.

All of this is built into a case that features wheels and a pull handle and, for all intents and purposes, looks like any other travel bag. $470 US ; visit gopromobiletechnologies.com.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 Car Laptop & Cell phone Mounting Brackets by RamMounts  http://www.ram-mount.com/ 

Office on Wheels http://www.gopromobiletechnologies.com/