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Saturday, December 1, 2018

Meet the Abu Dhabi Billionaire Who Owns a Museum of Cars

Meet the Abu Dhabi Billionaire Who Owns a Museum of Cars

Rainbow Cars | Museum of Cars | World’s Largest Jeep | Branded Island


By:Jimmy Aki  

Based in the UK, Jimmy is an economic researcher with outstanding hands-on and heads-on experience in Macroeconomic finance analysis, forecasting and planning. He has honed his skills having worked cross-continental as a finance analyst, which gives him inter-cultural experience. He currently has a strong passion for regulation and macroeconomic trends as it allows him peek under the global bonnet to see how the world works.


Hamad bin Hamdan Al Nahyan, popularly referred to as the Rainbow Sheikh, is the son of the late Emir of Abu Dhabi, the founder and first president of the United Arab Emirate (UAE). The Emirati businessman and Abu Dhabi billionaire is a descent of the Al Nahyan clan, one of the ruling families of the United Arab Emirates.

His nobility is a heritage which is shared by other members of the ruling clan. Hamad bagged his first degree in economics at the Emirates University before proceeding to obtain a masters degree at the University of Wales.

Rainbow Cars

His stupendous luxury includes a vast collection of some of the rarest automobiles. Profound among them are the seven Mercedes S-Classes which come in a variety of colors. He acquired these German machines in 1983 and sought the expertise of the “Styling Garage” firm to paint the cars one rainbow color each day of the week.
The German firm painted each car in the colors of the rainbow. Designed with matching leather interiors, the vehicles include gun racks inside the boot lit which accommodate three M16 rifles that match the color of the cars.

 
  Image Source: Steemit

This was where the parallel between the seven colors of his cars and the rainbow was drawn, hence; the nickname Rainbow Sheikh. Though his clout as an Abu Dhabi billionaire reverberates with so much ado in the United Arab Emirate’s capital, Hamad has a fervor for extravagance everywhere he goes.

Museum of Cars

Unlike Jay Leno who grew up acquainting himself with broken tractors and lawnmowers, Hamad has been preoccupied with the acquisition of rare and puzzling vehicles. A look into Hamad’s world of appurtenances will reveal the possession of a number of vintage Mini Coopers which seem to be a replica of an 1885 Benz Patent Motorwagen–widely regarded as the first ever car–and the only SUV ever manufactured by Lamborghini.

Source: Visit Abu Dhabi

His impressive array which some might deem eccentric includes vehicles ranging from the mundane to the insane. With an overwhelming status as a noble in the oil-rich nation, it would be somewhat pedestrian for someone of his influence to keep such cars in a garage.
Thus, Hamad specially built a pyramid to serve as a gallery for his antiquated collection. Commissioned as the Rainbow Sheikh’s Emirates National Auto Museum, Abu Dhabi, he combines the modern and the conservative taste to carve a niche which the likes of Jay Leno and Ralph Lauren would drool at.

World’s Largest Jeep

Hamad has a megalomaniac preference for dimensions that seem to defy the extreme definition for oddity. He built the world’s largest jeep; a prototype of the Dodge Power Wagon which is 64 times larger than the original.
The truck which is today the largest in existence has an apartment within. The Emirates National Auto Museum in Abu Dhabi is the only preserve where the rarity of a hybrid dwells.

He has a soft touch for Mercedes and feels well at home with other fans of the brand online. His museum also houses the largest motorized model of a Willys World War II jeep. The jeep gained global acclaim in 2012 when it was placed in the Guinness Book of World Records and the Abu Dhabi billionaire exploited the avenue to espouse the technological wherewithal of the UAE.

Social Media

The Sheikh never shies away from using his Instagram account as a platform to express his unbridled enthusiasm for ‘aesthetics around the wheels.’ His posts are almost entirely devoted to vehicles and anything related to transportation.
Followers will surely revel in the seemingly endless display of automobile luxury which includes the rarest and the most outlandish available. It features antiquities such as a massive white Ford truck in dunes and a 1959 Pontiac Bonneville. Other marvels include some of the cutest boats that you can imagine on waters.


 
Instagram

But some may think Hamad only comes to the spotlight because of his penchant for amassing a reservoir of automobiles. Beyond the attention stirred by his hobbies, his fortune according to the Daily Mail is almost as immense as that of the Saudi’s king. Hamad is one of the world’s nouveau riche with a net worth estimated at $20 billion and an abode that could be described as a castle.
He is twice as wealthy as mining magnate Gina Rinehart and even wealthier than the combined gross domestic product of several countries in Africa and Asia. Amassing about 400 different types of automobile barely drills a hole in Hamad’s pocket.

Abu Dhabi—the region where Hamad’s fortune sprouts from—has an immense oil deposit that constitutes 95% of the oil reserves in the United Arab Emirates. His family, regarded as one of the ruling elites in the UAE, controls Abu Dhabi’s oil deposits.

Branded Island

Hamad’s oddball adventures are not only restricted to road and track. He garnered global attention in 2011 when he reportedly recruited workers to carve his first name along a winding network of canals in a mostly-uninhabited island near Abu Dhabi. Named Al Futaisi, this private Island belonging to Hamad witnessed a dredging project creating series of canals snaking through the desert.





The ambitious engravement formed waterways in the sand. The fortune spent on such audacious project which spanned about a mile wide and a third of a mile across, left many lost for words when the Atlantic confirmed that the large letters of his names were visible even from space.
Although the images were wiped away probably for something grander and more in sync with the emirate’s development plan for 2030, his eccentric investment drew much publicity to the touch of wealth residing in the oil-rich region.
The Abu Dhabi billionaire flings his fortunes across America, Europe, and Australia as well. In 2017, the Sheikh spurned exploration attempts of an oil and gas company on his pastoral property in Australia.
While Hamad does not like to appeal to the world as a politician, he holds critical positions in the top echelons of administration in his native land where he serves as the chairman of Abu Dhabi Crown Prince’s Court and a member of the Executive Council of Abu Dhabi.


Featured image from commons.wikimedia.org.
Thursday, November 29, 2018

Top 10 Internet Safety Rules & What Not to Do Online

Top 10 Internet Safety Rules & What Not to Do Online:
#INTERNET #SECURITY #PRIVACY 


 1. Keep Personal Information Professional and Limited

Potential employers or customers don't need to know your personal relationship status or your home address. They do need to know about your expertise and professional background, and how to get in touch with you. You wouldn't hand purely personal information out to strangers individually—don't hand it out to millions of people online.

2. Keep Your Privacy Settings On

Marketers love to know all about you, and so do hackers. Both can learn a lot from your browsing and social media usage. But you can take charge of your information. As noted by Life hackers, both web browsers and mobile operating systems have settings available to protect your privacy online. Major websites like Facebook also have privacy-enhancing settings available. These settings are sometimes (deliberately) hard to find because companies want your personal information for its marketing value. Make sure you have enabled these privacy safeguards, and keep them enabled.

3. Practice Safe Browsing

You wouldn't choose to walk through a dangerous neighborhood—don't visit dangerous neighborhoods online. Cyber criminals use lurid content as bait. They know people are sometimes tempted by dubious content and may let their guard down when searching for it. The Internet's demimonde is filled with hard-to-see pitfalls, where one careless click could expose personal data or infect your device with malware. By resisting the urge, you don't even give the hackers a chance.

4. Make Sure Your Internet Connection is Secure

When you go online in a public place, for example by using a public Wi-Fi connection, PCMag notes you have no direct control over its security. Corporate cybersecurity experts worry about "endpoints"—the places where a private network connects to the outside world. Your vulnerable endpoint is your local Internet connection. Make sure your device is secure, and when in doubt, wait for a better time (i.e., until you're able to connect to a secure Wi-Fi network) before providing information such as your bank account number.

5. Be Careful What You Download 

A top goal of cyber criminals is to trick you into downloading malware—programs or apps that carry malware or try to steal information. This malware can be disguised as an app: anything from a popular game to something that checks traffic or the weather. As PCWorld advises, don't download apps that look suspicious or come from a site you don't trust.

6. Choose Strong Passwords
Passwords are one of the biggest weak spots in the whole Internet security structure, but there's currently no way around them. And the problem with passwords is that people tend to choose easy ones to remember (such as "password" and "123456"), which are also easy for cyber thieves to guess. Select strong passwords that are harder for cybercriminals to demystify. Password manager software can help you to manage multiple passwords so that you don't forget them. A strong password is one that is unique and complex—at least 15 characters long, mixing letters, numbers and special characters.

7. Make Online Purchases From Secure Sites

Any time you make a purchase online, you need to provide credit card or bank account information—just what cyber criminals are most eager to get their hands on. Only supply this information to sites that provide secure, encrypted connections. As Boston University notes, you can identify secure sites by looking for an address that starts with https: (the S stands for secure) rather than simply http: They may also be marked by a padlock icon next to the address bar.

8. Be Careful What You Post 

The Internet does not have a delete key, as that young candidate in New Hampshire found out. Any comment or image you post online may stay online forever because removing the original (say, from Twitter) does not remove any copies that other people made. There is no way for you to "take back" a remark you wish you hadn't made, or get rid of that embarrassing selfie you took at a party. Don't put anything online that you wouldn't want your mom or a prospective employer to see.

9. Be Careful Who You Meet Online
People you meet online are not always who they claim to be. Indeed, they may not even be real. As InfoWorld reports, fake social media profiles are a popular way for hackers to cozy up to unwary Web users and pick their cyber pockets. Be as cautious and sensible in your online social life as you 
are in your in-person social life.

10. Keep Your Antivirus Program Up To Date

Internet security software cannot protect against every threat, but it will detect and remove most malware—though you should make sure it's to date. Be sure to stay current with your operating system's updates and updates to applications you use. They provide a vital layer of security.
Keep these 10 basic Internet safety rules in mind and you'll avoid many of the nasty surprises that lurk online for the careless.


Collected Data Source

Hide your online status on Facebook

#facebook_features_you_may_not_know

How To Hide Online Status On Facebook Chat From Unwanted Friends:

During these days of social network and instant messaging apps, it is very hard to hide your online status from friends. Social networking sites like Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) and IM apps always keeps us connected with the world. While technology is mostly considered as a boon, some might consider this part of technology as “annoying.”


 Sometimes you might want to hide your online status on Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB). For example, you may not want to be seen as ‘online’ on the chat in your office, or don’t want to show your online status to people with whom you’re not much comfortable, such as your ex friend, father in law, etc. Thankfully, in such cases, Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) allows you to hide the fact that you’re online, and with this method, you can safely stay offline to people you want.



How to hide your online status on Facebook:

To hide your online status on Facebook from some particular friends, open Facebook in a web browser (Desktop Version of Facebook) and click on the chat bar from the bottom right corner. This will open a list of all your contacts who’re online.Now, click on the gear icon from this bar, and click on Advanced Settings from there. Now you’ll be able to see three options:

  •     Turn on chat for all friends except
  •     Turn on chat for only some friends
  •     Turn off chat

Of all these three, my personal favorite option is “Turn off chat” but this also means that I won’t be able to see online status of any of my friends. If you simply want to hide your online status from everybody, then this option is best for you.

If you want to turn on chat for all of your friends, except a few unwanted ones, then the first option is for you, and if you want to turn on chat for only a few selected friends, then use the second option. Of course after selecting the option, you’ll need to type the name of friends and click on the Save button.

So that’s how you can stay online for your near and dear friends, and stay away from unwanted and annoying friends on Facebook.
Wednesday, November 28, 2018

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