Top Stories
_____________________________________________
Fat Jump Pro (By SID On)Developer: SID On Price: $0.99 Version Reviewed: 1.2 Download: here Requirements: Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.Requires iOS 4.0 or later. Located in the Warsow,Poland-SID on an independent mobile application developer has announced a recent update of Fat Jump Pro for the iPhone,iPad and iPod touch.Fat Jump Pro is a fast paced vertical arcade action for the iOS devices.Using the tilt controls the player must guide the jumping,little green hero (a healthy and crispy cucumber) up a never ending series of platforms... |
|
Latest Stories
______________________________________________
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Do you like this story?
And the whole two-cylinder engine thing is rather central to pretty much everything about this car.
Design
You’ll be familiar with the Fiat 500 by now. Since 2007 the retro-style reinterpretation of the 1960s icon has been terrorizing the streets of European cities, charming the pants off hip city-girls, their mums, dads and grandmas alike.That shape is instantly recognizable, and regardless of how great a subscriber you are to the notion of modernist or minimal design, it’s hard not to fall for the smiling face of the 500, with it’s puppy dog eyes, retro touches of chrome and flashes of the Italian flag.
Jump in and the gloss dashboard, switch buttons that are like giant gobstoppers, and the stylized central binnacle lift the experience beyond the norm. Remember, you’re paying for a quazi-premium product here, and a crazy price tag is just a step away thanks to hundreds of different personalization options, should the mood take you.
We’d suggest you don’t go mad, but you can do much more chic and interesting than our rather normal red-with-black test car.
Tech
Fiat’s connectivity interface is called ‘Blue and me’. It’s built on Microsoft’s in-car OS, meaning it’s the same architecture as Ford’s brilliant Sync.You get an aux-in socket, USB port and 12v outlet just ahead of the cup holder, or you can use the Bluetooth. Then you control the phone, music and media via the steering wheel buttons and/or voice commands.
Once paired you only ever need shout simple instructions at it on the move, “Call Mrs Pocket-Lint” for example, which it seems to obey with few issues.
Accept this isn’t the Range Rover world of TV and onboard cameras and it all works with a refreshing simplicity, which is kind of the entire point, isn’t it?
We’d also like to give a big thumbs up to fit for featuring a port on the dash-top, to slot in a sat nav. We’ve long queried why car makers can’t move the cigarette/12v socket to a more sensible location, so you don’t have to trail wires all over the place to charge a TomTom.
Driving
Now to that engine. Turn the 500 Twinair on for the first time and you’re in for a shock. It starts with an almost electronic whine and then throbs into life before settling to a soft put-put-put at idle. For those of you into your mechanical sounds, think crossing a Vespa, a Porsche 911 and an electric kitchen knife and you’ll be some way to imagining what it sounds like. Sounds dreadful doesn’t it? In practice not so much, it puts a big grin on our face every time we press the accelerator.Which is great except that the point of the Twinair is that it’s supposed to be powerful enough for you to have fun when you want - mission accomplished - but uber-economical if you baby it. Well, we tried, and ended up getting 36mpg, which is pretty shocking for a city car, and one that includes stop/start at that.
Verdict
Objectively, there are better cars than the Fiat 500 Twinair. A Smart is smaller and easier to park, a Toyota iQ more sophisticated and space-smart, a Mini more premium and ‘big-car’ in feel. But if you’re of a hard-headed logic, you’re probably not even be considering a 500 the first place. This is a car you buy with your heart because of the way it looks, or because you remember fondly the 60s originalIt isn’t just style over substance. There’s more than enough practical box-ticking here to make it an entirely justifiable choice.
Yes it’s expensive for its size and yes that engine’s economy is questionable, but you can forgive that because it’s just capable of putting a smile on your face - whether you’re looking at it or driving it.
If you’re worried about fuel economy, save yourself some money and buy the 1.2 petrol or better still the 1.3 diesel. But know that you’ll be denying yourself one of the most interesting, charismatic and fun sounding engines on sale in a car today. Sometimes emotion has to overrule logic, and the 500 TwinAir is one of those instances.
Via:Pocket-lint
This post was written by: Irfan Jam
Irfan Jam is a professional blogger, web designer and front end web developer. Follow him on Facebook

0 Responses to “Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review”
Post a Comment