Published since 1967, N.Z. HOT ROD is dedicated to portraying every sphere of Hot Rodding.From traditional and modern Hot Rods to Street Machines, Muscle Cars and Race Cars, NZ Hot Rod features them all. Plus there’s coverage of many of the 100 or so hot rod events, including Drag meets from around New Zealand and overseas. NZ Hot Rod also features the personalities that make it all possible including the leading lights of the hot rod fraternity and the young guns coming through. There’s technical advice, mechanical features, safety articles, industry news, analysis of new products and services and opinions from within the industry and unique New Zealand hot rod scene. With issues now topping 84 pages, it is NZ’s most widely read Hot Rod magazine and is recognized as “The Voice of the NZ Hot Rodding.” It’s a good read for the enthusiast and does it all with style and much, much more.
Get your customer service and cold chain strategies down cold with this edition on high-impact CX moves and the latest techniques for the transport of food and other temperature-sensitive products. From keeping fruits luscious to maintaining ice cream at ideal temperatures to how to grow your supply chain career, this edition has fresh takes on the most effective approaches and solutions.
HackSpace is the new monthly magazine for the modern maker. We’ll teach you new techniques and give you refreshers on familiar ones, from 3D printing, laser cutting, and woodworking to electronics and Internet of Things.
Flight International (or Flight) is a global aerospace weekly publication. Founded in 1909, it is the world’s oldest continuously-published aviation news magazine. With a team of journalists and correspondents around the world, it provides global coverage of aerospace manufacturing and aviation operations in the areas of air transport, business aviation, defense, general aviation and spaceflight. Features include the magazine’s famous aircraft cutaway illustrations, flight tests of new aircraft, in-service reports and sector-by-sector analysis.
The Book of Job is about a high school student who has trouble separating reality from fiction. Young Job falls “madly in love” with a new girl who catches his eye one Sunday mass. In the midst of his conforming to what he believes to be her idealized standards, he realizes his life is about so much more than simply himself.