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February 01, 2012 04:59– by Everett Snyder
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Insulation may not be sexy, but it's everywhere - and without it we spend more money and lose the ability to regulate both heat and air conditioning in our homes. But recently, there's been a new growth area in the insulation and weatherization sector that's spurring all sorts of new technology for finding better ways to cram insulation into the standard pocket areas created in home construction. Now, after some time, the California Energy Commission (CEC) has voted unanimously to officially recognize open-cell spray foam as an accepted insulation.


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Bosch 2011 New Tools & Accessories - Part 1 Cordless

Every year Bosch generously invites members of the media to come test out, preview, and otherwise interact with, their new tools. In part 1 we'll focus on the…

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2011 Milwaukee Tools New Product Symposium Begins!

So we're here at the 2011 Milwaukee New Product Symposium. While it has yet to officially begin we have a lot of anticipation for what we expect to be a very…

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January 31, 2012 05:38– by Everett Snyder

LED lighting truly is the future. While we still like our incandescent lighting and how inexpensive it is, Cree has long been pioneering the next phase of LED-based lighting components. Now, Cree has introduced the new XLamp XB-D LED, which is the first LED based on an innovative new Cree technology platform. What makes it more impressive is that it actually doubles the lumens-per-dollar you get, so it simplifies product design and halves the LED component cost for many products. In this way, the XLamp XB-D LED is the next wave of price-performance for lighting-class LEDs. The XB-D LED is also 48 percent smaller than the XLamp XP package and ideal for lighting applications where high lumen density and compact light sources are especially important.


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January 24, 2012 22:22– by Matt MacDonald

It's important to take responsibility for your actions - and that equates to actions that lead to failure of products you've developed. This is particularly important when those products cause injuries or property damage. But, what if your product is only suspected of being the culprit - and investigations turn out the truth that it wasn't really your fault at all? This is what apparently happened when the owners of Larry's Upholstery dropped their case against Black & Decker. It turns out that an investigator discovered that the company's power tool equipment did not, in fact, cause the fire that burned down the business in 2008.


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January 23, 2012 05:18– by Everett Snyder

Home Depot has always been in the business of providing services to its customers. There's carpet installations, kitchen cabinet and countertop installation, plumbing, AC, electrical and more. But today, the home improvement warehouse chain announced that it acquired Redbeacon, a website-based company that connects consumers with contractors for their home maintenance, repair and remodeling needs.


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January 23, 2012 05:02– by Everett Snyder

You've heard of a pain in the neck, but Dante Autullo took it a little higher by accidentally shooting a 3-1/2" framing nail INTO HIS BRAIN. Now what makes this story even more interesting is that Dante didn't even realize he had shot the nail into his brain when the incident happened. He thought it flew by his head. The only mark was apparently a small puncture wound and the real truth (and subsequent panic) didn't occur until 36 hours later when an X-ray showed the nail lodged in his skull cavity. It wasn’t until he felt nauseated the next day that his fiancé took him to an immediate care center for a checkup. Adding to the irony, Dante's fiancé had already known him to be accident prone, stating at one point in the article "she wanted to marry [him] before he hurt himself too badly."


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January 26, 2012 12:06– by Everett Snyder

This week Lista announced that it has merged with global leading tool and storage manufacturer Stanley Black and Decker. Stanley's Vidmar division, like Lista, is a worldwide leader in the design and manufacture of a wide range of storage products. Lista is a Massachusetts company well-known for its excellent storage cabinets, mobile cabinets, workbenches and accessories. While Stanley Vidmar manufactures and markets similar modular cabinets, the company felt that the two complemented each other - with Stanley supplementing Lista's existing offerings in particular. The merger of these two leading companies and brands will establish a newly formed Stanley Storage and Workspace Solutions group. This group will be responsible for sale and support of both Lista and Vidmar products. That means that in the not-too-distant future you will be able to use the complete Lista offering alongside a powerful new complement of Stanley products, such as STAK, VLM and much more.


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January 02, 2012 07:42– by Tim Mitchell

We've seen our share of strange houses, but a couple of Berkeley architects took a decisively unique approach to a home in their local area, building an 1140 sq. ft. home from as many used car parts as they could get their hands on. We're talking painted sheet metal siding, windows and skylights & windows from Dodge Minivans, and car roofs. They went after a fish scale look by putting together a blend of parts made from different gray shades picked up from a variety of cars harvested from local junk yards. He and his partner used over 100 car roofs, laying them out according to color to make up the second-story "siding". They also utilized other reclaimed materials such as poplar bark and even salvaged redwood.


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December 30, 2011 08:05– by Everett Snyder

Perhaps this isn't part of a tool-story, but I suppose the combination of escaped prisoner and port-a-potty was impossible to resist. It seems an escaped prisoner, Cesar Sanchez, who had leapt from a moving van during a routine court transit, was caught just 6 hours later. How, you ask? Police dogs were used to track him to a local yard where there were portable toilets being stored. A helicopter crew then scanned the area using infrared and finally located him within one of the toilets.


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December 29, 2011 05:22– by Frank McCaulley

And I thought the Bugatti Veyron was fast! China has just unveiled its new "super-rapid" test train which is capable of traveling 310 miles per hour (500 kmph). The reveal, which took place over the weekend, is a positive move for the country that is suffering setbacks due to a fairly recent collision between two high-speed trains back in July. That crash killed over 40 people. Following the crash, the construction of new high-speed trains in China has since been a near halt... kind of like American trains have been since the dawn of the diesel engine...


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December 28, 2011 07:04– by Everett Snyder

If the siting of a home in relation to the sun is so important--think of everything you've ever heard about south-facing windows--why can't buildings simply rotate to take advantage of natural light? It may sound like a lot of effort just to achieve pleasing aesthetics, but when you're using the sun as your primary source of heat and electricity, which is true in some advanced sustainable building techniques, it starts to make sense.


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December 27, 2011 06:30– by Everett Snyder

This Christmas, what I really regret is not buying my wife this $130,000 toilet. I mean, if you're really going to demonstrate the maximum effect of a bling-centric life, how could you possibly pass up the opportunity to sit upon a crystal-studded throne to do your business? How can you justify wasting that money, for example, on an Audio R8 instead of this prestigious toilet-du-jour? The novelty lavatory was on display in Tokyo where, from the below video footage, seems to be very popular with the Japanese who were on-hand to check it out in person (the toilet, by-the-way was carefully protected behind glass so as to not allow any actual public, um, testing of the device).


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