Ramsey Flooring is a growing presence in Detroit Lakes, where its owners have history going back to the 1950s.
Steve
Ramsey is currently the sole owner, though he said he is working
towards joint ownership with brothers Dan and Brian, who work with him
in sales and installation.
From its 8,000-square-foot showroom
and warehouse in the original Detroit Lakes industrial park, Ramsey
Flooring handles sales and installation of “anything to do with floor
covering,” Steve said. “Carpet, ceramic tile, laminate, hardwood
floors…”
Ramsey Flooring has its own installers and also works with independent contractors.
“Jacobson
Tile and Stone does virtually all our tile work,” Steve said. “Keith
Pierson does hardwood floors — anything from finished to unfinished
product — he’s one of the best I’ve met. We’re just trying to
incorporate people that do quality work.”
Steve Ramsey has owned
a floor covering business in Anchorage for more than 15 years and
bought the building in Detroit Lakes last October, after renting space
for about a year in a building near the Canadian Pacific tracks.
Since
Floors & More left its Detroit Lakes presence to consolidate in
Fargo, Ramsey Flooring has been helping to fill the void.
About 70 percent of its workload is residential:
“Whether
you want to carpet one room, add the look and feel of laminate flooring
to your kitchen, or upgrade every floor in your house with the beauty
and elegance of hardwood, we can meet all of your flooring needs,” the
store says on its website.This document provides a guide to using the ventilation system in your house to provide adequate fresh air to residents.
But
it tackles commercial projects of all sizes. Some of its clients
include Country Inn and Suites, the Edgewater condominiums, the Holiday
Inn, Detroit Lakes Public Schools, the State Lottery offices in Detroit
Lakes, the MMCDC (State of Minnesota Housing), BJ’s BBQ Grill, BTD in
Detroit Lakes, Nereson Chevrolet, and the new Webber Family Ford
Dealership.
“Our overhead is real minimal, so that helps us keep
our prices down,” Steve said. “And the quality of our installation is
the best in the area, as far as I’m concerned.”
It’s a family business. Steve started working with his dad, Don, when he was about 16 years old.
Don and his brother Darrell are both helping out at Ramsey Flooring.
“Those
two have been in the business for years,” Steve said. With another
brother, Dave, who died a few years ago, “they used to be Ramsey
Brothers Carpet” in Detroit Lakes.
A cousin, Jim Ramsey, is an installer,This document provides a guide to using the ventilation system
in your house to provide adequate fresh air to residents. and Steve’s
sister Tanya is an artist who designed his business logo.
Other
employees include Shane Seaberg, who works in sales, Richard Haldorson,
an installer who often works with Darrell Ramsey, and Katie Pierson, who
handles accounting and sales.Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products.
SteLoad the precious minerals into your mining truck
and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot.ve Ramsey
grew up in Audubon and moved to the Twin Cities for a few years before
moving to Alaska in 1990.
Steve said his grandfather had always wanted to see Alaska, but never got the chance — so Steve made the move in his honor.
Steve
has a business there as well, Ramsey Carpet, which handles a wide range
of residential and commercial work — including housing in the Alaskan
oil fields and ongoing work at two military bases near Anchorage that
requires meeting tight military deadlines.
Lately he has been
spending about half his time in Alaska and about half in Detroit Lakes.
He has family working in Alaska as well, a daughter, Kara, and her
husband help run the business there.
His oldest daughter, Brittany, lives in England with her husband, who is a lawyer near London.
His son, Jacob, just graduated from college and is a youth pastor at the First Assembly of God Church in Brigham City, Utah.
Up
until now, Ramsey Flooring hasn’t done much work in the North Dakota
oil patch, but that may be beginning to change — it has jobs coming up
in Dickinson and Williston.
“We’ll go anywhere,” Steve said,
noting that the business is licensed in both Minnesota and North
Dakota.We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory.
More
travels may be in store, as the business is the only installer in
western Minnesota of Protect-All, a hard-wearing, easy-cleaning thick
vinyl flooring that is easy on the feet, looks like black rubber matting
and is used in commercial kitchens and veterinary clinics.
Ramsey
Flooring has the training and the special tools — routers and saws —
needed to weld the stuff together into a seamless floor covering.
Steve
handles commercial sales while Dan and Shane handle mostly residential
sales, and Steve said there is a lot of construction to keep them busy.
2012年10月31日 星期三
Wave of 'beautification' projects heads downtown
Palo Alto's busiest downtown thoroughfare will undergo a series of
touchups in the coming months, though in some cases the price for
beautification will include traffic disruptions and parking
restrictions.
The University Avenue projects are neither as dramatic nor as expensive as the city's planned streetscape changes at California Avenue,Our technology gives rtls systems developers the ability. which include switching from four lanes to two. But at least one of them is expected to impact downtown parking for up to three months early next year.
The most ambitious component of the city's "University Avenue Downtown Beautification Project" involves replacing the irrigation system that supplies water to the 73 planters along University Avenue. Starting in January,We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. workers will be going block by block between Alma and Webster streets, removing a section of the curb at most tree wells, changing the connection between the main water line and each well, replacing the existing spray heads with drip irrigation and reinstalling the curb, which runs above the main line.
The curb work will require the city to temporarily limit parking on each block. The city's work plan splits the area into six sections, with each phase involving one side of the block. Peter Jensen, the city's landscape architect, said the project is scheduled to begin in January and last from nine to 12 weeks.
"It will require closing of basically each segment or block for a week of so to parking," Jensen said at a Tuesday night meeting focused on the various downtown projects. "Parking will be impacted."
The first phase of the irrigation-replacement project is the southern side of University between Webster and Kipling streets.Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. Construction will require the city to close off 17 of the segment's 28 parking spots, Jensen said.
The goal of the $150,000 project is to replace an irrigation system that is outdated and inefficient, Jensen said. The existing system was installed in 1972, he said, with the idea that it would last until 1975. Tree growth has also been causing damage to the pipes.
"The trees have gotten a lot bigger and are crowding out everything in the planter, including the irrigation pipe," Jensen said. "There are consistently breaks in the pipe that require maintenance."
The project will also involve installing new planting along University Avenue. Jensen said the new plants were chosen largely for their survival skills, though color also played a major role. The proposed planting palette includes the resilient silver liriope,One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. the asparagus fern, the red-hued heuchera "Santa Ana Cardinal" and the pink-leafed nandina "Fire Power."
Other downtown projects promise to be less disruptive. Among them is the repainting of the underpass at the downtown Caltrain station and repairing broken light fixtures. This project, which the city is pursuing after requests from downtown businesses, is scheduled to kick off on Nov. 5 and last two weeks.
The project is included in the city's capital budget as the first phase of planned improvements to the Caltrain underpasses. This phase includes "power washing, limited waterproofing, painting the interior surfaces and replacing broken light fixtures," according to the budget. The second phase isn't currently on the city's agenda, though the budget notes that it "may include" new lighting, skylights, art and other amenities. The tunnel will be painted a sandy "golden brown" to match the stone archway near the entrance to Stanford University.
"The existing paint is peeling, water is leaking inside the tunnel at the joints, existing lighting fixtures are broken and are in need of repair," the budget states. "Increased clean-up and maintenance of the tunnel is necessary to provide a more inviting gateway entrance to downtown."
University Avenue isn't the only downtown street that will see construction in the coming months.A stone mosaic stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister. The city is scheduled to repave a stretch of Lytton Avenue between Alma and Florence streets in early January, a project that is expected to last two months. And work is proceeding on the recently approved renovation of the long-neglected Cogswell Plaza on Lytton and Ramona Street. That project includes removal of turf, installation of a new seating area and, most critically, the removal of the thick shrubbery that has long shielded the plaza's inhabitants and made the plaza a hot spot for alcohol, drug use and public urination.
Jensen said the goal of the renovation is to "encourage visitors and members of the business community to use that space for dining and broaden the user group of that plaza."
The University Avenue projects are neither as dramatic nor as expensive as the city's planned streetscape changes at California Avenue,Our technology gives rtls systems developers the ability. which include switching from four lanes to two. But at least one of them is expected to impact downtown parking for up to three months early next year.
The most ambitious component of the city's "University Avenue Downtown Beautification Project" involves replacing the irrigation system that supplies water to the 73 planters along University Avenue. Starting in January,We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. workers will be going block by block between Alma and Webster streets, removing a section of the curb at most tree wells, changing the connection between the main water line and each well, replacing the existing spray heads with drip irrigation and reinstalling the curb, which runs above the main line.
The curb work will require the city to temporarily limit parking on each block. The city's work plan splits the area into six sections, with each phase involving one side of the block. Peter Jensen, the city's landscape architect, said the project is scheduled to begin in January and last from nine to 12 weeks.
"It will require closing of basically each segment or block for a week of so to parking," Jensen said at a Tuesday night meeting focused on the various downtown projects. "Parking will be impacted."
The first phase of the irrigation-replacement project is the southern side of University between Webster and Kipling streets.Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. Construction will require the city to close off 17 of the segment's 28 parking spots, Jensen said.
The goal of the $150,000 project is to replace an irrigation system that is outdated and inefficient, Jensen said. The existing system was installed in 1972, he said, with the idea that it would last until 1975. Tree growth has also been causing damage to the pipes.
"The trees have gotten a lot bigger and are crowding out everything in the planter, including the irrigation pipe," Jensen said. "There are consistently breaks in the pipe that require maintenance."
The project will also involve installing new planting along University Avenue. Jensen said the new plants were chosen largely for their survival skills, though color also played a major role. The proposed planting palette includes the resilient silver liriope,One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. the asparagus fern, the red-hued heuchera "Santa Ana Cardinal" and the pink-leafed nandina "Fire Power."
Other downtown projects promise to be less disruptive. Among them is the repainting of the underpass at the downtown Caltrain station and repairing broken light fixtures. This project, which the city is pursuing after requests from downtown businesses, is scheduled to kick off on Nov. 5 and last two weeks.
The project is included in the city's capital budget as the first phase of planned improvements to the Caltrain underpasses. This phase includes "power washing, limited waterproofing, painting the interior surfaces and replacing broken light fixtures," according to the budget. The second phase isn't currently on the city's agenda, though the budget notes that it "may include" new lighting, skylights, art and other amenities. The tunnel will be painted a sandy "golden brown" to match the stone archway near the entrance to Stanford University.
"The existing paint is peeling, water is leaking inside the tunnel at the joints, existing lighting fixtures are broken and are in need of repair," the budget states. "Increased clean-up and maintenance of the tunnel is necessary to provide a more inviting gateway entrance to downtown."
University Avenue isn't the only downtown street that will see construction in the coming months.A stone mosaic stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister. The city is scheduled to repave a stretch of Lytton Avenue between Alma and Florence streets in early January, a project that is expected to last two months. And work is proceeding on the recently approved renovation of the long-neglected Cogswell Plaza on Lytton and Ramona Street. That project includes removal of turf, installation of a new seating area and, most critically, the removal of the thick shrubbery that has long shielded the plaza's inhabitants and made the plaza a hot spot for alcohol, drug use and public urination.
Jensen said the goal of the renovation is to "encourage visitors and members of the business community to use that space for dining and broaden the user group of that plaza."
Repairing the damage Sandy did to your home
Home repair in the wake of catastrophic flooding is enough to boggle
the brain. Ruined food is the common denominator of damage, but past
that,Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck.
other things seem to come in layers. Wet wood that sat in 2 feet of
rainwater for two days is usually salvageable,The oreck XL professional air purifier,
but wood that soaked in 6 feet of toxic water for three weeks may not
be. What can be saved and what must be bulldozed, and conditions will
vary widely from neighborhood to neighborhood.
Air-conditioning can be an important tool in drying things out, but experts advise against turning it on until it can be checked for electrical damage and the ducts cleaned of mold spores and other potential health irritants.Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. After spending a couple of weeks unchallenged, mold is likely not only to coat your walls but to threaten your health as well.
You may have been away for a while and might be eager to get back inside your house. But experts warn that patience is important: Enter your home only after examining the exterior for structural damage and evidence of gas leaks. If there is evidence of the latter, retreat to a safe distance and call your natural gas provider, who will give you further instructions. If there is obvious structural damage, you won't want to go inside until a building inspector can assure you that it's safe.
When you're ready to go inside, treat the entry like TV characters working a crime scene: Use a face mask (to protect your lungs from mold and other allergens); gloves (to protect your skin from infectious residue); and a camera (to document damage to your home and belongings for your insurance company). Take pictures before you move anything, and include close-ups.
The extent of the damage will depend on the depth, duration and velocity of the floodwaters, says Bill Coulbourne, a structural engineer in charge of risk management services for Citigate Sard and Verbinnen. Velocity likely will be a problem only where fast-moving water may have scored the homes' foundations, undermining them and causing potential settling. Depth will be a more widespread problem, affecting everything from floors and framing to power and plumbing.
"You don't have to have water very far off the floor to do electrical damage," Coulbourne says. "The same is true of air-conditioning and heating systems."
Chris Paul of Paul Davis Restoration in Alexandria, Va., who is certified in mitigation and remediation for mold, fire and water damage, says floodwater is divided into three grades: clean water; and black water (floodwater containing bacteria and pathogens). Rain that entered homes through roof gashes qualifies as clean water, which is easier to mitigate. However, if that water was left standing for weeks, Paul still recommends using gloves and face masks when cleaning up residue.
"A house that was fully impacted by floodwater is probably going to be cheaper to tear down and rebuild than remodel," says Martin King, technical adviser to the Association of Specialists in Cleaning and Restoration.Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. "If you have to strip the interior completely, it's often not economically feasible to salvage the house. Wood framing should survive flooding, but on a square-foot basis, it's more expensive to repair and remodel than to build new construction."
If structural damage is less severe, he says, a germicide should be used to clean exposed framing, studs and the like. Paul suggests putting furniture up on blocks or moving it to a dry room. It is possible to extract water from carpet.
"If it's been sitting four or five days, you want to just get it out of there," King says. "It's a hundred times easier to physically remove water than to dry it out. Take (wet) carpet out or the substructure will start buckling."
As for your refrigerator: If it has been sitting in floodwater for days or weeks, it can't be salvaged. If it simply sat without power for a few weeks, it may be. In either case, whatever you do: Don't open it. The fridge likely leaked, and the fate of the floor beneath it depends on the material it's made from. Ceramic tile is nonporous, so it can be cleaned as usual, although the grout, which is porous,Quickparts builds injection molds using aluminum or steel to meet your program. may require special effort.
Air-conditioning can be an important tool in drying things out, but experts advise against turning it on until it can be checked for electrical damage and the ducts cleaned of mold spores and other potential health irritants.Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. After spending a couple of weeks unchallenged, mold is likely not only to coat your walls but to threaten your health as well.
You may have been away for a while and might be eager to get back inside your house. But experts warn that patience is important: Enter your home only after examining the exterior for structural damage and evidence of gas leaks. If there is evidence of the latter, retreat to a safe distance and call your natural gas provider, who will give you further instructions. If there is obvious structural damage, you won't want to go inside until a building inspector can assure you that it's safe.
When you're ready to go inside, treat the entry like TV characters working a crime scene: Use a face mask (to protect your lungs from mold and other allergens); gloves (to protect your skin from infectious residue); and a camera (to document damage to your home and belongings for your insurance company). Take pictures before you move anything, and include close-ups.
The extent of the damage will depend on the depth, duration and velocity of the floodwaters, says Bill Coulbourne, a structural engineer in charge of risk management services for Citigate Sard and Verbinnen. Velocity likely will be a problem only where fast-moving water may have scored the homes' foundations, undermining them and causing potential settling. Depth will be a more widespread problem, affecting everything from floors and framing to power and plumbing.
"You don't have to have water very far off the floor to do electrical damage," Coulbourne says. "The same is true of air-conditioning and heating systems."
Chris Paul of Paul Davis Restoration in Alexandria, Va., who is certified in mitigation and remediation for mold, fire and water damage, says floodwater is divided into three grades: clean water; and black water (floodwater containing bacteria and pathogens). Rain that entered homes through roof gashes qualifies as clean water, which is easier to mitigate. However, if that water was left standing for weeks, Paul still recommends using gloves and face masks when cleaning up residue.
"A house that was fully impacted by floodwater is probably going to be cheaper to tear down and rebuild than remodel," says Martin King, technical adviser to the Association of Specialists in Cleaning and Restoration.Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. "If you have to strip the interior completely, it's often not economically feasible to salvage the house. Wood framing should survive flooding, but on a square-foot basis, it's more expensive to repair and remodel than to build new construction."
If structural damage is less severe, he says, a germicide should be used to clean exposed framing, studs and the like. Paul suggests putting furniture up on blocks or moving it to a dry room. It is possible to extract water from carpet.
"If it's been sitting four or five days, you want to just get it out of there," King says. "It's a hundred times easier to physically remove water than to dry it out. Take (wet) carpet out or the substructure will start buckling."
As for your refrigerator: If it has been sitting in floodwater for days or weeks, it can't be salvaged. If it simply sat without power for a few weeks, it may be. In either case, whatever you do: Don't open it. The fridge likely leaked, and the fate of the floor beneath it depends on the material it's made from. Ceramic tile is nonporous, so it can be cleaned as usual, although the grout, which is porous,Quickparts builds injection molds using aluminum or steel to meet your program. may require special effort.
2012年10月29日 星期一
Sun farms boom across South Carolina state line
Just off a country road, a few miles from the South Carolina border,We are pleased to offer the following list of professional mold maker and casters. is a sight few people ever imagined around here.
Solar panels cover a 35-acre field that once produced corn, tobacco and other crops in this corner of southeastern North Carolina. When the sun shines, the panels generate enough electricity for hundreds of homes.
"I initially thought this was a pipe dream," said farmer Billy Dean Hunt, recalling discussions with a solar company about using his cornfield for a sun farm. "But I started talking to them. They convinced me they would honor what they said. So I did it."
The scene near Rowland is found increasingly across North Carolina. Solar farms dot the landscape from the Blue Ridge mountains to the sandy coastal plain -- the result of an emerging renewable energy industry.
In many cases, solar farms are replacing cropland that doesn't generate enough income from traditional farming. Other times, solar farms are being placed on vacant industrial sites or land that hasn't grown crops in years.
Unlike South Carolina, North Carolina has encouraged the development of solar power through generous tax incentives and a state law requiring electric utilities to use some renewable energy. These policies are a key reason North Carolina often rates high in national rankings of solar-friendly states -- and why solar farms are growing steadily.
"This shows we are progressive," said Laurinburg Mayor Thomas Parker, whose community has a solar farm similar to the ones in nearby Rowland. "Anytime we can add a dollar to the tax base, we are interested. I believe in it. I think this will be more prevalent in the future."
Since 2007, when North Carolina began requiring power companies to use renewable energy, about 100 solar farms have registered to open, according to the N.C. Sustainable Energy Association, a group that tracks the sun business.
Some of those may not have cranked up yet, but the association says the number of companies registering with the state gives an indication of the interest. Before the law passed five years ago, North Carolina didn't have any solar farms, the association reports.
The increase in solar farms reflects a larger trend in North Carolina, where investor-owned utilities must provide up to 12.5 percent of their power from renewable sources.
North Carolina's renewable and energy efficiency industry employs more than 15,000 people and has generated some $3.7 billion in gross revenue this year, the association says. Companies providing solar services have increased 76 percent since the renewable energy requirement passed the N.C. Legislature five years ago, according to surveys by the Sustainable Energy Association.
The idea behind North Carolina's solar effort is to diversify energy sources and stimulate the economy with a relatively new type of industry.
Solar will never replace traditional power sources because the sun doesn't shine all the time. But if North Carolina's effort continues, solar boosters say the state could reduce dependence on coal and nuclear power and stabilize electric bills for customers. Coal and nuclear power plants, both of which create toxic waste, buy fuel from out of state to make energy, and fuel supplies such as coal are subject to price variability.
Solar farms are large-scale projects intended to provide power for the electrical grid, which has historically relied almost entirely on coal, nuclear, hydro and natural gas. Solar farms provide far more energy than solar panels on homes, which also feed power to the grid.
In contrast to North Carolina, South Carolina has no solar farms, even though the states have many similarities,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. according to the S.C. Clean Energy Business Alliance, a group that favors renewable power.
Nationally, the Palmetto State is one of the least-friendly places in the country for solar power, studies have shown. Unlike North Carolina, the state has no requirements that energy companies use solar, wind or biomass. And last spring, S.C. legislators failed to pass a solar tax credits bill that mirrored North Carolina's and was expected to make development of sun farms easier.
Solar farms periodically spark questions about whether they are appropriate in some communities. Some people say they are unsightly and take up too much space, while others question whether it's a good idea to replace productive farmland with solar farms.
Conservative lawmakers also question the wisdom of adopting government policies to encourage an industry they say would have trouble surviving on its own. Efforts are under way in North Carolina and, possibly at the federal level, to scale back incentives and requirements for renewable energy.
To Helen and Tom Livingston, solar farms are a great idea.
She and her younger brother decided this spring not to replant a 47-acre cotton field their family has owned for generations. For much of the next three decades, their family will be paid to rent the land to Strata Solar, one of North Carolina's leading sun power developers.
Details of the arrangement were not available, but Strata typically pays about $500 to $600 per acre annually. That would be more than $20,000 each year for the 47-acre plot in Robeson County.
"It is almost too good to pass up," said Helen Livingston, 71. "For us, it wasn't just the money. It was the excitement of having a solar farm. But I think people would see that it does pay more than farming."
Livingston said producing energy from the sun helps reduce dependence on fossil fuels, such as coal and natural gas, which hurt the environment when they are extracted from the earth.
"All of our family is environmentally conscious," she said.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. "We were the right contact for a solar farm because we knew the importance of this."
Hunt, the farmer from Rowland, said his reasons for leasing to a renewable energy company were almost purely financial.
"It is guaranteed money," said Hunt, 63, a Marine Corps veteran. "Farming is a risky business. If you can take some of the risk out and the liability, you are ahead of the ball game.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. If I die, my wife will have income because she couldn't farm the land anymore."
Like Livingston, Hunt hasn't abandoned farming other land he owns. His solar farm is surrounded by cornfields that are a short jaunt from the South-of-the-Border tourist stop and the S.C. state line.
Sun farms typically develop in the way Strata Solar Inc. built those for Hunt and the Livingstons. A renewable energy company will strike a deal to rent or buy property, build the sun farm, then resell the power to an electric utility. The solar company makes money, and the utility meets state requirements that it use renewable energy.
Most solar farms contain dozens of rows of large glassy panels, facing south to absorb the best sunlight. Wires send energy to nearby electrical substations. Duke Energy, which also operates in South Carolina, buys some of the power. Many farms can produce up to five megawatts, but one is large enough to produce 20 megawatts.
For much of this year, Robeson County was a busy place for solar farms, where Strata Solar developed six of them. Statewide, the company has built about 15 farms and plans more than 20 next year, company spokesman Blair Schooff said. The company's 12 total solar projects this year employed about 360 construction workers, company officials said.
O2 Energies Inc., another solar development company, opened a $15 million sun farm near Fairmont earlier this month. The company has developed and owns seven farms statewide and plans to develop at least five more next year, said the company's chief executive, Joel Olsen.
Jerry Bass, Strata Solar's construction manager for sun farms, said his company trains mostly local workers, then moves them from one job site to the next in areas where the company is building clusters of farms.
Willie Locklear, a Maxton area native who helped build the Livingston family's solar farm, said sun projects have created badly needed construction jobs. Many of the people who landed solar jobs in Robeson County are Native Americans, like himself, who were skilled at general construction work, he said.
But Locklear said those jobs have dwindled and solar farm construction "gave us a chance to show we could do something besides hang a piece of sheetrock."
Robeson County, just across the border from Dillon County, S.C., has an unemployment rate that hovers near 13 percent, one of the highest in North Carolina.
"When I think of solar, I think of Texas, Arizona -- places out West," said the 42-year-old Locklear, now a supervisor with Strata. "But the opportunity has proven itself here. All it takes is an open land mass and somebody willing to take a chance. Sunlight is going nowhere. I think it's 100 percent more of the future than a lot of people imagined."
Despite the popularity of solar farms in many parts of North Carolina, the business has detractors,Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, including some lawmakers.
N.C. Rep. Mike Hager, R-Rutherfordton, said it's a mistake to dangle tax incentives, which drain state revenues, for an industry that he contends would not be competitive otherwise. He and others question whether North Carolina is gaining any real economic benefit since solar farms don't produce many jobs after the initial construction phase.
"I think this has set the wrong precedent," said Hager, a former Duke Energy employee. "You take taxpayer dollars and prop up an industry that can't survive on its own. Why do we do this? Why is it any better than any of the other ones?"
The development of solar farms has not caused major increases in power bills, but Hager said even extra pennies on a bill matter to people who are unemployed. He predicted the state's generous tax incentives and energy requirement would be examined by the N.C. Legislature next year. Questions also have arisen about whether federal tax incentives for solar companies will be reduced if Republican Mitt Romney defeats Democratic President Barack Obama.
S.C. Sen. Lee Bright, R-Spartanburg, noted that taxpayers lost when the government-supported Solyndra solar panel company went under in California, so he questions why South Carolina should follow North Carolina's lead. He said it's wrong to mandate that power companies use renewable energy when natural gas is increasingly available and affordable.
Utilities argue that it is more expensive to produce sun power than traditional energy forms. They also say the best solar can ever do is supplement more reliable energy sources. It will never replace coal or nuclear because the sun doesn't always shine.
They also say it's obvious the industry is flourishing in North Carolina -- and that could also occur in South Carolina under the right circumstances. National Renewable Energy Laboratory data show that South Carolina is among the top 20 states in solar intensity, higher even than North Carolina.
Solar panels cover a 35-acre field that once produced corn, tobacco and other crops in this corner of southeastern North Carolina. When the sun shines, the panels generate enough electricity for hundreds of homes.
"I initially thought this was a pipe dream," said farmer Billy Dean Hunt, recalling discussions with a solar company about using his cornfield for a sun farm. "But I started talking to them. They convinced me they would honor what they said. So I did it."
The scene near Rowland is found increasingly across North Carolina. Solar farms dot the landscape from the Blue Ridge mountains to the sandy coastal plain -- the result of an emerging renewable energy industry.
In many cases, solar farms are replacing cropland that doesn't generate enough income from traditional farming. Other times, solar farms are being placed on vacant industrial sites or land that hasn't grown crops in years.
Unlike South Carolina, North Carolina has encouraged the development of solar power through generous tax incentives and a state law requiring electric utilities to use some renewable energy. These policies are a key reason North Carolina often rates high in national rankings of solar-friendly states -- and why solar farms are growing steadily.
"This shows we are progressive," said Laurinburg Mayor Thomas Parker, whose community has a solar farm similar to the ones in nearby Rowland. "Anytime we can add a dollar to the tax base, we are interested. I believe in it. I think this will be more prevalent in the future."
Since 2007, when North Carolina began requiring power companies to use renewable energy, about 100 solar farms have registered to open, according to the N.C. Sustainable Energy Association, a group that tracks the sun business.
Some of those may not have cranked up yet, but the association says the number of companies registering with the state gives an indication of the interest. Before the law passed five years ago, North Carolina didn't have any solar farms, the association reports.
The increase in solar farms reflects a larger trend in North Carolina, where investor-owned utilities must provide up to 12.5 percent of their power from renewable sources.
North Carolina's renewable and energy efficiency industry employs more than 15,000 people and has generated some $3.7 billion in gross revenue this year, the association says. Companies providing solar services have increased 76 percent since the renewable energy requirement passed the N.C. Legislature five years ago, according to surveys by the Sustainable Energy Association.
The idea behind North Carolina's solar effort is to diversify energy sources and stimulate the economy with a relatively new type of industry.
Solar will never replace traditional power sources because the sun doesn't shine all the time. But if North Carolina's effort continues, solar boosters say the state could reduce dependence on coal and nuclear power and stabilize electric bills for customers. Coal and nuclear power plants, both of which create toxic waste, buy fuel from out of state to make energy, and fuel supplies such as coal are subject to price variability.
Solar farms are large-scale projects intended to provide power for the electrical grid, which has historically relied almost entirely on coal, nuclear, hydro and natural gas. Solar farms provide far more energy than solar panels on homes, which also feed power to the grid.
In contrast to North Carolina, South Carolina has no solar farms, even though the states have many similarities,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. according to the S.C. Clean Energy Business Alliance, a group that favors renewable power.
Nationally, the Palmetto State is one of the least-friendly places in the country for solar power, studies have shown. Unlike North Carolina, the state has no requirements that energy companies use solar, wind or biomass. And last spring, S.C. legislators failed to pass a solar tax credits bill that mirrored North Carolina's and was expected to make development of sun farms easier.
Solar farms periodically spark questions about whether they are appropriate in some communities. Some people say they are unsightly and take up too much space, while others question whether it's a good idea to replace productive farmland with solar farms.
Conservative lawmakers also question the wisdom of adopting government policies to encourage an industry they say would have trouble surviving on its own. Efforts are under way in North Carolina and, possibly at the federal level, to scale back incentives and requirements for renewable energy.
To Helen and Tom Livingston, solar farms are a great idea.
She and her younger brother decided this spring not to replant a 47-acre cotton field their family has owned for generations. For much of the next three decades, their family will be paid to rent the land to Strata Solar, one of North Carolina's leading sun power developers.
Details of the arrangement were not available, but Strata typically pays about $500 to $600 per acre annually. That would be more than $20,000 each year for the 47-acre plot in Robeson County.
"It is almost too good to pass up," said Helen Livingston, 71. "For us, it wasn't just the money. It was the excitement of having a solar farm. But I think people would see that it does pay more than farming."
Livingston said producing energy from the sun helps reduce dependence on fossil fuels, such as coal and natural gas, which hurt the environment when they are extracted from the earth.
"All of our family is environmentally conscious," she said.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. "We were the right contact for a solar farm because we knew the importance of this."
Hunt, the farmer from Rowland, said his reasons for leasing to a renewable energy company were almost purely financial.
"It is guaranteed money," said Hunt, 63, a Marine Corps veteran. "Farming is a risky business. If you can take some of the risk out and the liability, you are ahead of the ball game.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. If I die, my wife will have income because she couldn't farm the land anymore."
Like Livingston, Hunt hasn't abandoned farming other land he owns. His solar farm is surrounded by cornfields that are a short jaunt from the South-of-the-Border tourist stop and the S.C. state line.
Sun farms typically develop in the way Strata Solar Inc. built those for Hunt and the Livingstons. A renewable energy company will strike a deal to rent or buy property, build the sun farm, then resell the power to an electric utility. The solar company makes money, and the utility meets state requirements that it use renewable energy.
Most solar farms contain dozens of rows of large glassy panels, facing south to absorb the best sunlight. Wires send energy to nearby electrical substations. Duke Energy, which also operates in South Carolina, buys some of the power. Many farms can produce up to five megawatts, but one is large enough to produce 20 megawatts.
For much of this year, Robeson County was a busy place for solar farms, where Strata Solar developed six of them. Statewide, the company has built about 15 farms and plans more than 20 next year, company spokesman Blair Schooff said. The company's 12 total solar projects this year employed about 360 construction workers, company officials said.
O2 Energies Inc., another solar development company, opened a $15 million sun farm near Fairmont earlier this month. The company has developed and owns seven farms statewide and plans to develop at least five more next year, said the company's chief executive, Joel Olsen.
Jerry Bass, Strata Solar's construction manager for sun farms, said his company trains mostly local workers, then moves them from one job site to the next in areas where the company is building clusters of farms.
Willie Locklear, a Maxton area native who helped build the Livingston family's solar farm, said sun projects have created badly needed construction jobs. Many of the people who landed solar jobs in Robeson County are Native Americans, like himself, who were skilled at general construction work, he said.
But Locklear said those jobs have dwindled and solar farm construction "gave us a chance to show we could do something besides hang a piece of sheetrock."
Robeson County, just across the border from Dillon County, S.C., has an unemployment rate that hovers near 13 percent, one of the highest in North Carolina.
"When I think of solar, I think of Texas, Arizona -- places out West," said the 42-year-old Locklear, now a supervisor with Strata. "But the opportunity has proven itself here. All it takes is an open land mass and somebody willing to take a chance. Sunlight is going nowhere. I think it's 100 percent more of the future than a lot of people imagined."
Despite the popularity of solar farms in many parts of North Carolina, the business has detractors,Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, including some lawmakers.
N.C. Rep. Mike Hager, R-Rutherfordton, said it's a mistake to dangle tax incentives, which drain state revenues, for an industry that he contends would not be competitive otherwise. He and others question whether North Carolina is gaining any real economic benefit since solar farms don't produce many jobs after the initial construction phase.
"I think this has set the wrong precedent," said Hager, a former Duke Energy employee. "You take taxpayer dollars and prop up an industry that can't survive on its own. Why do we do this? Why is it any better than any of the other ones?"
The development of solar farms has not caused major increases in power bills, but Hager said even extra pennies on a bill matter to people who are unemployed. He predicted the state's generous tax incentives and energy requirement would be examined by the N.C. Legislature next year. Questions also have arisen about whether federal tax incentives for solar companies will be reduced if Republican Mitt Romney defeats Democratic President Barack Obama.
S.C. Sen. Lee Bright, R-Spartanburg, noted that taxpayers lost when the government-supported Solyndra solar panel company went under in California, so he questions why South Carolina should follow North Carolina's lead. He said it's wrong to mandate that power companies use renewable energy when natural gas is increasingly available and affordable.
Utilities argue that it is more expensive to produce sun power than traditional energy forms. They also say the best solar can ever do is supplement more reliable energy sources. It will never replace coal or nuclear because the sun doesn't always shine.
They also say it's obvious the industry is flourishing in North Carolina -- and that could also occur in South Carolina under the right circumstances. National Renewable Energy Laboratory data show that South Carolina is among the top 20 states in solar intensity, higher even than North Carolina.
The classic nudes of the Silverman Collection
For anyone interested in German and Austrian art before the Second
World War, there is only one place to go and that is to the Richard Nagy
gallery in London where the Silverman Collection of art is on display.
It is not just that it is a quite breathtaking collection, with half a dozen masterpieces and some of the finest paintings of Otto Dix, Egon Schiele and Ludwig Meidner anywhere. It is also such a strongly personal gathering of art by a collector who has bought the pictures that appealed to him not for their name or their value but for what can only be described as their anger. "I like paintings of torment,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS." he told an interviewer, "of tension, of the human condition"
Well, there is plenty of that in his chosen field, which may explain the singular lack of the art in UK public galleries. The British tend not to like angst in their art, still less when it is painted by their former enemies. Even among private collectors it is a limited speciality, confined mostly to Jewish Americans from the East Coast, seeking the culture of their roots but also, perhaps, an explanation of the cataclysm that befell Europe at the time.
Benedict Silverman fits that bill, although he lays no claim to middle-European ancestry. But there is clearly something in the art that speaks to him directly. One of his first purchases was of a black wash and charcoal sketch, Standing Boy by Egon Schiele, from 1910. It was one of a series of studies the artist made when only 20 of street urchins. It's an exquisite work but a painful one, as the boy, his hands thrust into his jacket pockets, looks with tightened eyes on the world about.
It was a picture, Silverman implies in an interview published in the catalogue, that reminded him of his own childhood,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale agate beads from china, or lack of it. When he was only six his mother had been carted off to a mental asylum suffering from post-natal depression after the birth of twin girls. She remained incarcerated until her death in old age, unbeknownst to her son who was left bringing up his sisters.
The theme of loss and disruption runs throughout his holdings. His own favourite picture is a superb gouache and watercolour by Egon Schiele, Woman with Homunculus, from his most creative period in 1910. He drew it after he had taken his girlfriend for an abortion.Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, The black-haired girl, naked except for black stockings, turns back to look at you, the figure of a child clutching her side, her eyes both accusing and resigned. Schiele died, tragically, of the Spanish flu in 1918, aged only 28, planning a life-size canvas of the Last Supper representing himself and the young artists whose task it would be to create a new world after all the destruction of the old. Silverman's collection includes an oil and tempura study for the final work, which was never completed. It's one of the most valuable paintings in the collection and, in its way, the most optimistic as the figures set about the meal with an air of determination and experience.
Few of Schiele's contemporaries shared his belief in that future. Ludwig Meidner,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale shamballa Bracele , whose work is too little known over here,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. foresaw what was coming in 1913 with Apocalyptic Landscape in a violent vision of tumbling buildings, huge explosions and raging waters. His worst fears were realised once the war had started. The Incident in the Suburbs from 1915 depicts two men struggling desperately against each other as they flee the collapsing buildings. For Meidner, it represented the ruptures of society caused by the war. For Silverman, it appealed as a picture of the viciously competitive real estate market in which he started out. Meidner's feelings are mirrored in a powerful Cubist oil on board painting by his friend George Grosz, completed towards the end of the year. It is a nightmare view of a world balanced on the edge of chaos, the figures and emblems of the corporate world bustling around the figure of a lone female tightrope walker.
"I like paintings that hit me in the stomach," says Silverman. That is certainly true of the works of Meidner and Schiele. It is also true in a more cerebral sense of the works of Otto Dix. The collection contains two truly stupendous works by Germany's answer to Goya. One is a small nude done in the manner of Cranach. Venus with Gloves from 1932 is as compulsive as it is disconcerting, the classical simplicity of the nude subverted by the emaciation of the body, the wistful fragility in the eyes and the black of the gloves and falling skirt against the whiteness of the body. You could spend hours just looking at it without ever fully understanding the picture or the sitter.
The same could be said, but even more so, of the great masterpiece of the Silverman Collection, Otto Dix's Self Portrait with Model. Painted in 1923, it is one of the largest oils in the exhibition and quite the most disconcerting. The artist stands, all formal and constricted, in shirt and tie and well-groomed hair. He looks out of the picture with a set face and empty eyes. Beside him is the nude model, full fleshed, her arms above her head, looking down with wide-eyes, thinking of something else. Power and control are there, but it is the model that seems freest, and the artist most imprisoned by himself.
Benedict Silverman is now disposing of the whole collection to fund a foundation dedicated to teaching literacy around the world. Reading, he feels, is the great liberator and the lack of it the great obstacle to an individual's progress. It's a very American act of charity. But then Silverman represents a very American style of collector in his combination of private passion and public responsibility. One wishes there were more like him. One fears that, in a world of trophy buying and the super rich, they are a vanishing breed.
It is not just that it is a quite breathtaking collection, with half a dozen masterpieces and some of the finest paintings of Otto Dix, Egon Schiele and Ludwig Meidner anywhere. It is also such a strongly personal gathering of art by a collector who has bought the pictures that appealed to him not for their name or their value but for what can only be described as their anger. "I like paintings of torment,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS." he told an interviewer, "of tension, of the human condition"
Well, there is plenty of that in his chosen field, which may explain the singular lack of the art in UK public galleries. The British tend not to like angst in their art, still less when it is painted by their former enemies. Even among private collectors it is a limited speciality, confined mostly to Jewish Americans from the East Coast, seeking the culture of their roots but also, perhaps, an explanation of the cataclysm that befell Europe at the time.
Benedict Silverman fits that bill, although he lays no claim to middle-European ancestry. But there is clearly something in the art that speaks to him directly. One of his first purchases was of a black wash and charcoal sketch, Standing Boy by Egon Schiele, from 1910. It was one of a series of studies the artist made when only 20 of street urchins. It's an exquisite work but a painful one, as the boy, his hands thrust into his jacket pockets, looks with tightened eyes on the world about.
It was a picture, Silverman implies in an interview published in the catalogue, that reminded him of his own childhood,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale agate beads from china, or lack of it. When he was only six his mother had been carted off to a mental asylum suffering from post-natal depression after the birth of twin girls. She remained incarcerated until her death in old age, unbeknownst to her son who was left bringing up his sisters.
The theme of loss and disruption runs throughout his holdings. His own favourite picture is a superb gouache and watercolour by Egon Schiele, Woman with Homunculus, from his most creative period in 1910. He drew it after he had taken his girlfriend for an abortion.Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, The black-haired girl, naked except for black stockings, turns back to look at you, the figure of a child clutching her side, her eyes both accusing and resigned. Schiele died, tragically, of the Spanish flu in 1918, aged only 28, planning a life-size canvas of the Last Supper representing himself and the young artists whose task it would be to create a new world after all the destruction of the old. Silverman's collection includes an oil and tempura study for the final work, which was never completed. It's one of the most valuable paintings in the collection and, in its way, the most optimistic as the figures set about the meal with an air of determination and experience.
Few of Schiele's contemporaries shared his belief in that future. Ludwig Meidner,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale shamballa Bracele , whose work is too little known over here,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. foresaw what was coming in 1913 with Apocalyptic Landscape in a violent vision of tumbling buildings, huge explosions and raging waters. His worst fears were realised once the war had started. The Incident in the Suburbs from 1915 depicts two men struggling desperately against each other as they flee the collapsing buildings. For Meidner, it represented the ruptures of society caused by the war. For Silverman, it appealed as a picture of the viciously competitive real estate market in which he started out. Meidner's feelings are mirrored in a powerful Cubist oil on board painting by his friend George Grosz, completed towards the end of the year. It is a nightmare view of a world balanced on the edge of chaos, the figures and emblems of the corporate world bustling around the figure of a lone female tightrope walker.
"I like paintings that hit me in the stomach," says Silverman. That is certainly true of the works of Meidner and Schiele. It is also true in a more cerebral sense of the works of Otto Dix. The collection contains two truly stupendous works by Germany's answer to Goya. One is a small nude done in the manner of Cranach. Venus with Gloves from 1932 is as compulsive as it is disconcerting, the classical simplicity of the nude subverted by the emaciation of the body, the wistful fragility in the eyes and the black of the gloves and falling skirt against the whiteness of the body. You could spend hours just looking at it without ever fully understanding the picture or the sitter.
The same could be said, but even more so, of the great masterpiece of the Silverman Collection, Otto Dix's Self Portrait with Model. Painted in 1923, it is one of the largest oils in the exhibition and quite the most disconcerting. The artist stands, all formal and constricted, in shirt and tie and well-groomed hair. He looks out of the picture with a set face and empty eyes. Beside him is the nude model, full fleshed, her arms above her head, looking down with wide-eyes, thinking of something else. Power and control are there, but it is the model that seems freest, and the artist most imprisoned by himself.
Benedict Silverman is now disposing of the whole collection to fund a foundation dedicated to teaching literacy around the world. Reading, he feels, is the great liberator and the lack of it the great obstacle to an individual's progress. It's a very American act of charity. But then Silverman represents a very American style of collector in his combination of private passion and public responsibility. One wishes there were more like him. One fears that, in a world of trophy buying and the super rich, they are a vanishing breed.
How To Weather The Storm
With Hurricane Sandy upon us, those of us on the East coast are most
likely staying indoors the next couple of days hoping our basements
don’t flood. During that time, one might get a little bored what with
the whole stuck inside by yourself thing. So I figure it may be a good
idea to lay out some ideal movies to watch if you find yourself counting
the tiles in your kitchen floor because nothing’s on television and you
just finished the last page of the “Mad Libs” booklet you scavenged
from behind your dresser that you haven’t seen in almost 6 years and
flipping through it you realize that you would always put fart for every
word… movies you can watch on your own.
I don’t know why, but this movie really motivates me to do things I otherwise wouldn’t have the energy or drive for.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. Like if my room was particularly dirty I would just watch the first 15-20 minutes of it and start cleaning like it was what I was wanted to do the whole time, and the movie was just distracting me. For the uninitiated, Bradley Cooper plays a down on his luck writer Eddie Morra, who runs into a guy from his past who offers him a free sample of a pill that could solve all his problems. With nothing left to lose, Eddie takes it and discovers that it opens up all the doors inside his head that he didn’t even know were there. So with a modest supply of the drug, his life is completely open to any and all possibilities, including the drawbacks of overconfidence and recklessness that come with being too smart for one’s own good. If you find yourself with extra time on your hands in the coming days, watch this movie and when it’s over clean your home, balance your checkbook, make a nice dinner for your family, or whatever you could never find the right motivation to do before.
If you start to feel lonely with the rain coming down in sheets, pop this one in and remember that people are terrible and completely undeserving of your affinity. The first Kevin Smith film, financed by selling off his comic book collection, that put him on the map as a writer and director. Dante Hicks is a twenty-something burnout still working his go nowhere job as a cashier at the Quick Stop convenience story in Leonardo, New Jersey. Despite his constant pleas that he isn’t even supposed to be there that day, he encounters the usual pain in the ass customers and awkward social situations that come with a job behind the counter, and seeks to vent it all with his lackadaisical friend Randall who does a similar job in the video store next door. It’s a catharsis of all the things wrong not just with working in retail, but the arrogance and disrespect of the average consumer. And with everyone staying indoors for the inclement weather, not having to deal with customers is something I would think most retail employees would relish.
Michael Cera has a sort of polarizing effect amongst audiences. People either love him or loathe him. But most people from each camp can come together and agree that Scott Pilgrim is an awesome movie,Manufactures flexible plastic and synthetic rubber hose tubing, even if it’s in spite of Michael Cera. Either way, Scott Pilgrim is a 22 year old bass player in the band Sex Bob-omb and as they proceed through a battle of the bands contest for a shot at a record contract, Scott meets the mysterious and angst ridden Ramona Flowers. In his quest to earn her affection as well as deal with all the other people problems in his life, Scott has to defeat Ramona’s seven evil exes in one on one battles.Klaus Multiparking is an industry leader in innovative parking system technology. The twist is that in Scott’s world, everything is set to a stylized version of an 80s arcade aesthetic, down to the 8-bit imagery and even Ramona’s exes exploding into coins with arbitrary points after they are defeated. Despite its poor performance in theaters having to open against the first Expendables, it still stands in my top ten favorite movies ever.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. The action is exciting,We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. the comedy is funny, the music is enticing, and everyone appears to be acting their heart out making the flurry of emotions, though exaggerated, entirely believable. Even if you have a hard time laughing at a movie when you are alone, this is a movie that will have you in stitches.
I don’t know why, but this movie really motivates me to do things I otherwise wouldn’t have the energy or drive for.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. Like if my room was particularly dirty I would just watch the first 15-20 minutes of it and start cleaning like it was what I was wanted to do the whole time, and the movie was just distracting me. For the uninitiated, Bradley Cooper plays a down on his luck writer Eddie Morra, who runs into a guy from his past who offers him a free sample of a pill that could solve all his problems. With nothing left to lose, Eddie takes it and discovers that it opens up all the doors inside his head that he didn’t even know were there. So with a modest supply of the drug, his life is completely open to any and all possibilities, including the drawbacks of overconfidence and recklessness that come with being too smart for one’s own good. If you find yourself with extra time on your hands in the coming days, watch this movie and when it’s over clean your home, balance your checkbook, make a nice dinner for your family, or whatever you could never find the right motivation to do before.
If you start to feel lonely with the rain coming down in sheets, pop this one in and remember that people are terrible and completely undeserving of your affinity. The first Kevin Smith film, financed by selling off his comic book collection, that put him on the map as a writer and director. Dante Hicks is a twenty-something burnout still working his go nowhere job as a cashier at the Quick Stop convenience story in Leonardo, New Jersey. Despite his constant pleas that he isn’t even supposed to be there that day, he encounters the usual pain in the ass customers and awkward social situations that come with a job behind the counter, and seeks to vent it all with his lackadaisical friend Randall who does a similar job in the video store next door. It’s a catharsis of all the things wrong not just with working in retail, but the arrogance and disrespect of the average consumer. And with everyone staying indoors for the inclement weather, not having to deal with customers is something I would think most retail employees would relish.
Michael Cera has a sort of polarizing effect amongst audiences. People either love him or loathe him. But most people from each camp can come together and agree that Scott Pilgrim is an awesome movie,Manufactures flexible plastic and synthetic rubber hose tubing, even if it’s in spite of Michael Cera. Either way, Scott Pilgrim is a 22 year old bass player in the band Sex Bob-omb and as they proceed through a battle of the bands contest for a shot at a record contract, Scott meets the mysterious and angst ridden Ramona Flowers. In his quest to earn her affection as well as deal with all the other people problems in his life, Scott has to defeat Ramona’s seven evil exes in one on one battles.Klaus Multiparking is an industry leader in innovative parking system technology. The twist is that in Scott’s world, everything is set to a stylized version of an 80s arcade aesthetic, down to the 8-bit imagery and even Ramona’s exes exploding into coins with arbitrary points after they are defeated. Despite its poor performance in theaters having to open against the first Expendables, it still stands in my top ten favorite movies ever.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. The action is exciting,We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. the comedy is funny, the music is enticing, and everyone appears to be acting their heart out making the flurry of emotions, though exaggerated, entirely believable. Even if you have a hard time laughing at a movie when you are alone, this is a movie that will have you in stitches.
2012年10月24日 星期三
This Tiny Sticker Is Bigger Than The Giant Samsung Galaxy
At any given time there are a whole mess of buzzwords and concepts
floating around the tech world, evolving incrementally until eventually
they become something we can all actually use and enjoy (or,
alternately, until they are replaced or forgotten). "The cloud,"
meaningless as that term is, has already transitioned into "thing
everyone uses all the time." Something like 3-D printing, on the other
hand, is still at a comparatively early stage--you can technically do
it, but nobody knows quite why you would, given the current state of the
tech, and nobody knows what the application will be that makes it
useful for normal people.
Near-field communication, or NFC,Find detailed product information for howo tractor 6x4 and other products. is, I think, suddenly usable for normal people,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. in one very specific product: TecTiles, from Samsung. If you want a full primer on NFC, read this, but in short, NFC is a communications protocol, sort of like Bluetooth but without the need for elaborate searching and pairing. It's a tap-based connection: tap to connect to a speaker, tap to transfer data, tap to pay, tap to talk, tap to share. Eventually, this is the tech (or perhaps the basis of the tech) that'll let you replace your wallet with your phone. Credit card, gift cards, subway pass, identification, that'll all be digital, and you'll share it with a tap.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. But the infrastructure isn't nearly in place to do that smoothly, as Christina Bonnington of Wired found out when she went wallet-less for a month.
TecTiles are NFC-enabled stickers, priced at $15 for five. They're nonthreatening, easy, and fun. They're little stickers and do little things. They make it easier to do things you were going to do already. You'll use them for just that reason and then all of a sudden, you'll understand NFC. So when it comes time to put your wallet in a box in your closet and use your phone to pay for things in stores, check your ID in bars, and pay for the subway, you'll be prepared. And that's much more interesting than the Galaxy Note II, which is, you know, a massive phone that's pretty much like the last massive phone Samsung made.
Most new Samsung smartphones, including the very popular Galaxy S III, the very good Galaxy Nexus, and soon-to-be-popular Galaxy Note II (the latter of which launches in the US today, and which I used to test the new TecTiles) support them. You put the stickers on, well, anything, and tapping them with your phone makes your phone do various things. Imagine a QR code, except imagine it's easy to use and also not stupid.
Example: Put a TecTile on your bedside table. When you tap it, your phone dims, your alarm switches on, your volume turns to an appropriate level for an alarm clock, and your Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turn off to save battery.
A movie theater could stick one onto its entrance. Tap it with your phone and you check in on Foursquare, tweet about it, update your Facebook status, update your Google+ status, share your location on Glympse, and connect to the guy next to you on LinkedIn. Which is all subterfuge, because the real benefit is that the same TecTile also set your phone to silent mode so when all of your social networks explode with fascinating updates while you're in the theater, nobody else has to know about it.
Stick one on your car's dashboard. Tap it with your phone, and it turns on Bluetooth to connect to your car stereo,China plastic moulds manufacturers directory. launches the navigation app,Thank you for visiting! I have been cry stalmosaic since 1998. starts playing your favorite driving song, and texts your mom to say you're leaving now.
Near-field communication, or NFC,Find detailed product information for howo tractor 6x4 and other products. is, I think, suddenly usable for normal people,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. in one very specific product: TecTiles, from Samsung. If you want a full primer on NFC, read this, but in short, NFC is a communications protocol, sort of like Bluetooth but without the need for elaborate searching and pairing. It's a tap-based connection: tap to connect to a speaker, tap to transfer data, tap to pay, tap to talk, tap to share. Eventually, this is the tech (or perhaps the basis of the tech) that'll let you replace your wallet with your phone. Credit card, gift cards, subway pass, identification, that'll all be digital, and you'll share it with a tap.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. But the infrastructure isn't nearly in place to do that smoothly, as Christina Bonnington of Wired found out when she went wallet-less for a month.
TecTiles are NFC-enabled stickers, priced at $15 for five. They're nonthreatening, easy, and fun. They're little stickers and do little things. They make it easier to do things you were going to do already. You'll use them for just that reason and then all of a sudden, you'll understand NFC. So when it comes time to put your wallet in a box in your closet and use your phone to pay for things in stores, check your ID in bars, and pay for the subway, you'll be prepared. And that's much more interesting than the Galaxy Note II, which is, you know, a massive phone that's pretty much like the last massive phone Samsung made.
Most new Samsung smartphones, including the very popular Galaxy S III, the very good Galaxy Nexus, and soon-to-be-popular Galaxy Note II (the latter of which launches in the US today, and which I used to test the new TecTiles) support them. You put the stickers on, well, anything, and tapping them with your phone makes your phone do various things. Imagine a QR code, except imagine it's easy to use and also not stupid.
Example: Put a TecTile on your bedside table. When you tap it, your phone dims, your alarm switches on, your volume turns to an appropriate level for an alarm clock, and your Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turn off to save battery.
A movie theater could stick one onto its entrance. Tap it with your phone and you check in on Foursquare, tweet about it, update your Facebook status, update your Google+ status, share your location on Glympse, and connect to the guy next to you on LinkedIn. Which is all subterfuge, because the real benefit is that the same TecTile also set your phone to silent mode so when all of your social networks explode with fascinating updates while you're in the theater, nobody else has to know about it.
Stick one on your car's dashboard. Tap it with your phone, and it turns on Bluetooth to connect to your car stereo,China plastic moulds manufacturers directory. launches the navigation app,Thank you for visiting! I have been cry stalmosaic since 1998. starts playing your favorite driving song, and texts your mom to say you're leaving now.
Why a Renaissance in Local Delivery Points
Amazon still wavers on the model. In early summer, reports surfaced
that the e-commerce giant was planning to pursue same-day delivery as a
tentpole of its strategy moving forward. But the rumors were quickly
quieted by Tom Szukutak,Allows you to securely organize any group of cable ties
or wires. the company’s CFO, who told investors on the Q2 earnings call
that the company did not ”really see a way to do same-day delivery on a
broad scale economically.”
Fast forward to October, and we’re seeing an explosion of activity in the logistics space with a handful of key startups expanding; Walmart piloting a same-day delivery option; and eBay opening its own service, eBay Now. What’s driving the resurgence however, is not the e-commerce framework that sunk Kozmo and continues to hinder Amazon’s efforts. It’s a new push to improve connectivity, and transparency, within existing local marketplaces — not build new ones.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte.
“What we’re doing is basically redistributing an infrastructure that’s in a city; we’re a simple marketplace,” Bastian Lehmann, CEO of Postmates told me in an interview.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. The company, which expanded into groceries earlier this month with an update to its Get It Now service, draws on a pool of crowd-sourced couriers — similar to Taskrabbit — to pick up, pay for, and deliver food and merchandise to anyone located in San Francisco. “The goal is to try to understand the inventory in city in the same way that Amazon understands what they have in their warehouse,” Lehmann explained.
But it’s the information problem behind inventory, not necessarily the logistics of bringing the inventory to consumers, that’s the major hurdle for services like Postmates today. The company currently manages the majority of the inventory information for the businesses on its platform manually (via a data entry team), but plans to launch a merchant-facing product which will allow businesses to keep their own inventory up-to-date. But for a company that positions its ability to deliver from business without pre-existing agreements as a major catalyst for scale, the inventory channel — whether via data entry or merchant relationship — will likely prove a major impediment to growth.
Part of the problem is that the current models for collecting and sharing local information — namely, crowd-sourcing (Foursquare and Yelp), aggregation (Factual) and distribution/publishing networks (SinglePlatform and Yext) — are largely inapplicable for the complex and time-sensitive nature of inventory information. While availability may not be a major issue in the restaurant vertical, retail inventory fluctuates and the value proposition for same-day delivery relies on absolute transparency of product (you need to know what’s available at the time of the order, and need to make sure it remains available until the courier makes the pickup). Inevitably, inventory data is too fragmented and fluid to rely on human management; it needs to be passed along programmatically through integrations with the point of sale and inventory management tools used by local businesses.
Tom Allason, CEO of Shutl,Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck. a UK-based startup that provides a white-label delivery solution for retailers similar to the way paypal services payments, says that adoption of these connected inventory systems is improving. “There were pretty much no retailers in the UK who had [accessible inventory] five years ago; maybe a handful three years ago; and maybe thirty who got it last year,” Allason told me Monday. “But there’s not a single retailer that you talk to that doesn’t have a plan on getting [accessible inventory], whether it’s tomorrow or a few years down the road.”
Peter Christensen, the director of marketing at Retailigence, which aggregates and distributes inventory data to mobile applications, says the early success of online-to-in-store pickup programs run at Walmart and Target will likely push others larger retailers to begin to upgrade existing inventory systems.
In many ways, same-day delivery is a leading indicator for an emerging, and potentially dominant, sector in the hyperlocal industry built on top of a connected local inventory.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. Whether its fulfillment (same-day delivery or in-store pickup) or search and discovery, the inventory layer is a critical next step in creating parity between the local and remote (e-commerce) marketplaces. That process began with business information – place data, hours of operation, reviews etc – and, with the advent of GPS-enabled smartphones, has expanded to consumer location. But it’s real-time inventory, and the services built on top of it, which still makes Amazon a better marketplace than main street.
Fast forward to October, and we’re seeing an explosion of activity in the logistics space with a handful of key startups expanding; Walmart piloting a same-day delivery option; and eBay opening its own service, eBay Now. What’s driving the resurgence however, is not the e-commerce framework that sunk Kozmo and continues to hinder Amazon’s efforts. It’s a new push to improve connectivity, and transparency, within existing local marketplaces — not build new ones.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte.
“What we’re doing is basically redistributing an infrastructure that’s in a city; we’re a simple marketplace,” Bastian Lehmann, CEO of Postmates told me in an interview.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. The company, which expanded into groceries earlier this month with an update to its Get It Now service, draws on a pool of crowd-sourced couriers — similar to Taskrabbit — to pick up, pay for, and deliver food and merchandise to anyone located in San Francisco. “The goal is to try to understand the inventory in city in the same way that Amazon understands what they have in their warehouse,” Lehmann explained.
But it’s the information problem behind inventory, not necessarily the logistics of bringing the inventory to consumers, that’s the major hurdle for services like Postmates today. The company currently manages the majority of the inventory information for the businesses on its platform manually (via a data entry team), but plans to launch a merchant-facing product which will allow businesses to keep their own inventory up-to-date. But for a company that positions its ability to deliver from business without pre-existing agreements as a major catalyst for scale, the inventory channel — whether via data entry or merchant relationship — will likely prove a major impediment to growth.
Part of the problem is that the current models for collecting and sharing local information — namely, crowd-sourcing (Foursquare and Yelp), aggregation (Factual) and distribution/publishing networks (SinglePlatform and Yext) — are largely inapplicable for the complex and time-sensitive nature of inventory information. While availability may not be a major issue in the restaurant vertical, retail inventory fluctuates and the value proposition for same-day delivery relies on absolute transparency of product (you need to know what’s available at the time of the order, and need to make sure it remains available until the courier makes the pickup). Inevitably, inventory data is too fragmented and fluid to rely on human management; it needs to be passed along programmatically through integrations with the point of sale and inventory management tools used by local businesses.
Tom Allason, CEO of Shutl,Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck. a UK-based startup that provides a white-label delivery solution for retailers similar to the way paypal services payments, says that adoption of these connected inventory systems is improving. “There were pretty much no retailers in the UK who had [accessible inventory] five years ago; maybe a handful three years ago; and maybe thirty who got it last year,” Allason told me Monday. “But there’s not a single retailer that you talk to that doesn’t have a plan on getting [accessible inventory], whether it’s tomorrow or a few years down the road.”
Peter Christensen, the director of marketing at Retailigence, which aggregates and distributes inventory data to mobile applications, says the early success of online-to-in-store pickup programs run at Walmart and Target will likely push others larger retailers to begin to upgrade existing inventory systems.
In many ways, same-day delivery is a leading indicator for an emerging, and potentially dominant, sector in the hyperlocal industry built on top of a connected local inventory.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. Whether its fulfillment (same-day delivery or in-store pickup) or search and discovery, the inventory layer is a critical next step in creating parity between the local and remote (e-commerce) marketplaces. That process began with business information – place data, hours of operation, reviews etc – and, with the advent of GPS-enabled smartphones, has expanded to consumer location. But it’s real-time inventory, and the services built on top of it, which still makes Amazon a better marketplace than main street.
Mobile phone review exclusive
The Motorola Razr I is the latest offering from Google owned smartphone maker Motorola.Largest gemstone beads
and jewelry making supplies at wholesale prices. It shares its design
and many of its features with the Razr M, launched in the US, however it
is one of the first mainstream android devices to feature an Intel
chipset inside.
In this review we will look at the design of the device, the Intel chipset and some of the main features and compare them to other offerings on the smartphone market.
At a similar size to the iPhone 5, Motorola has designed a great looking compact smartphone. Although the dimensions are similar to the iPhone 5, the Razr i still manages to incorporate an impressive 4.3-inch display. To fit the screen Motorola have designed the handset’s bezel to be extremely slim, giving the phone a sleek look.A wide range of polished tiles for your tile flooring and walls. The inner frame is constructed out of aircraft grade aluminium with a plastic surround, giving the phone a very solid feel compared to many android smartphones currently available. Gorilla Glass protects the display on the front with the unique rear case being inlaid with Kevlar. The casing is also coated with a Splash Guard that repels water droplets.
The Razr has several physical buttons on its right side, with a lock key at the top, a volume rocker under it and a camera shutter. The left side of the phone features a microUSB charging port and under a flap there are slots for a microSD and a micro-SIM card. As the internals of the phone are sealed, there is no access to the 2000mAh battery, and this may be a negative point for some. The top of the phone has a standard 3.5mm jack, and the phone is bundled with a stereo headset.
The design is definitely one of the plus points of the Razr i, giving the phone a solid, sleek feel and when compared to many similar android handsets like the HTC One S.
The Razr i comes packed with Android 4.0 – Ice Cream Sandwich, with an upgrade to Jellybean in the works. Unlike Motorola smartphones of old, which had heavily customized ROMs, Motorola have stuck which the standard Ice Cream Sandwich with a few minor changes. The general user interface looks just like the stock Android interface with extra widgets and different homepages.
The most useful change I found was that swiping to the left of the main screen pulls up a quick settings screen. This made accessing most of the phones key settings very simple, with the ability to launch the full settings menu with one button.
Another change to the stock Android interface is the Circles widget. This provides time, weather and battery in an elegant widget on the home screen. The widget allows you to display the clock in analogue or digital format, the weather for several cities and also shows notifications where the battery is normally displayed.
The 2.0 GHz Intel Processer does well to cope with all that Android 4.0 throws at it with only a few minor stumbles along the way.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. In normal operation, the Intel chip can deal with several apps running with ease, however the phone animations can at times feel sluggish in comparison to similar handsets by HTC or Samsung. The Intel chip also brings with it compatibility issues, for example apps like Google Chrome will run on the US Razr M, but not on the Intel based Razr I and this is a problems for several other apps.
A great addition to Android on the Razr i is SmartActions. This allows you to simply and easily set your phone to automatically apply different settings in any situation. Examples include changing to silent when you get home, or reminding you to charge your phone before you go to bed.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. These SmartActions really differentiate the phone from other offerings at a similar price point.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
A great feature included in this phone, yet to make it to many smartphones is NFC. This allows the transfer of files, websites or videos quickly and simply by touching the phone to another NFC enabled smartphone. Tests between the Razr i and a Galaxy S3 worked perfectly when transferring websites and YouTube videos, however there was some trouble transferring picture files. The in-built NFC will may also allow for wireless payments in the near future.
In this review we will look at the design of the device, the Intel chipset and some of the main features and compare them to other offerings on the smartphone market.
At a similar size to the iPhone 5, Motorola has designed a great looking compact smartphone. Although the dimensions are similar to the iPhone 5, the Razr i still manages to incorporate an impressive 4.3-inch display. To fit the screen Motorola have designed the handset’s bezel to be extremely slim, giving the phone a sleek look.A wide range of polished tiles for your tile flooring and walls. The inner frame is constructed out of aircraft grade aluminium with a plastic surround, giving the phone a very solid feel compared to many android smartphones currently available. Gorilla Glass protects the display on the front with the unique rear case being inlaid with Kevlar. The casing is also coated with a Splash Guard that repels water droplets.
The Razr has several physical buttons on its right side, with a lock key at the top, a volume rocker under it and a camera shutter. The left side of the phone features a microUSB charging port and under a flap there are slots for a microSD and a micro-SIM card. As the internals of the phone are sealed, there is no access to the 2000mAh battery, and this may be a negative point for some. The top of the phone has a standard 3.5mm jack, and the phone is bundled with a stereo headset.
The design is definitely one of the plus points of the Razr i, giving the phone a solid, sleek feel and when compared to many similar android handsets like the HTC One S.
The Razr i comes packed with Android 4.0 – Ice Cream Sandwich, with an upgrade to Jellybean in the works. Unlike Motorola smartphones of old, which had heavily customized ROMs, Motorola have stuck which the standard Ice Cream Sandwich with a few minor changes. The general user interface looks just like the stock Android interface with extra widgets and different homepages.
The most useful change I found was that swiping to the left of the main screen pulls up a quick settings screen. This made accessing most of the phones key settings very simple, with the ability to launch the full settings menu with one button.
Another change to the stock Android interface is the Circles widget. This provides time, weather and battery in an elegant widget on the home screen. The widget allows you to display the clock in analogue or digital format, the weather for several cities and also shows notifications where the battery is normally displayed.
The 2.0 GHz Intel Processer does well to cope with all that Android 4.0 throws at it with only a few minor stumbles along the way.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. In normal operation, the Intel chip can deal with several apps running with ease, however the phone animations can at times feel sluggish in comparison to similar handsets by HTC or Samsung. The Intel chip also brings with it compatibility issues, for example apps like Google Chrome will run on the US Razr M, but not on the Intel based Razr I and this is a problems for several other apps.
A great addition to Android on the Razr i is SmartActions. This allows you to simply and easily set your phone to automatically apply different settings in any situation. Examples include changing to silent when you get home, or reminding you to charge your phone before you go to bed.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. These SmartActions really differentiate the phone from other offerings at a similar price point.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
A great feature included in this phone, yet to make it to many smartphones is NFC. This allows the transfer of files, websites or videos quickly and simply by touching the phone to another NFC enabled smartphone. Tests between the Razr i and a Galaxy S3 worked perfectly when transferring websites and YouTube videos, however there was some trouble transferring picture files. The in-built NFC will may also allow for wireless payments in the near future.
2012年10月22日 星期一
Apple Expand Micropayment Systems
Efforts to monetize web content have largely failed in the past, with
users preferring to switch rather than pay for information. Earlier
this month, Google Wallet expanded its micropayment capabilities to
include web content. Websites can now set up their pages so that users
can sample some portion of the web content and then see a banner (bottom
figure) that tells them that seeing more of the content will require
paying a fee. The system also works for buying other types of products
over the web.
“The Google Wallet online service is a free service that lets you carry your wallet on the web,” Google explains on its About Wallet page. “It securely stores your credit card information in your Google Account so you don’t have to enter your billing and shipping information each time you shop online. When you checkout at online merchants that accept Google Wallet, you can quickly pay by signing in to Google Wallet.”
Publishers have long sought ways to compensate themselves for their web content. “Google Wallet for web content is an experiment to see if users will be prepared to pay for individual web pages if the buying process is sufficiently easy,” notes Google on its Wallet for Business page.We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. Initial participants in this “experiment” are Dorling Kindersley Ltd., Oxford University Press, and Peachpit Press. Google promises that, by bringing content online, companies will expand their audiences and increase revenues while giving users a method of “instant refunds and rich previews” with just a simple click of their mouse, once they are signed up for the service.
Micropayment schemes such as this date from the 1990s, with efforts such as IBM’s Micro Payments and microtransaction division. Standards were even developed, but users never accepted these systems. In 2009, New York Times columnist David Carr wrote, “Remember that when iTunes began, the music industry was being decimated by file sharing. By coming up with an easy user interface and obtaining the cooperation of a broad swath of music companies, Mr. Jobs helped pull the business off the brink. He has been accused of running roughshod over the music labels, which are a fraction of their former size. But they are still in business.”
Google Wallet,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. first demonstrated in May 2011, was described as an open system that would allow any vendor of even non-Android phones (such as Apple, Microsoft, and RIM) to partner with Google to provide the service: “Google Wallet is a key part of our ongoing effort to improve shopping for both businesses and consumers. It’s aimed at making it easier for you to pay for and save on the goods you want, while giving merchants more ways to offer coupons and loyalty programs to customers, as well as bridging the gap between online and offline commerce.”
Google Wallet, a free Android app on Google Play or other Android stores, allows your smartphone to act as a “virtual wallet, so you can tap, pay, and save using virtual versions of your credit cards, rewards cards, gift cards and Google Offers. It securely stores your credit card information on your phone by isolating your credentials from malware. When you checkout at traditional brick-and-mortar stores that accept Google Wallet, you can pay by just tapping your phone at the point of sale.” The Wallet also includes advertising or incentive offers as well as GPS and location information. Early reviews of the general product through Google Play have been very mixed, with complaints revolving around the speed of the services and the difficulty in using it even on the Galaxy Nexus.HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed .
Google Wallet—minus the web payment feature—is available in 160 countries. Adding web content to its financial services platform should only increase Google’s reach. This latest update includes security and battery life improvements. Originally, Google Wallet stored user data on individual cellphones; however,The oreck XL professional air purifier, in the latest update of Wallet, sensitive data is now stored on a “highly secure” server at the Google site for greater consumer protection.
With the release of Apple’s iOS 6, Apple now has its own mobile payment platform: Passbook. “Your boarding passes, movie tickets, retail coupons, loyalty cards, and more are now all in one place. You can add passes to Passbook through apps, emails, and websites from participating airlines, theaters, stores, and more. Then you can scan your iPhone or iPod touch to check in for a flight, get into a movie, and redeem a coupon. You can also see when your coupons expire, where your concert seats are, and the balance left on that all-important coffee bar card.”
Released with iOS 6 in September, Passbook launches from the App Store once users select the feature on their iPhone or iPod touch. It doesn’t currently work with the iPad. Passbook uses a combination of GPS, web, and banking technologies: “Passbook is time and location based. So your passes and tickets automatically appear on your Lock screen when and where you need them. Arrive at the airport and your boarding pass pops up. If you’re waiting to board the flight and your gate changes, Passbook tells you. And if you decide to grab a coffee on the way to your newSelecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. gate, your gift card appears when you walk into the cafe.”
“The Google Wallet online service is a free service that lets you carry your wallet on the web,” Google explains on its About Wallet page. “It securely stores your credit card information in your Google Account so you don’t have to enter your billing and shipping information each time you shop online. When you checkout at online merchants that accept Google Wallet, you can quickly pay by signing in to Google Wallet.”
Publishers have long sought ways to compensate themselves for their web content. “Google Wallet for web content is an experiment to see if users will be prepared to pay for individual web pages if the buying process is sufficiently easy,” notes Google on its Wallet for Business page.We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. Initial participants in this “experiment” are Dorling Kindersley Ltd., Oxford University Press, and Peachpit Press. Google promises that, by bringing content online, companies will expand their audiences and increase revenues while giving users a method of “instant refunds and rich previews” with just a simple click of their mouse, once they are signed up for the service.
Micropayment schemes such as this date from the 1990s, with efforts such as IBM’s Micro Payments and microtransaction division. Standards were even developed, but users never accepted these systems. In 2009, New York Times columnist David Carr wrote, “Remember that when iTunes began, the music industry was being decimated by file sharing. By coming up with an easy user interface and obtaining the cooperation of a broad swath of music companies, Mr. Jobs helped pull the business off the brink. He has been accused of running roughshod over the music labels, which are a fraction of their former size. But they are still in business.”
Google Wallet,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. first demonstrated in May 2011, was described as an open system that would allow any vendor of even non-Android phones (such as Apple, Microsoft, and RIM) to partner with Google to provide the service: “Google Wallet is a key part of our ongoing effort to improve shopping for both businesses and consumers. It’s aimed at making it easier for you to pay for and save on the goods you want, while giving merchants more ways to offer coupons and loyalty programs to customers, as well as bridging the gap between online and offline commerce.”
Google Wallet, a free Android app on Google Play or other Android stores, allows your smartphone to act as a “virtual wallet, so you can tap, pay, and save using virtual versions of your credit cards, rewards cards, gift cards and Google Offers. It securely stores your credit card information on your phone by isolating your credentials from malware. When you checkout at traditional brick-and-mortar stores that accept Google Wallet, you can pay by just tapping your phone at the point of sale.” The Wallet also includes advertising or incentive offers as well as GPS and location information. Early reviews of the general product through Google Play have been very mixed, with complaints revolving around the speed of the services and the difficulty in using it even on the Galaxy Nexus.HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed .
Google Wallet—minus the web payment feature—is available in 160 countries. Adding web content to its financial services platform should only increase Google’s reach. This latest update includes security and battery life improvements. Originally, Google Wallet stored user data on individual cellphones; however,The oreck XL professional air purifier, in the latest update of Wallet, sensitive data is now stored on a “highly secure” server at the Google site for greater consumer protection.
With the release of Apple’s iOS 6, Apple now has its own mobile payment platform: Passbook. “Your boarding passes, movie tickets, retail coupons, loyalty cards, and more are now all in one place. You can add passes to Passbook through apps, emails, and websites from participating airlines, theaters, stores, and more. Then you can scan your iPhone or iPod touch to check in for a flight, get into a movie, and redeem a coupon. You can also see when your coupons expire, where your concert seats are, and the balance left on that all-important coffee bar card.”
Released with iOS 6 in September, Passbook launches from the App Store once users select the feature on their iPhone or iPod touch. It doesn’t currently work with the iPad. Passbook uses a combination of GPS, web, and banking technologies: “Passbook is time and location based. So your passes and tickets automatically appear on your Lock screen when and where you need them. Arrive at the airport and your boarding pass pops up. If you’re waiting to board the flight and your gate changes, Passbook tells you. And if you decide to grab a coffee on the way to your newSelecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. gate, your gift card appears when you walk into the cafe.”
DA finds officer justified in shooting of suspect
I am of the opinion, based upon my review of all of these materials,
that the police officers of the Eau Claire Police Department, and all
other law enforcement agencies who were involved, including the
Department of Justice-Division of Criminal Investigation, the Wisconsin
State Patrol, the Eau Claire County Sheriff's Department, Altoona Police
Department and University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire, along with all of
the support personnel who assisted during the incident on the evening of
October 5, 2012, all acted within the scope of their authority and
consistent with their sworn duty as law enforcement officers.Load the
precious minerals into your mining truck
and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot. It is my
further opinion that the use of deadly force employed by Officer Jason
A. Ruppert was consistent with the Use of Deadly Force Policy of your
department at the time deadly force was employed.
Officer Ruppert and other officers who responded to the Culver's parking lot acted with extreme courage and bravery in the face of an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm to themselves, to the innocent first-time father whose wife gave birth earlier that day who was seated in his truck in the drive-thru at Culver's, and to the innocent men,Allows you to securely organize any group of cable ties or wires. women and children who were inside the Culver's restaurant when the shooting occurred. The extent to which police officers put their lives at risk to protect the community is demonstrated by the events that occurred that evening.
On October 5, 2012 at approximately 5:21 p.m., officers with the Altoona Police Department, working in conjunction with DCI agents,We specialize in howo concrete mixer, became aware that Peterson was in the area of CTH QQ and Hotchkiss Avenue, in the City of Altoona. Peterson was a suspect in the burglary of a home in Altoona that occurred on September 3, 2012 in which a car and other items, including a firearm, were stolen. Peterson was also wanted on a felony escape warrant out of Marathon County.
Police officers made visual contact with a white Dodge Ram truck that was parked in the area of the Altoona Dam. Peterson, who was driving, and a passenger got into the truck and left the location where the truck was parked at approximately 6:31 p.m. Law enforcement officers followed the truck to the parking lot of Perkins Restaurant in the City of Eau Claire.
At approximately 6:38 p.m., law enforcement officers attempted to stop Peterson in the Perkins parking lot by having one squad car pull toward Peterson as other squad cars pulled behind him. Peterson drove the truck into the squad car in front of him and then cut between other parked cars in the parking lot,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. striking multiple cars as he drove out of the parking lot.
Law enforcement officers pursued Peterson in the first of two high-speed chases. In the first chase which ended at Coolidge Courts, Peterson drove from the Regis Court area, onto Keith Street, then onto Brackett Avenue, then down the Harding Avenue Hill and into downtown Eau Claire. Peterson hit an SUV at the intersection of Jefferson Street and South Farwell Street, continuing on until he abandoned the truck after getting it stuck in the backyard of a residence on Coolidge Courts. Peterson then fled on foot.
The driver of the SUV Peterson struck was a woman who was eight months pregnant and was transported by ambulance to Sacred Heart Hospital. As law enforcement officers were in the process of establishing a perimeter in the area where Peterson fled on foot,Directory ofchina glass mosaic Tile Manufacturers, the Communications Center received a call from an elderly homeowner on Roosevelt Avenue that a male with a gun who he described as a "pretty scary guy" had taken his black Trailblazer at gunpoint.
Officer Ruppert and other officers who responded to the Culver's parking lot acted with extreme courage and bravery in the face of an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm to themselves, to the innocent first-time father whose wife gave birth earlier that day who was seated in his truck in the drive-thru at Culver's, and to the innocent men,Allows you to securely organize any group of cable ties or wires. women and children who were inside the Culver's restaurant when the shooting occurred. The extent to which police officers put their lives at risk to protect the community is demonstrated by the events that occurred that evening.
On October 5, 2012 at approximately 5:21 p.m., officers with the Altoona Police Department, working in conjunction with DCI agents,We specialize in howo concrete mixer, became aware that Peterson was in the area of CTH QQ and Hotchkiss Avenue, in the City of Altoona. Peterson was a suspect in the burglary of a home in Altoona that occurred on September 3, 2012 in which a car and other items, including a firearm, were stolen. Peterson was also wanted on a felony escape warrant out of Marathon County.
Police officers made visual contact with a white Dodge Ram truck that was parked in the area of the Altoona Dam. Peterson, who was driving, and a passenger got into the truck and left the location where the truck was parked at approximately 6:31 p.m. Law enforcement officers followed the truck to the parking lot of Perkins Restaurant in the City of Eau Claire.
At approximately 6:38 p.m., law enforcement officers attempted to stop Peterson in the Perkins parking lot by having one squad car pull toward Peterson as other squad cars pulled behind him. Peterson drove the truck into the squad car in front of him and then cut between other parked cars in the parking lot,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. striking multiple cars as he drove out of the parking lot.
Law enforcement officers pursued Peterson in the first of two high-speed chases. In the first chase which ended at Coolidge Courts, Peterson drove from the Regis Court area, onto Keith Street, then onto Brackett Avenue, then down the Harding Avenue Hill and into downtown Eau Claire. Peterson hit an SUV at the intersection of Jefferson Street and South Farwell Street, continuing on until he abandoned the truck after getting it stuck in the backyard of a residence on Coolidge Courts. Peterson then fled on foot.
The driver of the SUV Peterson struck was a woman who was eight months pregnant and was transported by ambulance to Sacred Heart Hospital. As law enforcement officers were in the process of establishing a perimeter in the area where Peterson fled on foot,Directory ofchina glass mosaic Tile Manufacturers, the Communications Center received a call from an elderly homeowner on Roosevelt Avenue that a male with a gun who he described as a "pretty scary guy" had taken his black Trailblazer at gunpoint.
The City at War
In an age of voluntary U.S. military service, when we consider the
patriotism of American warriors and their families distinct from that of
the nation, the citizenry reveres the sacrifice of the military but, in
the absence of a draft, often candidly acknowledges its detachment from
war and the plight of the modern-day soldier.
A revealing new exhibition at the New-York Historical Society Museum & Library keenly reminds us of the way we used to fight wars. In a sleekly designed series of presentations, "WWII & NYC" illuminates how "New York and its metropolitan region contributed to victory in the Second World War." It exhibits with a masterly touch the great mobilization of humanity, from borough to suburb, that led New Yorkers of all creeds—from the scientists spearheading the Manhattan Project and IBM engineers developing wartime arms to ad executives crafting anti-Nazi posters—to help win the war. The valor of America in World War II stretched beyond a drafted army, and, of course, beyond the Fireside Chats of New York-born commander-in-chief Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Based on the scholarship of historian Kenneth T. Jackson, the exhibition features more than 400 artifacts from the New-York Historical Society and institutions across the nation, including letters, photographs, paintings, a rarely viewed film by Francis Lee (a New York combat cameraman trained in Astoria, Queens), and many other eyewitness wartime accounts. In conjunction with the inauguration of "WWII & NYC," the New-York Historical Society is launching a film series "with a selection of classic and new films focusing on life during and after WWII."
Among the New Yorkers pressing for intervention in the war was Theodor Seuss Geisel, best known as Dr. Seuss, whose 1941 editorial cartoon in the city newspaper PM is featured prominently; this was at a time when many Americans still favored isolationism. The exhibit also includes an original 1936 Time profile of Columbia University anthropologist Franz Boas and his opposition to the Nazi doctrine of race supremacy. A photograph from the run-up to the war depicts a crowded anti-Nazi march in the city's garment district.
In an August 1939 letter to President Roosevelt penned from his summer retreat in Long Island—on view near the entrance to the exhibit—Albert Einstein (who had left Germany in 1933) and colleagues, more than two years before the U.S. joined the war, laid the seeds for the Manhattan Project. Fearing that the Nazis could win the race to a nuclear bomb, Einstein suggested that the government engage directly "with the group of physicists working on chain reactions in America."
Even before America entered the war, Manhattan was the hub in which essential supplies were made and subsequently shipped across the Atlantic to Europe. After the attacks on Pearl Harbor propelled America into war, Manhattan's Pennsylvania Station was the central embarkation point for soldiers beginning tours in Europe or Northern Africa.
In remarks broadcast on WNYC directly following Pearl Harbor,Klaus Multiparking is an industry leader in innovative parking system technology. to which visitors can tune in, Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia urged his fellow New Yorkers to "toughen up . . . and remain calm and determined." Twenty-four hours later, 3,000 enlisted at Brooklyn Navy Yard and elsewhere. Booklets explained the rules of rationing food, metal and gasoline, which Americans unquestioningly embraced.
At the center of the exhibition, where a beautiful panorama of New York Harbor with ships embarking forms a backdrop, visitors will find a colorfully illuminated interactive map highlighting the various wartime activities within each borough—such as military training, intelligence-gathering and munitions-stockpiling—as well as walls of contemporaneous documents.Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck.
Among the memorabilia is a ticket to an anti-Hitler Madison Square Garden demonstration. The Office of War Information,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. whose activities were largely based in New York, produced myriad materials advancing the U.S. mission abroad. A poster designed by E. McKnight Kauffer presented New York City as the Nazis' "Target No. 1" with a swastika descending upon the city. The definitive message: "Protect it. Enroll now at your local C.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.D.High quality mold making Videos teaches anyone how to make molds.V.O."
The exhibition shows the impossibility of U.S. victory without New York. An irreplaceable center of aviation innovation was Long Island's Nassau County, where TBF Avengers, F4F Wildcats and F6F Hellcats, reproductions of which are featured in the exhibit, were assembled. Pfizer opened its first operation in a defunct Brooklyn ice-cream factory. "Thanks to penicillin . . . he will come home," one of its wartime advertisements read.
The shared sacrifice among a large swath of New Yorkers is explored in individual wall stations dedicated to both famous and lesser-known veterans of World War II, from celebrated combat artist Jacob Lawrence of the U.S. Coast Guard and military bandleader Tito Puente (better known as a jazz musician) to Mary Yamada of the Army Nurse Corps and Benjamin Bederson, a Manhattan Project engineer based in New Mexico.
A revealing new exhibition at the New-York Historical Society Museum & Library keenly reminds us of the way we used to fight wars. In a sleekly designed series of presentations, "WWII & NYC" illuminates how "New York and its metropolitan region contributed to victory in the Second World War." It exhibits with a masterly touch the great mobilization of humanity, from borough to suburb, that led New Yorkers of all creeds—from the scientists spearheading the Manhattan Project and IBM engineers developing wartime arms to ad executives crafting anti-Nazi posters—to help win the war. The valor of America in World War II stretched beyond a drafted army, and, of course, beyond the Fireside Chats of New York-born commander-in-chief Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Based on the scholarship of historian Kenneth T. Jackson, the exhibition features more than 400 artifacts from the New-York Historical Society and institutions across the nation, including letters, photographs, paintings, a rarely viewed film by Francis Lee (a New York combat cameraman trained in Astoria, Queens), and many other eyewitness wartime accounts. In conjunction with the inauguration of "WWII & NYC," the New-York Historical Society is launching a film series "with a selection of classic and new films focusing on life during and after WWII."
Among the New Yorkers pressing for intervention in the war was Theodor Seuss Geisel, best known as Dr. Seuss, whose 1941 editorial cartoon in the city newspaper PM is featured prominently; this was at a time when many Americans still favored isolationism. The exhibit also includes an original 1936 Time profile of Columbia University anthropologist Franz Boas and his opposition to the Nazi doctrine of race supremacy. A photograph from the run-up to the war depicts a crowded anti-Nazi march in the city's garment district.
In an August 1939 letter to President Roosevelt penned from his summer retreat in Long Island—on view near the entrance to the exhibit—Albert Einstein (who had left Germany in 1933) and colleagues, more than two years before the U.S. joined the war, laid the seeds for the Manhattan Project. Fearing that the Nazis could win the race to a nuclear bomb, Einstein suggested that the government engage directly "with the group of physicists working on chain reactions in America."
Even before America entered the war, Manhattan was the hub in which essential supplies were made and subsequently shipped across the Atlantic to Europe. After the attacks on Pearl Harbor propelled America into war, Manhattan's Pennsylvania Station was the central embarkation point for soldiers beginning tours in Europe or Northern Africa.
In remarks broadcast on WNYC directly following Pearl Harbor,Klaus Multiparking is an industry leader in innovative parking system technology. to which visitors can tune in, Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia urged his fellow New Yorkers to "toughen up . . . and remain calm and determined." Twenty-four hours later, 3,000 enlisted at Brooklyn Navy Yard and elsewhere. Booklets explained the rules of rationing food, metal and gasoline, which Americans unquestioningly embraced.
At the center of the exhibition, where a beautiful panorama of New York Harbor with ships embarking forms a backdrop, visitors will find a colorfully illuminated interactive map highlighting the various wartime activities within each borough—such as military training, intelligence-gathering and munitions-stockpiling—as well as walls of contemporaneous documents.Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck.
Among the memorabilia is a ticket to an anti-Hitler Madison Square Garden demonstration. The Office of War Information,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. whose activities were largely based in New York, produced myriad materials advancing the U.S. mission abroad. A poster designed by E. McKnight Kauffer presented New York City as the Nazis' "Target No. 1" with a swastika descending upon the city. The definitive message: "Protect it. Enroll now at your local C.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.D.High quality mold making Videos teaches anyone how to make molds.V.O."
The exhibition shows the impossibility of U.S. victory without New York. An irreplaceable center of aviation innovation was Long Island's Nassau County, where TBF Avengers, F4F Wildcats and F6F Hellcats, reproductions of which are featured in the exhibit, were assembled. Pfizer opened its first operation in a defunct Brooklyn ice-cream factory. "Thanks to penicillin . . . he will come home," one of its wartime advertisements read.
The shared sacrifice among a large swath of New Yorkers is explored in individual wall stations dedicated to both famous and lesser-known veterans of World War II, from celebrated combat artist Jacob Lawrence of the U.S. Coast Guard and military bandleader Tito Puente (better known as a jazz musician) to Mary Yamada of the Army Nurse Corps and Benjamin Bederson, a Manhattan Project engineer based in New Mexico.
2012年10月17日 星期三
A time of wonder
My friend Ellen had a dollhouse that had been constructed for her
by a family member. Made of thin pine boards. The carpets of the tiny rooms, I
realize now, were mere green felt. But what a thing it was, an elaborate maze of
stairways and small spaces. Even the dolls that lived there were tiny, more tin
soldier-like than anything else.
There was a small doorway deep inside the dollhouse. It was hard to reach. Occasionally, we’d take a small object from the house and stick it into the dark room beyond. It was a room we never saw; this dollhouse, like most dollhouses I’ve seen, only opened on one side. Since you couldn’t see well enough to play in it, the dark room had never been furnished. Which should have made it easy for us to feel along the floor with our fingertips and take back the object we’d just put there. But we never managed to find anything. Everything that entered that room, disappeared. At the time, it was a strange curiosity. But as I got older, and no longer played with the dollhouse when I came over, whenever I thought too much about it, I’d get chills.
My father was always taking my sister and me to his office on the weekends.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. We’d sit and draw with pens on printer paper, or pretend to answer phones. Once, he received a fax while we were there. I was amazed at this machine that could, I thought, take an object from somewhere, and transmit it to another location. I dreamt of the possibilities, but not being a particularly adventurous child in anything but imagination, I never tried to use the machine for my own devices.
Today I know how a fax machine works…more or less. But I have to confess, it still fills me with wonder. How could someone understand how to construct such a thing?
It’s like when I see my boyfriend building or sewing something. Sometimes there are directions to follow, but other times – he improvises. The other day, while putting together some metal shelves, we realized we didn’t have the requisite rubber hammer. The boyfriend shrugged, got a small block of wood,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. and used it to soften the blows of our regular hammer. When I asked where he’d learned that trick, he said he’d just figured it out – it was pretty obvious. I thought of the first humans, starting fires, inventing the wheel. It’s like when he asks me how I knew where to find a delivery man with such good rates, or how I was able to sell our furniture so quickly. And I tell him, sincerely, it’s obvious. We have the internet, after all. It’s like when another armoire gets disassembled and taken away by the delivery man, and though we didn’t remember loving it, memories tied to it come flooding back to us, and for the first time in a long time,Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, the boyfriend takes a beer from the fridge, and we sit together staring at the now-empty space, reminiscing about that armoire like it was an old friend.
When I was thinking about writing this, the title Time of Wonder came to me, from a picture book by Robert McCloskey that I remember. I’ve always loved that title. But unlike the characters in the book, for me a time of wonder isn’t on a beach in Maine.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. Though it is when I’m in the ocean up to my shoulders, quietly bobbing with the waves, floating over them and through them at times, feeling the rhythm of the ocean around me and inside of me. It is also Christmas and the days leading up to it. Holiday lights twinkling in the cold blackness, the promise of surprises and family, warmth and snow all at once. A time of wonder is when I write, when time stops being time and is forgotten.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. A time of wonder was when we’d be in the backyard of my neighbor’s house and we’d stop and stare out at this thin, blue-green object on the horizon, convinced it was the Statue of Liberty, yet always questioning deep inside us, if it really was. We were in north New Jersey, on a high hill, but we were still at least an hour’s drive from Liberty Island. Wonder was standing on the high deck of my long-gone late childhood home, feeling the wind coming from the forest below, looking out at the uninhabited island on the lake and thinking there might be a secret castle among the pines.
There was a small doorway deep inside the dollhouse. It was hard to reach. Occasionally, we’d take a small object from the house and stick it into the dark room beyond. It was a room we never saw; this dollhouse, like most dollhouses I’ve seen, only opened on one side. Since you couldn’t see well enough to play in it, the dark room had never been furnished. Which should have made it easy for us to feel along the floor with our fingertips and take back the object we’d just put there. But we never managed to find anything. Everything that entered that room, disappeared. At the time, it was a strange curiosity. But as I got older, and no longer played with the dollhouse when I came over, whenever I thought too much about it, I’d get chills.
My father was always taking my sister and me to his office on the weekends.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. We’d sit and draw with pens on printer paper, or pretend to answer phones. Once, he received a fax while we were there. I was amazed at this machine that could, I thought, take an object from somewhere, and transmit it to another location. I dreamt of the possibilities, but not being a particularly adventurous child in anything but imagination, I never tried to use the machine for my own devices.
Today I know how a fax machine works…more or less. But I have to confess, it still fills me with wonder. How could someone understand how to construct such a thing?
It’s like when I see my boyfriend building or sewing something. Sometimes there are directions to follow, but other times – he improvises. The other day, while putting together some metal shelves, we realized we didn’t have the requisite rubber hammer. The boyfriend shrugged, got a small block of wood,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. and used it to soften the blows of our regular hammer. When I asked where he’d learned that trick, he said he’d just figured it out – it was pretty obvious. I thought of the first humans, starting fires, inventing the wheel. It’s like when he asks me how I knew where to find a delivery man with such good rates, or how I was able to sell our furniture so quickly. And I tell him, sincerely, it’s obvious. We have the internet, after all. It’s like when another armoire gets disassembled and taken away by the delivery man, and though we didn’t remember loving it, memories tied to it come flooding back to us, and for the first time in a long time,Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, the boyfriend takes a beer from the fridge, and we sit together staring at the now-empty space, reminiscing about that armoire like it was an old friend.
When I was thinking about writing this, the title Time of Wonder came to me, from a picture book by Robert McCloskey that I remember. I’ve always loved that title. But unlike the characters in the book, for me a time of wonder isn’t on a beach in Maine.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. Though it is when I’m in the ocean up to my shoulders, quietly bobbing with the waves, floating over them and through them at times, feeling the rhythm of the ocean around me and inside of me. It is also Christmas and the days leading up to it. Holiday lights twinkling in the cold blackness, the promise of surprises and family, warmth and snow all at once. A time of wonder is when I write, when time stops being time and is forgotten.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles. A time of wonder was when we’d be in the backyard of my neighbor’s house and we’d stop and stare out at this thin, blue-green object on the horizon, convinced it was the Statue of Liberty, yet always questioning deep inside us, if it really was. We were in north New Jersey, on a high hill, but we were still at least an hour’s drive from Liberty Island. Wonder was standing on the high deck of my long-gone late childhood home, feeling the wind coming from the forest below, looking out at the uninhabited island on the lake and thinking there might be a secret castle among the pines.
Shark social networking
University of Delaware researchers are using an underwater
robot to find and follow sand tiger sharks that they previously tagged with
transmitters. The innovative project is part of a multi-year partnership with
Delaware State University to better understand the behavior and migration
patterns of the sharks in real time. "In the past week our new, specially
equipped glider OTIS -- which stands for Oceanographic Telemetry Identification
Sensor -- detected multiple sand tiger sharks off the coast of Maryland that
were tagged over the past several years," said Matthew Oliver, assistant
professor of oceanography in UD's College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment.
"This is the first time that a glider has found tagged sharks and reported their
location in real time."
OTIS is a remote-controlled device that looks like a yellow torpedo and normally darts through the ocean to sample water conditions. Oliver outfitted the apparatus with acoustic receivers that can recognize signals given off by the sharks' transmitters as they travel through coastal waters, rapidly reporting the encounters.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
The technology allows the course of OTIS to be changed to follow the sharks and test the water surrounding them.Why does moulds grow in homes or buildings? Sharks were initially found on Oct. 10, and OTIS doubled back to again locate the sharks. The approach will help scientists follow where the sharks are going more quickly than conventional tracking techniques.
Sand tigers are the largest commonly occurring shark in Delaware's bay and coastal waters, serving as Delaware Bay's apex predator and playing a key role in the ecological balance of the region.
"Sand tigers have suffered from a number of threats that ultimately led to population declines," said Delaware State's Dewayne Fox. "In 1997 sand tigers were listed as a 'species of concern' by the National Marine Fisheries Service, although very little is known of their migrations and habitat requirements."
The research involves three different types of tags. One is an acoustic transmitter that "pings" receivers while passing by a set of 70 devices situated mostly in Delaware Bay, with a few along the Atlantic coast. The receivers are maintained by Fox,The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. who has tagged more than 500 sharks since 2006.
The team is also using 34 pop-off satellite archival tags, which store data on the sharks' journeys for one year and then automatically release from the animal to dispatch a location signal for retrieval from the water.
The newest type of tag is called a VEMCO mobile transceiver (VMT), a larger tag that both transmits and receives information to communicate its location and listen for the pings of other sharks, fish or marine mammals outfitted with acoustic tags.
"It will tell us not only where it is, but who it's with," Oliver said. "It's like a social network for sharks."
Together with their students, Oliver and Fox spent the summer inserting the transmitters into sand tiger sharks in Delaware Bay. Using bait, hooks and little patience, they caught the sharks -- up to nine feet long -- and carefully pulled them into a stretcher alongside their boat.
Veterinarians from the Georgia Aquarium trained Oliver's graduate student, Danielle Haulsee,A wide range of polished tiles for your tile flooring and walls. to insert the small transmitters in a quick surgery.
Scientists suspect that the sharks migrate widely along the Eastern Seaboard,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. and the Delaware research team plans to use newly collected information to map sand tiger shark habitats. They will cross-reference the sharks' data with satellite and remotely sensed environmental conditions to create a comprehensive picture of the animals' habitats.
"The integration of biotelemetry with ocean observations represents a fusion between observing networks on the East Coast," Oliver said.
Fox is part of the Atlantic Cooperative Telemetry Network (ACT), which tracks thousands of animals as they move up and down the coast, while Oliver participates in the Mid-Atlantic Regional Association Coastal Ocean Observing System (MARACOOS), which uses satellites, underwater robots and models to study the coastal ocean. Their hope is that the combination of various data sets will assist natural resource managers in predicting where sand tiger sharks live -- and when -- for conservation and recovery efforts.
Using OTIS will help researchers know which water conditions sharks prefer to swim in during their migrations. The glider can travel further out than the static receivers' locations and also collect information on temperature, water clarity and oxygen levels. If the sharks head to a certain place, scientists may be able to better understand why, Oliver explained.
OTIS is a remote-controlled device that looks like a yellow torpedo and normally darts through the ocean to sample water conditions. Oliver outfitted the apparatus with acoustic receivers that can recognize signals given off by the sharks' transmitters as they travel through coastal waters, rapidly reporting the encounters.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
The technology allows the course of OTIS to be changed to follow the sharks and test the water surrounding them.Why does moulds grow in homes or buildings? Sharks were initially found on Oct. 10, and OTIS doubled back to again locate the sharks. The approach will help scientists follow where the sharks are going more quickly than conventional tracking techniques.
Sand tigers are the largest commonly occurring shark in Delaware's bay and coastal waters, serving as Delaware Bay's apex predator and playing a key role in the ecological balance of the region.
"Sand tigers have suffered from a number of threats that ultimately led to population declines," said Delaware State's Dewayne Fox. "In 1997 sand tigers were listed as a 'species of concern' by the National Marine Fisheries Service, although very little is known of their migrations and habitat requirements."
The research involves three different types of tags. One is an acoustic transmitter that "pings" receivers while passing by a set of 70 devices situated mostly in Delaware Bay, with a few along the Atlantic coast. The receivers are maintained by Fox,The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. who has tagged more than 500 sharks since 2006.
The team is also using 34 pop-off satellite archival tags, which store data on the sharks' journeys for one year and then automatically release from the animal to dispatch a location signal for retrieval from the water.
The newest type of tag is called a VEMCO mobile transceiver (VMT), a larger tag that both transmits and receives information to communicate its location and listen for the pings of other sharks, fish or marine mammals outfitted with acoustic tags.
"It will tell us not only where it is, but who it's with," Oliver said. "It's like a social network for sharks."
Together with their students, Oliver and Fox spent the summer inserting the transmitters into sand tiger sharks in Delaware Bay. Using bait, hooks and little patience, they caught the sharks -- up to nine feet long -- and carefully pulled them into a stretcher alongside their boat.
Veterinarians from the Georgia Aquarium trained Oliver's graduate student, Danielle Haulsee,A wide range of polished tiles for your tile flooring and walls. to insert the small transmitters in a quick surgery.
Scientists suspect that the sharks migrate widely along the Eastern Seaboard,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. and the Delaware research team plans to use newly collected information to map sand tiger shark habitats. They will cross-reference the sharks' data with satellite and remotely sensed environmental conditions to create a comprehensive picture of the animals' habitats.
"The integration of biotelemetry with ocean observations represents a fusion between observing networks on the East Coast," Oliver said.
Fox is part of the Atlantic Cooperative Telemetry Network (ACT), which tracks thousands of animals as they move up and down the coast, while Oliver participates in the Mid-Atlantic Regional Association Coastal Ocean Observing System (MARACOOS), which uses satellites, underwater robots and models to study the coastal ocean. Their hope is that the combination of various data sets will assist natural resource managers in predicting where sand tiger sharks live -- and when -- for conservation and recovery efforts.
Using OTIS will help researchers know which water conditions sharks prefer to swim in during their migrations. The glider can travel further out than the static receivers' locations and also collect information on temperature, water clarity and oxygen levels. If the sharks head to a certain place, scientists may be able to better understand why, Oliver explained.
A Tussle Over Sacred Land
The two sides are fighting in the courts over whether the
700-square-mile area surrounding the mountain—where private groups are seeking
permits to mine for uranium on federal lands—should be considered a "traditional
cultural property" under state law.
The dispute, which the New Mexico Supreme Court is weighing after hearing arguments from both sides last month,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. is part of a growing series of scuffles among Native American groups and private interests over how much, if any, sway tribes should have over development of lands they don't own but consider part of their heritage.
As such cases have become more common, the National Park Service, keeper of the National Register of Historic Places, is updating federal guidelines on what constitutes a traditional cultural property. It is consulting with tribes and soliciting comments through the end of October. The rules apply to federal lands, although some states, including New Mexico, have used them as a guide when designating culturally important sites within their jurisdiction.
Separately,HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed . the U.S. Forest Service is reviewing laws in a bid to better protect land it manages that Native Americans consider sacred. A final report is in the works.
The area around Mount Taylor, a striking extinct volcano known to New Mexico's Acoma Pueblo tribe as Kaweshtima, or "place of snow," was designated a traditional cultural property by New Mexico in 2009. The peak, some 80 miles west of Albuquerque, is considered sacred by several Southwestern tribes including the Navajo,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. who call it Tsoodzil. The Acoma Pueblo banded together with four other tribes—the Navajo, Hopi, Zuni and Laguna—to apply for the designation.
Landowners sued the state cultural agency and the tribes, arguing the area is too large for the state to inspect and maintain as a historic site. A state district court ruled in the landowners' favor, but a state appellate court sent the case to the New Mexico Supreme Court.
The designated area around Mount Taylor is public land. But local landowners are concerned that under state rules, any development on adjacent private land that could damage the sacred site has to be reviewed by cultural authorities. Some also say their private land has been misidentified as public. The state's cultural authorities say that owners can rectify any mistakes by presenting a title to the land.
If the state Supreme Court rules to uphold the area's designation as a traditional cultural property, tribes wouldn't have the power to veto local projects.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. However, state agencies that issue permits for development such as mining and drilling would have to consider tribes' views on projects. Landowners worry that would add red tape and create uncertainty about what they could do on their lands.
"It ceases to be my private property," said Marron Lee Nelson, a fourth-generation cattle rancher.
Theresa Pasqual, director of the Historic Preservation Office of the Acoma Pueblo, said the designation is needed so developers are aware of the terrain's cultural meaning before altering it. The tribe is concerned about the potential impact from industries such as uranium mining and timber harvesting."Our history is not written—it's on the landscape," Ms. Pasqual said.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. "You can't rewrite that history book once it's gone."
Similar disputes are erupting in other parts of the country as development sprouts up in traditional Native American territories. Development plans can be controversial because Native Americans often view land differently than the government and landowners, said Claudia Nissley, a cultural-preservation consultant based in Boulder, Colo.
"The Native American spiritual-belief system is holistic, so they don't necessarily separate out the sky above from the soils," she said. "They look more at a landscape."
In Montville, Conn., a low-income housing development was put on hold after federal and state authorities determined earlier this year that it would disturb a landscape considered sacred by the Mohegan Tribe, including stone piles its members believe protect them from outsiders. The parties are reviewing the plan to lessen its impact.
In Massachusetts, the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head has sought traditional-cultural-property status for Nantucket Sound in an effort to stop an offshore wind farm. The Wampanoag argued wind turbines would obstruct the view of the rising sun across the water, an essential element in tribal ceremonies. The tribe sued the U.S. Department of Interior after the agency approved the wind project in 2010, and is scheduled to file a brief in the case with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia this month.
The dispute, which the New Mexico Supreme Court is weighing after hearing arguments from both sides last month,Thank you for visiting! I have been crystal mosaic since 1998. is part of a growing series of scuffles among Native American groups and private interests over how much, if any, sway tribes should have over development of lands they don't own but consider part of their heritage.
As such cases have become more common, the National Park Service, keeper of the National Register of Historic Places, is updating federal guidelines on what constitutes a traditional cultural property. It is consulting with tribes and soliciting comments through the end of October. The rules apply to federal lands, although some states, including New Mexico, have used them as a guide when designating culturally important sites within their jurisdiction.
Separately,HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed . the U.S. Forest Service is reviewing laws in a bid to better protect land it manages that Native Americans consider sacred. A final report is in the works.
The area around Mount Taylor, a striking extinct volcano known to New Mexico's Acoma Pueblo tribe as Kaweshtima, or "place of snow," was designated a traditional cultural property by New Mexico in 2009. The peak, some 80 miles west of Albuquerque, is considered sacred by several Southwestern tribes including the Navajo,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. who call it Tsoodzil. The Acoma Pueblo banded together with four other tribes—the Navajo, Hopi, Zuni and Laguna—to apply for the designation.
Landowners sued the state cultural agency and the tribes, arguing the area is too large for the state to inspect and maintain as a historic site. A state district court ruled in the landowners' favor, but a state appellate court sent the case to the New Mexico Supreme Court.
The designated area around Mount Taylor is public land. But local landowners are concerned that under state rules, any development on adjacent private land that could damage the sacred site has to be reviewed by cultural authorities. Some also say their private land has been misidentified as public. The state's cultural authorities say that owners can rectify any mistakes by presenting a title to the land.
If the state Supreme Court rules to uphold the area's designation as a traditional cultural property, tribes wouldn't have the power to veto local projects.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. However, state agencies that issue permits for development such as mining and drilling would have to consider tribes' views on projects. Landowners worry that would add red tape and create uncertainty about what they could do on their lands.
"It ceases to be my private property," said Marron Lee Nelson, a fourth-generation cattle rancher.
Theresa Pasqual, director of the Historic Preservation Office of the Acoma Pueblo, said the designation is needed so developers are aware of the terrain's cultural meaning before altering it. The tribe is concerned about the potential impact from industries such as uranium mining and timber harvesting."Our history is not written—it's on the landscape," Ms. Pasqual said.Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS. "You can't rewrite that history book once it's gone."
Similar disputes are erupting in other parts of the country as development sprouts up in traditional Native American territories. Development plans can be controversial because Native Americans often view land differently than the government and landowners, said Claudia Nissley, a cultural-preservation consultant based in Boulder, Colo.
"The Native American spiritual-belief system is holistic, so they don't necessarily separate out the sky above from the soils," she said. "They look more at a landscape."
In Montville, Conn., a low-income housing development was put on hold after federal and state authorities determined earlier this year that it would disturb a landscape considered sacred by the Mohegan Tribe, including stone piles its members believe protect them from outsiders. The parties are reviewing the plan to lessen its impact.
In Massachusetts, the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head has sought traditional-cultural-property status for Nantucket Sound in an effort to stop an offshore wind farm. The Wampanoag argued wind turbines would obstruct the view of the rising sun across the water, an essential element in tribal ceremonies. The tribe sued the U.S. Department of Interior after the agency approved the wind project in 2010, and is scheduled to file a brief in the case with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia this month.
2012年10月15日 星期一
Twin Development Moves Ahead
A proposed one twin and five townhome
development on a property at N. Towamencin Avenue and Spring Alley in Lansdale,
adjacent to the former American Olean Tile property, received preliminary and
final land development approval earlier this month from Lansdale's Land Planning
Committee.
Now, it's up to council to give the OK; the borough and county planning commissions are in favor of, and have already given their approvals for, the project.
At present on the property at 815 N. Towamencin Avenue is a single-family bungalow with a dilapidated chicken coop structure in the rear of the property. The property is bordered at the rear by a grown-over, unused alley.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
The property is owned by Lansdale residents Kevin Dunigan and Mike Riccio, who also own the property that houses Virago Baking Company at 322 W.
The existing bungalow — which is currently for rent via Riccio Real Estate — and existing garage will remain on the half-acre property. The chicken coop at the rear of the property will be heading to the Dumpster, Dunigan said, and cannot be convereted into a garage.
"It's beyond repair," Dunigan said.
Four townhomes will be built along the rear of the property and twins will be developed next to the bungalow along N. Towamencin Avenue.
The new townhomes and rear of the twins and existing home will be accessed via a new entranceway/alley off Spring Alley.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte.
Riccio and Dunigan plan to pave the portion of Spring Alley that fronts their property.
"Most of the traffic will come out to Towamencin," said engineer Jason Smeland of Lenape Valley Engineering.
The plan calls for one rear parking spot and one on-street parking spot for the twin. The plan calls for two spots per townhome: one in the garage and one in the driveway.
The bungalow will have a 20-foot by 20-foot rear parking area.
Spill-over parking will be allowed on N. Towamencin Avenue and in designated areas on Spring Alley.
The entranceway, as well as all properties, will be managed by a homeowners' association.
Community Development Director John Ernst said the county planning commission had suggested parking lot areas be joined together between units instead of greenspaces. Ernst said the applicants are not willing to do that because of potential legal disputes that could arise out of shared parking down the road.
"They were thinking we could end up with a bit more greenspace," Dunigan said. "But that would be where any utilities would be, so no trees could be planted there regardless."
The borough planning commission approved a waiver for an ordinance that states proposed alleys are prohibited in residential development.
"It makes sense to have the alley to hide the parking from Towamencin Avenue, and have it centralized, so that the twins, single and townhouses can all use same access and keep it hidden in the back," Smeland said.
Two seepage beds are proposed for the site for stormwater management.
The borough planning commission also approved the use of a 10-inch sewer pipe over the required 15-inch sewer pipe, due to the flatness of the site and issues with outletting detention basins, Smeland said.
Committee member Matt West asked about residents' concern for cut-through traffic on Spring Alley.
"Spring comes from Maple to Towamencin avenues, so you can get through there the whole length of that," Smeland said.
Dunigan said there is no other residential home on that block.
"The fire chief has reveiwed the plan, and made the recommendation that there be no parking on the alley except in designated parking areas," Smeland said.
West said the proposed development is the type of development Lansdale needs.
"In-fill," West said. "You'll hear no argument from me."
There was an argument from neighboring property owner Jeff Maier.
Maier, a Doylestown resident who owns 301 W. Eighth Street and 403 W. Eighth Street, had concerns over what is being done in Lansdale as far as long-term land planning.
"When we plan something, what's it going to be like in 20 years?" he said. "That's why we have codes."
Maier argued that the twin needed two parking spots per unit for off-street parking in the borough. He said it was "smart planning."
"This site plan troubled me for the twins — it only has one spot each, and it needs four spots for the two units," he said. "That should be on the site plan."
Towamencin Avenue, he said, is a snow emergency route.
"(I've been in this neighborhood) since I was 12, cutting the grass. We're going to live there; I'm going to be there for the next 20 years taking care of these places.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. I take pride in my buildings and do the right thing,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS." he said. "As long as I can remember, we've had to get everybody off the street for plowing.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. If there's cars parked up and down that street under snow conditions, it's going to be hard to plow that. It's a dead end."
Maier said it's not good planning to encourage on-street parking.
"It's not going to slow down cars on this dead-end street. It's going to be a quagmire to park on Towamencin," he said. "They are going to be parking on my side of where my building is."
Maier also said paving the alley will be a nice thing, but will it be paved like a driveway or paved like "there's trash trucks coming up and down that alley."
"Are they going to maintain that path 20 years from now when it needs to be paved again?" he said. "I'll say no. This place is going to be sold. They're not going to be around. I'm going to be around. My friends are going to be around. It makes good sense on site plan that they should have the right number of spaces."
Smeland and Ernst acknowledged the applicant complies with parking specifications.
"We have one parking space for each twin and no garage for the twins," Smeland said. "If we do need the second space for each of the twins, we have the space to do it."
Now, it's up to council to give the OK; the borough and county planning commissions are in favor of, and have already given their approvals for, the project.
At present on the property at 815 N. Towamencin Avenue is a single-family bungalow with a dilapidated chicken coop structure in the rear of the property. The property is bordered at the rear by a grown-over, unused alley.If you want to read about buy mosaic in a non superficial way that's the perfect book.
The property is owned by Lansdale residents Kevin Dunigan and Mike Riccio, who also own the property that houses Virago Baking Company at 322 W.
The existing bungalow — which is currently for rent via Riccio Real Estate — and existing garage will remain on the half-acre property. The chicken coop at the rear of the property will be heading to the Dumpster, Dunigan said, and cannot be convereted into a garage.
"It's beyond repair," Dunigan said.
Four townhomes will be built along the rear of the property and twins will be developed next to the bungalow along N. Towamencin Avenue.
The new townhomes and rear of the twins and existing home will be accessed via a new entranceway/alley off Spring Alley.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte.
Riccio and Dunigan plan to pave the portion of Spring Alley that fronts their property.
"Most of the traffic will come out to Towamencin," said engineer Jason Smeland of Lenape Valley Engineering.
The plan calls for one rear parking spot and one on-street parking spot for the twin. The plan calls for two spots per townhome: one in the garage and one in the driveway.
The bungalow will have a 20-foot by 20-foot rear parking area.
Spill-over parking will be allowed on N. Towamencin Avenue and in designated areas on Spring Alley.
The entranceway, as well as all properties, will be managed by a homeowners' association.
Community Development Director John Ernst said the county planning commission had suggested parking lot areas be joined together between units instead of greenspaces. Ernst said the applicants are not willing to do that because of potential legal disputes that could arise out of shared parking down the road.
"They were thinking we could end up with a bit more greenspace," Dunigan said. "But that would be where any utilities would be, so no trees could be planted there regardless."
The borough planning commission approved a waiver for an ordinance that states proposed alleys are prohibited in residential development.
"It makes sense to have the alley to hide the parking from Towamencin Avenue, and have it centralized, so that the twins, single and townhouses can all use same access and keep it hidden in the back," Smeland said.
Two seepage beds are proposed for the site for stormwater management.
The borough planning commission also approved the use of a 10-inch sewer pipe over the required 15-inch sewer pipe, due to the flatness of the site and issues with outletting detention basins, Smeland said.
Committee member Matt West asked about residents' concern for cut-through traffic on Spring Alley.
"Spring comes from Maple to Towamencin avenues, so you can get through there the whole length of that," Smeland said.
Dunigan said there is no other residential home on that block.
"The fire chief has reveiwed the plan, and made the recommendation that there be no parking on the alley except in designated parking areas," Smeland said.
West said the proposed development is the type of development Lansdale needs.
"In-fill," West said. "You'll hear no argument from me."
There was an argument from neighboring property owner Jeff Maier.
Maier, a Doylestown resident who owns 301 W. Eighth Street and 403 W. Eighth Street, had concerns over what is being done in Lansdale as far as long-term land planning.
"When we plan something, what's it going to be like in 20 years?" he said. "That's why we have codes."
Maier argued that the twin needed two parking spots per unit for off-street parking in the borough. He said it was "smart planning."
"This site plan troubled me for the twins — it only has one spot each, and it needs four spots for the two units," he said. "That should be on the site plan."
Towamencin Avenue, he said, is a snow emergency route.
"(I've been in this neighborhood) since I was 12, cutting the grass. We're going to live there; I'm going to be there for the next 20 years taking care of these places.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. I take pride in my buildings and do the right thing,Selecting the best rtls solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS." he said. "As long as I can remember, we've had to get everybody off the street for plowing.The stone mosaic comes in shiny polished and matte. If there's cars parked up and down that street under snow conditions, it's going to be hard to plow that. It's a dead end."
Maier said it's not good planning to encourage on-street parking.
"It's not going to slow down cars on this dead-end street. It's going to be a quagmire to park on Towamencin," he said. "They are going to be parking on my side of where my building is."
Maier also said paving the alley will be a nice thing, but will it be paved like a driveway or paved like "there's trash trucks coming up and down that alley."
"Are they going to maintain that path 20 years from now when it needs to be paved again?" he said. "I'll say no. This place is going to be sold. They're not going to be around. I'm going to be around. My friends are going to be around. It makes good sense on site plan that they should have the right number of spaces."
Smeland and Ernst acknowledged the applicant complies with parking specifications.
"We have one parking space for each twin and no garage for the twins," Smeland said. "If we do need the second space for each of the twins, we have the space to do it."
Crime Blotter--drugs
A couple discovered a subject inside their Andrews Court
residence. The suspect, a 23-year old male, is known by both victims. The
suspect previously lived with the victims, and it is believed he may still
possess a key to the residence, since there was no sign of forced entry. The
suspect ran from the scene. The only item missing was a wallet belonging to the
man, which contained cash and several credit cards.
A man reported that his Laurie Drive residence was entered and a 12-gauge Smith and Wesson shotgun was stolen. There were no signs of forced entry.
A Pauldoe Street residence of was entered through a broken rear window. Two laptop computers,Installers and distributors of solar panel, two PlayStation III Game Systems, a Wii Game System and a Sony Camcorder were stolen from the residence. A neighbor witnessed two young, black males running from the residence and they have been tentatively identified.
A man from Rock Glen Road was buying gas at the Golden Pantry located at 2290 Barnett Shoals Road. When the pumps would not function properly, he went inside to pay, leaving his car unlocked and his wallet inside. When he returned, he discovered his wallet, containing cash and two credit cards, had been taken from inside his vehicle.
ACCPD officers received information concerning a suspect allegedly selling drugs from under the bridge at the intersection of North Avenue and Willow Street. When they went under the bridge, they discovered the suspect, as described, sitting in a chair. Next to the chair, they found a package containing several rocks of crack cocaine and marijuana.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads from china, Kareem Bernard “Rat” Thompson, 26, was arrested for Possession of Cocaine With Intent To Distribute and Misdemeanor Possession of Marijuana. During a search incidental to his arrest, he was also found to be in possession of several pieces of counterfeit U.S. Currency and was then charged with 2nd Degree Forgery.
ACCPD responded to a domestic disturbance at a residence on Zebulon Drive. Upon arrival, they met with a 32-year-old woman. She said she had been involved in an argument with Alton Fitzgerald Jackson, 45, and the argument had escalated to a “scuffle.” An investigation revealed that during the “scuffle,” the woman had been stabbed in the leg. A knife with traces of blood on it was recovered by officers at the scene.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale agate beads from china, Jackson was subsequently arrested for Aggravated Assault and Battery under Georgia’s Domestic Violence Law, as well as Cruelty to Children, since this action occurred in the presence of the woman’s ten-year old son.
A Rivermont Road residence was entered through an insecure rear door. Entry had also been attempted by kicking in the door under the carport . Several items of clothing and furniture were thrown outside and damaged, but nothing was determined to have been stolen. A neighbor had heard the voice of two males at that location between 2:00 and 4:00am on October 12.
A maintenance man at a vacant rental property on Crows Nest Court discovered that the property had been entered and several interior walls damaged by persons ripping the electrical wiring out of the wall.
A Bob Holman Road residence was entered by someone prying open a front window. Two Apple Mac Book computers, a Glock .40 caliber handgun and a Heritage .22 caliber handgun were stolen from the residence.
A woman reported that strangers entered the open garage of her Cedar Springs Drive residence and entered a vehicle belonging to a 26-year-old man. The car had been parked inside. An in-dash stereo system was stolen.
An Old Lexington Road residence was entered through a forced-open side door. Two watches and a flat-screen TV were stolen.
ACCPD officers were on patrol near Broad Acres Court when they had contact with a male acting suspiciously. As the officers approached, the subject walked away. Officers located several baggies of marijuana lying in the stairwell where the subject had been sitting. The subject was located inside a nearby apartment where he had changed shirts. Eric Lanier Chambers, Jr., 24, was arrested and charged with Possession of Marijuana With Intent To Distribute and Possession of Marijuana Within 1000 Feet of Public Housing.
The Drug Task Force executed a search warrant at a Fourth Street residence where a quantity of marijuana, drug paraphernalia and stolen items were recovered. Larry Michael Darden,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. Jr., 28, was arrested and charged with Possession of Marijuana and Theft By Receiving Stolen Property.
ACCPD officers were on patrol in the area of Bethel Midtown Village (Hickman Drive) when they observed suspicious activity and moved to investigate. As they approached a stairwell, they observed a male and female engaged in an apparent drug transaction. A quantity of crack cocaine and a stolen firearm were recovered from near the location where the female was standing. Jonathan Palmer,Gardner Bender offers a broad range of cableties, 35, Nantahala Avenue, and Sermaine Gaynelle Moses, 23, Hickman Drive were arrested and charged with Possession of Crack Cocaine and Theft By Receiving Stolen Property.
ACCPD officers responded to a report of a suspicious vehicle in the visitor parking lot of the Clarke County Jail. A male was sitting in a car, apparently passed out, with the motor running. When asked, the male stated he was waiting on a bondsman to get his girlfriend out of jail. Investigation revealed that Christopher Charles Tully, 38, Prospect Church Road, had an outstanding warrant from a neighboring county and he was placed under arrest. During a search incidental to his arrest, two separate types of drugs were recovered wrapped in a cigarette package. Tully was also charged with Possession of Prescription Drugs Not In Original Container.
A man reported that his Laurie Drive residence was entered and a 12-gauge Smith and Wesson shotgun was stolen. There were no signs of forced entry.
A Pauldoe Street residence of was entered through a broken rear window. Two laptop computers,Installers and distributors of solar panel, two PlayStation III Game Systems, a Wii Game System and a Sony Camcorder were stolen from the residence. A neighbor witnessed two young, black males running from the residence and they have been tentatively identified.
A man from Rock Glen Road was buying gas at the Golden Pantry located at 2290 Barnett Shoals Road. When the pumps would not function properly, he went inside to pay, leaving his car unlocked and his wallet inside. When he returned, he discovered his wallet, containing cash and two credit cards, had been taken from inside his vehicle.
ACCPD officers received information concerning a suspect allegedly selling drugs from under the bridge at the intersection of North Avenue and Willow Street. When they went under the bridge, they discovered the suspect, as described, sitting in a chair. Next to the chair, they found a package containing several rocks of crack cocaine and marijuana.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads from china, Kareem Bernard “Rat” Thompson, 26, was arrested for Possession of Cocaine With Intent To Distribute and Misdemeanor Possession of Marijuana. During a search incidental to his arrest, he was also found to be in possession of several pieces of counterfeit U.S. Currency and was then charged with 2nd Degree Forgery.
ACCPD responded to a domestic disturbance at a residence on Zebulon Drive. Upon arrival, they met with a 32-year-old woman. She said she had been involved in an argument with Alton Fitzgerald Jackson, 45, and the argument had escalated to a “scuffle.” An investigation revealed that during the “scuffle,” the woman had been stabbed in the leg. A knife with traces of blood on it was recovered by officers at the scene.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale agate beads from china, Jackson was subsequently arrested for Aggravated Assault and Battery under Georgia’s Domestic Violence Law, as well as Cruelty to Children, since this action occurred in the presence of the woman’s ten-year old son.
A Rivermont Road residence was entered through an insecure rear door. Entry had also been attempted by kicking in the door under the carport . Several items of clothing and furniture were thrown outside and damaged, but nothing was determined to have been stolen. A neighbor had heard the voice of two males at that location between 2:00 and 4:00am on October 12.
A maintenance man at a vacant rental property on Crows Nest Court discovered that the property had been entered and several interior walls damaged by persons ripping the electrical wiring out of the wall.
A Bob Holman Road residence was entered by someone prying open a front window. Two Apple Mac Book computers, a Glock .40 caliber handgun and a Heritage .22 caliber handgun were stolen from the residence.
A woman reported that strangers entered the open garage of her Cedar Springs Drive residence and entered a vehicle belonging to a 26-year-old man. The car had been parked inside. An in-dash stereo system was stolen.
An Old Lexington Road residence was entered through a forced-open side door. Two watches and a flat-screen TV were stolen.
ACCPD officers were on patrol near Broad Acres Court when they had contact with a male acting suspiciously. As the officers approached, the subject walked away. Officers located several baggies of marijuana lying in the stairwell where the subject had been sitting. The subject was located inside a nearby apartment where he had changed shirts. Eric Lanier Chambers, Jr., 24, was arrested and charged with Possession of Marijuana With Intent To Distribute and Possession of Marijuana Within 1000 Feet of Public Housing.
The Drug Task Force executed a search warrant at a Fourth Street residence where a quantity of marijuana, drug paraphernalia and stolen items were recovered. Larry Michael Darden,Find detailed product information for Low price howo tipper truck and other products. Jr., 28, was arrested and charged with Possession of Marijuana and Theft By Receiving Stolen Property.
ACCPD officers were on patrol in the area of Bethel Midtown Village (Hickman Drive) when they observed suspicious activity and moved to investigate. As they approached a stairwell, they observed a male and female engaged in an apparent drug transaction. A quantity of crack cocaine and a stolen firearm were recovered from near the location where the female was standing. Jonathan Palmer,Gardner Bender offers a broad range of cableties, 35, Nantahala Avenue, and Sermaine Gaynelle Moses, 23, Hickman Drive were arrested and charged with Possession of Crack Cocaine and Theft By Receiving Stolen Property.
ACCPD officers responded to a report of a suspicious vehicle in the visitor parking lot of the Clarke County Jail. A male was sitting in a car, apparently passed out, with the motor running. When asked, the male stated he was waiting on a bondsman to get his girlfriend out of jail. Investigation revealed that Christopher Charles Tully, 38, Prospect Church Road, had an outstanding warrant from a neighboring county and he was placed under arrest. During a search incidental to his arrest, two separate types of drugs were recovered wrapped in a cigarette package. Tully was also charged with Possession of Prescription Drugs Not In Original Container.
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