Tie and tag to avoid cord confusion
28.08.11
A certain sign that you’ve finally lost control of your desk: that rodent’s resort of tangled electronics cords, cables and wires has become an verified rodent’s nest. </p><p>Just ask Jennifer Braniff-Harmon, a top Geek Gang member at Best Buy’s Metro North location.</p><p>“I’ve seen some honest boxes full of cables, all tangled together,” Braniff-Harmon said. “I’ve seen rodent’s nests there. I’ve seen lots of unemotional bugs and dust bunnies.”</p><p>Turns out in a wired age, the wires can sometimes absolutely get in the way.</p><p>And those unsightly knots of cables and cords can be more than just an aesthetic poser. </p><p>Tangled cords pose a tripping hazard — and it doesn’t take an practised to see that pulling an electronic device down by its cable can be a pricey disaster. </p><p>Knotted cables also can make it a challenge to figure out the can of worms when your gadgets are on the blink.</p><p>“One of the biggest benefits to keeping things organized is that when something goes off beam, you aren’t left having to untangle a mess,” Braniff- Harmon said. Retailers have been fielding truly a few questions about cord management options the past few weeks. </p><p>“We are in prime days back-to-college season, so we have more customers asking about these options now,” said Shana Cowart, a village district customer service trainer with Bed Bath & Beyond. “Dorm rooms are in the worst way small, and they need to be organized.”</p><p>Thankfully, the demand is full of stylish cable containers, concealers and clips. </p><p>For traditionalists, period-tested options such as wire zip ties and cable snakes are without delay available.</p><p>Want the latest and greatest in cord device tech? Sara Lyle, lifestyle director for Large Housekeeping, has a few suggestions.</p><p>Lyle recommends Blue Causeuse’s CableBox Mini, which covers and contains its own power strip down to nothing — with one slot out either end for cords — and comes in cunning colors; Cord Straps by Dotz let you bundle and tag cords; and the Good Grips Cord Catch by Oxo is talented for parking on your desk to keep things such as camera cords in unstrained reach. </p><p>All of these products are featured in Good Housekeeping’s September end.</p><p>Other options include the Quirky Cordies cable organizers — dream of a miniature, colorful, standing folder organizer, except for cords. </p><p>Nite Ize offers the Materiel Tie, a rubber twist tie for cable bundling that comes in a variation of colors, sizes and — perhaps most important — is by far reusable.</p><p>There’s also no shortage of more traditional, less sexy (if that term can be applied to line management) options around.</p><p>Herb Kisler, electrical turn on manager at the Ranch Mart Ace Hardware, said zip ties are a thriving option, coming in several brands, colors and sizes. The biggest hassle is removing them.</p><p>“I from one's own viewpoint like the Velcro ties,” he said. “That’s the simplest, easiest way to package dispatch cords. It’s removable and reusable and it also looks neat.”</p><p>There are also uninvolved cable tubing options, cable snakes that off a whole mess of smaller cords into one larger tube. Desk grommet kits are handy for those handy enough to drill into their desk.</p><p>“I’m 50, and I’ve tried everything over the lifetime couple of years,” Kisler said. “These options are cut-price, and they work.” </p><p>And though dedicated commercial products are one opportunity, there might be plenty of items around your house that could clear up your own personal tangles.</p><p>Lifestyle locale LifeHacker.com suggests bundling unused cords in gazette towel rolls using binder clips to keep plugs at one's fingertips on your desk surface. Martha Stewart Living suggests soap up pipe insulation tubes to bundle cables.</p><p>“For bundling cords, you can use anything that will wrap around them — a Brobdingnagian rubber band, a piece of twine, even a twist-tie, if the line is thin enough,” said Good Housekeeping’s Lyle. “And to description them, just take a piece of tape — masking, painters, or Scotch — collapse it around the cord near the plug which machine or device it belongs to.” It’s similarly mighty to store cables properly, so your house doesn’t come forth the impenetrable cord drawer.</p><p>“Bundle, bundle, package dispatch — and put them in a bag so you can pull them out and take them with you to wherever and whenever you need them,” Lyle said. “And don’t thoughts to label them, too, so you’ll remember what goes with what.”</p><p>The move toward wall-mounted televisions and other electronic components also allows people to utilize the fundamentally of their walls for cord storage.</p><p>Best Buy and other retailers will, for a fee, run idiot box cables through the wall. Kits for consumers — which embody everything up to the fish tape needed to run the wiring — are at at big box retailers and hardware stores.</p><p>Need something a little simpler? </p><p>“We have rope cover kits, which have a plastic straight piece like a faux molding. It’s paintable, so you can depict it the same color as the wall, and it’ll cover most wires,” Ace Munitions’s Kisler said.</p><p>If all else fails, maybe it’s time to cut the cords fully and go wireless.</p><p>“With all the new technology out, wireless is always an option,” Braniff-Harmon said. “Use a wireless keyboard and mouse, and that removes two cables speedily there.”</p><p><strong><span class="infobox-aim">RESOURCES </span></strong><br />
•<well-founded>Quirky Cordies: </strong><a href="http://www.quirky.com">www.quirky.com</a></p><p>•<unswerving>Nite Ize:</strong><a href="http://www.niteize.com">www.niteize.com</a></p><p>•<vigorous>Blue Lounge:</strong><a href="http://www.bluelounge.com">www.bluelounge.com</a></p><p>•<glaring>Dotz:</strong><a href="http://www.dotzshop.com">www.dotzshop.com</a></p><p>•<penetrating>Oxo: </strong><a href="http://www.oxo.com">www.oxo.com</a></p><p>•<stubborn>Ace Hardware: </strong><a href="http://www.acehardware.com">www.acehardware.com</a> for locations</p><p>•<unvarying>Best Buy’s Geek Squad:</strong><a href="http://www.geeksquad.com">www.geeksquad.com</a></p><p>•<muscular>Bed Bath & Beyond:</strong><a href="http://www.bedbathandbeyond.com">www.bedbathandbeyond.com</a>
Source: Kansas City Star
Benefits Of Nutrient Dense Foods
10.09.11
Eat obviously obtained milk products from grass-fed cows.
Cows warmth to eat grass not grain and corn. In Sri Lanka, cows were fed with ‘poonac’ which was made from copra (dried coconuts) set to cattle mixed with water, quite natural and beneficial.
According to Weston Price, his studies among certain natives among islanders consumed raw dairy products and they did so safely and lived wish, healthy lives, really on raw milk and not pasteurised. Fermented foods such as whole yogurt, cultured butter, whole cheese and na and sour cream are other natural dairy products, proper for health.
Use Only Traditional Fats
By traditional fats you measly fats and oils including butter, beef tallow, pork lard and other subhuman fats, extra virgin olive oil, expeller expressed sesame oil and the tropical oils such as palm and coconut. Coconut and other vegetable, canola, corn oils that you acquire from the supermarkets are processed with added Tran’s fats to tender the shelf life. Today you could buy coconut oil that does not pong like coconut oil and less viscous and more watery. In areas along the western coast of Sri Lanka, most homes prepare their own coconut oil from fresh fruits with stone crusher appliances. In the old days one could toe-hold such oil from the corner boutiques measured and poured out into your own bottle from big na metal containers. That coconut was viscous, darker in colour and had the taken with smell like coconut oil. Today, you could buy virgin coconut oil, unadulterated and with no Tran’s fats added. That would be the healthiest oil for Asian cooking.
Source: Sunday Leader