Here's a utility light that's both green and cost-effective. Sunovia Energy Technologies Inc., a renewable energy and conservation company in Sarasota, FL, has introduced EvoLucia LED general utility lights for multiple applications, including spotlights, floodlights and general landscape lighting. The lights were designed to be highly efficient and cost-effective. They were built to combine the environmental advantages of LED lighting with reliable, durable mechanical design.
According to Sunovia, the lights use less electricity than incandescent quartz or metal halide counterparts with negligible light loss. Sunovia developed the EvoLucia lights with Precision and Beacon Products, which are members of the Varon Light Group. The Varon Light Group will distribute the lights.
Inforbix is leveraging its CAD and product data access technology to power up a free iPad app that lets mobile users search and access engineering data.
Unlike his friends in engineering programs, blogger Jon Titus had little need for calculus except in a few of his college physical-chemistry labs and classes.
In the wake of the Chevy Volt fire investigations, sales are down, and General Motors' (GM) CEO Dan Akerson is blaming the downturn on a spate of bad publicity.
Thanks to embedded electronics, medical devices are getting smaller and smarter than ever. Pacemakers and implantable defibrillators are now able to call physicians. MRIs, CT scanners, and ultrasound machines are gaining mobility. And the venerable Band-Aid may soon be able to detect illnesses ranging from fevers to heart arrhythmias. On February 21, join Design News senior editor Charles Murray for a wide-ranging discussion, "Embedded Angles for Medical Products," which will explore the latest developments in medical electronics. The discussion will examine advances in medical device technology and offer an inside look at the embedded electronics behind it.
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