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LED low energy signs are a sure way to light your business. Light Emitting Diode bulbs are super bright and will attract attention to your store! There are many advantages to using LED signs to attract customers, many signs will alert your customers if your business is open, which hours your business is open, if your Drive-Thru is open and many more options. If you need something advertised specifically go for one of out LED Programmable Signs. They allow custom messages and graphics to be displayed. What about your store's ATM? Check out our banking signs with indoor and outdoor functionality.
LED Signs are a cost effective way to attract customers to your storefront without increasing your energy bills. Our low priced, low energy consumption signs are easy to install and maintain. Most of them you just Hang and Plugin! LED signs are know for their long life, most of our products have a life of 100,000 hours of expected life. Our variety of LED signs is a sure way to increase your visibility to customers without a major increase in spending.
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Latest Green Tips
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Congress to be briefed on LED lighting
A Congressional Luncheon Briefing discussed how, with energy-efficient technology becoming a government priority, cities across the country are investing in greener lighting sources. A Congressional Luncheon Briefing later this week will discuss how, with energy-efficient technology becoming a government priority, cities across the country are investing in greener lighting sources.
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LED Clip Light Transforms any Object Into a Lamp
Wow those around you by transforming any old household object into a lamp with this “LED Pin” by Korean designer Sungho Lee. To create this subtle, yet awe-inspiring illuminating accent Lee stylized and whitewashed the form of a traditional clothespin. The refreshing take on a familiar design successfully turns the object’s dollar-store stigma into a museum store find, but it’s the techy twist that makes it even more notable.
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European Union Begins Ban of Incandescent Light Bulbs
The European Union is on the cutting-edge of green technology; already ahead of many nations through its introduction a ban of incandescent light bulbs that began on September 1, 2009. The ban of these incandescent light bulbs has a goal of reducing region-wide energy costs through use of the more eco-friendly compact fluorescent light bulbs instead.
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Nitride phosphor from Philips Lumileds closes yellow LED gap
Philips Lumileds researchers have developed a monochromatic nitride diode that closes the yellow light LED gap. The phosphor-converted (PC) amber LED demonstrated by Regina Mueller-Mach and her colleagues uses the down-conversion of blue light from an indium-gallium-nitride (InGaN) LED to longer-wavelength light by a phosphor
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Refrigerator
Keep your head out of the refrigerator and the door closed! The refrigerator is the single biggest energy-consuming kitchen appliance, and opening the refrigerator door accounts for between $30 and $60 of a typical family’s electricity bill each year
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Preheating
If you’re boiling, roasting, or baking a dish that will cook for an hour or more, don’t bother preheating your oven. Even for breads and cakes, never preheat for longer than ten minutes. If you reduce the amount of time your oven is on by one hour per year, you’ss save an average of two kilowatt-hours of energy
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Storage Containers
Instead of using plastic, store your food in glass or porcelain containers. Fewer chemicals will likely leach from the container into the food. Chemicals that transfer from plastic to food and from food to body may cause health risks.
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Composting
If, over the course of a year, everyone in the US composted their kitchen scaps instead of sending them away in the trash, the organic waste diverted from landfills could make a three-foot high compost pile to cover the city of San Francisco.
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Food Waste
If you could reduce the amount of food wasted in your household by just twenty-five grams per day (about the weight of a slice of bread), you'd save twenty pounds of food annually - roughly enough to make 16 meals.
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Garbage Disposal
Use cold water when you run your garbage disposal. Better yet, try not to use it at all by composting your food waste or disposing of it in the trash.
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Junk Mail
Rid yourself of Junk mail – or at least recycle it. The average U.S. household receives 1.5 trees’ worth of junk mail each year, and many of these are thrown right into the trash.
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