Thursday, July 28, 2011

5 THINGS YOU DINT KNOW ABOUT LED'S

If you've heard about residential LED light bulbs, you probably know that they're energy efficient, last a long time, and are pricier than other light bulb technologies.
I've been using LED lights in my home for several months now, and overall the transition has been good. As you consider your lighting options going forward, here a few things that you might not know about LEDs.
LEDs are cooler.
When you're running fans or an air conditioner this summer, having burning-hot incandescent bulbs just makes it harder to manage the heat. LEDs run much cooler than incandescent bulbs and significantly cooler than CFLs.
The latest generation of energy-efficient LED bulbs are brighter and give off more even light.
(Credit: Martin LaMonica/CNET)
Online retailer the EnergyCircle actually measured the difference and found that a halogen, a type of incandescent bulb, ran at 327 degrees! A Cree LED downlight was measured at 107 degrees and a Philips Par38 CFL worked at 167 degrees.
That's not to say that heat isn't at all an issue. LED bulbs do get hot but the heat is dissipated by metal heat sinks that wick away the heat from the light source itself. Keeping them cool with heat sinks or even liquid cooling, as Switch Lighting is doing, is important to ensuring they last as long as advertised.
You get instant full light.
You get the full brightness of an LED bulb when you turn it on, which is an advantage over CFLs in a couple of ways. For starters, you don't need to wait for full light if you're running in and out of a room, for example. But frequent cycling also degrades the life of CFLs, one of the reasons that CFLs in some cases don't last as long as expected.
I've become more conscious of this and put LEDs in places where lights are cycled on and off quickly. CFLs, meanwhile, are in light fixtures and lamps which typically stay on for extended periods. Consumer Reports found turning CFLs on and off in less than 15 minutes degraded their life.
LEDs don't attract bugs.
Pixi Lighting, which makes LEDs, lists "no bugs!" as one of the reasons to use LEDs. But if you look at discussions online, it's not perfectly clear cut.
The stated reason that bugs don't fly toward LEDs is because bugs are attracted to ultraviolet light and at least some LEDs don't give off this type of light. But that's not universally true for all types of LEDs, according to people who have commented online. In one discussion, an employee from the EnergyCircle said that most residential LED bulbs give off almost no UV light.
In an unscientific test last night at my house, I saw moths and mosquitoes fly right past my outdoor LED bulb and not attracted to the light. Consumer LED bulb maker Pharox advertises its bulbs as having no UV, so it's something worth checking when you're shopping around.
LEDs come in funny shapes.
Lighting manufacturers have tried to make LED bulbs as familiar-looking as possible, most importantly by having a screw-in connector. But there are limits to mimicking the Edison-style bulb.
"Snow cone" LEDs, where the top half is a bulb shape, best resemble incandescent bulbs but light is given off in only one direction. So you'll get more light from the top of a desk lamp, for example, than the bottom. CFLs or incandescents give off light in all directions.
The most recent bulbs to come to market address this light dispersal problem very well. I've been testing a Lighting Sciences Group 60-watt equivalent for the last week or so and it does indeed give off far more even light than the company's own snow cone-type bulbs.
Related links
LED bulbs in the home: So far, so good
Philips Lighting CEO: LED prices to drop in half
LED bulb makers target 100-watt brightness
LED bulbs move in and mix up home lighting
The price for the more even light dispersal is odd-looking bulbs. The LSG bulb has a squat disk for a light source and the rest of the bulb is a heat sink made of metal fins that make up most of the actual bulb.
Philips' LED bulbs have a crown-like light source and a similar aluminum heat sink. But their recently released 75-watt equivalent bulb has a noticeably longer heat sink than the 60-watt equivalent Philips LED, which is something to consider. When I tried it at home, the 75-watt equivalent, called the 17-watt A21 LED, was too long to fit into a small overhead fixture.
You will need to learn some lighting lingo.
We still talk about 60-watt and 75-watt equivalent bulbs because that's what we're accustomed to. But some manufacturers are using new labels that give people far more information than brightness, which is worth understanding as lighting gets more diverse.
Lumens, of course, measure the amount of light, with a 60-watt equivalent giving off at least 800 lumens. But LEDs are also sold by color temperature, either warmer yellow light or cooler white light. And then there's color rendering index, with the highest being the best for light quality.
Warmer color lights will be more familiar since they're closer to the yellow glow of a CFL or incandescent. But I found I like the cooler, white light of the Lighting Sciences Group bulbs, rated at a cooler 3000 Kelvin, which I find a little cleaner. As for color quality, I can't put my finger on why, but I've been very happy with the light from a Pixi bulb which has a 96 color rendering index--higher than the others I have.
Bonus: 40-watt equivalents bulbs are underrated.
Some of the first general-purpose LED bulbs I tested were rated with the light output of a 40-watt equivalent. I found that they were not quite enough to light up a whole room, but they do the trick in more places than I thought. For example, I have a small LED for an outdoor light and one in the basement.
These aren't spots I'll spend time reading a book so these energy-sippers have fit in nicely.
COPYRIGHTS:

Muammar Gaddafi’s ‘Libyan Rocket’


Gaddafi's Car
Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has always been internationally recognised for his vibrant fashion sense, sleeping in Bedouin tents wherever he goes, wearing huge provocative buttons, being guarded by heavily armed women, just to name a few. An epitome of Gaddafi's eccentricity is the car he designed for himself, which Libya claims is the safest vehicle on earth. However, don't go into any details to back up the claim.
The Saroukh el-Jamahiriya, which means Libyan rocket, is a five-seater saloon with the nose and tail of a rocket and powered by a 230bhp V6. Launched at a conference called the Organization of African Unity and organized by Colonel Gaddafi in 2009, the Libyan Rocket comes with airbags, an electronic defense system and collapsible bumpers that supposedly help out in a crash.. Wonder what is an "electronic defense system"? Apparently, no one knows what it is or how it works.
Dukhali Al-Meghareff, chairman of the Libyan Arab Domestic Investment company which produced the prototype, touted it as revolutionary in automotive history. "The leader spent so many hours of his valuable time thinking of an effective solution. It is the safest car produced anywhere," said Mr Meghareff.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

HTC'S ChaCha to be launched soon in INDIA

HTc...finally officially launching in India with its new product... HTC has been winninG the hearts of mobile lovers over globe lately and now its India's turn ....Mind you the performance and quality of these mobiles....The new CHACHA model from HTC is to be shortly launched in india with the following specifications:

HTC-ChaCha-550x309
  • 2.6-inch TFT capacitive touch screen display with 480 x 320 resolution ( Gorilla Glass)
  • 800 MHz processor
  • 512MB RAM and 512MB ROM. Micro sd card support upto 32GB.
  • Full QWERTY keypad with special Facebook share button
  • Android 2.3.3 Gingerbread
  • 5MP rear facing camera with auto-focus and LED flash. VGA front facing camera.
  • GPS, Accelerometer, Proximity sensor, Bluetooth 3.0
  • WiFi b/g/n, Wireless hotspot. GPRS, EDGE, 3G(upto 7.2Mbps)
  • 1250mAH battery with 7.5Hrs talk time on 2G and 7Hrs on 3G
  • Price of HTC ChaCha in India: Rs15,990/-
Looking at the specs you can say that this is a well priced device for the specs that you get. HTC especially wants to highlight the Facebook button on the phone that deeply integrates with the Android system and even glows when content is available to upload to Facebook straight from your phone. HTC ChaCha will be competing with Samsung’s Galaxy Pro which has almost comparable specifications but is priced at Rs12K. But we recon HTC has an ace up its sleeve and that’s where the partnership with TATA DOCOMO comes in.
Under the bundle offer, Tata DOCOMO 3G prepaid customers can avail 3GB free data valid for a period of 90 days whereas 1GB free data is offered free each month to postpaid customers across all 3G circles valid for 90 days. All 3G customers will also get 3 hour of free Mobile TV that includes data access charges valid for 90 days.
Tata DOCOMO 2G prepaid customers can avail 3GB free data and 300 Tata to Tata local calling valid for a period of 90 days whereas 1GB free data and 100 minutes Tata to Tata calling is offered free each month for 3 months to postpaid customers across all 2G circles.