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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Can You Save Energy When Building Your Home?


By H. John Griffin II

Have you decided to build an energy efficient house? What are some products that you can use in your house if you want to create an energy efficient house? This article will give two examples of energy efficient products.

One of the products that you will want to use is energy efficient insulation. In your house you want to make sure that the heat flows properly. This will help to cut the cost of both heating and cooling your house. With the proper flow, you won't have to increase or decrease the heat or air conditioning thermostat. With the installation of energy efficient insulation, your house will be more comfortable.


Heat tends to flow from warmer areas of the house to cooler areas of the house. With proper energy efficient insulation, the cooler areas will get warmer as the warm air moves to these places, and the heat in the summer will go from the outside part of your house to the inside of your house.The efficiency of insulation is measured by something known as the R-value. The actual value is based on the how thick and dense the insulation is as well as what kind is insulation is used. If the R-value is high, then you have insulation that is efficient.

A product that uses insulation and also helps to make your home energy efficient is a product known as the All Wall System. This concrete and insulation wall system conserves heat and air cooled energy. This system will help to reduce your monthly heating and cooling bills and will implement the use of smaller heating and cooling devices.

The All Wall System walls do more than cut down on the biggest types of energy loss. The concrete gives them the heat-absorbing property, "thermal mass". It keeps the walls of the house a little warmer when the outdoor temperature hits its coldest extreme, and keeps the house a little cooler when the outdoor temperature is hottest. The walls themselves "add back" heat or cooling to the house when it needs them most. This contributes about 12% of the needed energy to the house for free. Due to the savings in energy, the cost of the energy will be reduced. Less energy is needed, so the size of the furnaces and compressors will be smaller.

In conclusion, these two products are examples of the way people can save energy when they build new homes. If you are interested in building a home that will be cost efficient month after month, these systems and products should be used in the home.

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Sunday, March 8, 2009

Mouse House need your vote on Start Up Nation - CLICK HERE

Mouse House Hand Warmer bloggers are asked to please click the link below to cast a quick vote for IGMproducts.com on Start Up Nation! Thank you!

Please click the above picture and vote for our start up company on Start Up Nation. Voting deadline is March 31, 2009. Thank you!

We specialize in Ergonomic Heated Computer Aids.

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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Mouse House Giveaway at Everything Up Close




Does your mouse hand get cold? Do you sit for hours working at the computer? Get a FREE Designer Mouse House for your computer mouse hand.
The Mouse House Hand Warmer blog announces a blog contest at Everything Up Close. You must enter to win! Click here now and visit Everything Up Close's Mouse Hand Warmer Giveaway.

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Monday, February 9, 2009

Hand warmer computer mouse house


Keep your hand warm inside a mouse house hand warmer
Cold hand medical conditions make it difficult to sit and work at the computer. That's why we thought you'd enjoy seeing the Mouse Hand Warmer. It creates a warm house for your mouse. For more details, click here.
from PRStherapy

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Carpal tunnel is defined by compression of the median nerve at the level of the wrist. This nerve passes through the carpal tunnel along with nine tendons which help you bend your fingers. The "tunnel" is created by the carpal bones and transverse carpal ligament. When inflammation occurs at the wrist this creates pressure on the nerve. The pressure leads to symptoms such as numbness or tingling in the fingers, pain radiating up the arm, and night pain. These symptoms can be evident when driving, holding newspapers and dropping objects. Compression of the nerve can result from repetitive use of the hands and writs, diabetes, and/or hormonal changes such as pregnancy.

DeQuervain's Syndrome: Also known as "washerwoman's sprain" this syndrome can be a product of overuse. This is and inflammatory disorder in which pain and discomfort is felt along the edge of the thumb and wrist. The tendons that straighten your thumb become inflamed following prolonged repetitive activity. The symptoms include tenderness at the base of the thumb, aching over the side aspect of the thumb and wrist. This discomfort can be aggravated by bending the thumb or straightening the thumb and with various wrist motions.

Tendinitis: General terminology for inflammation of a tendon. This may result from overuse or repetitive use of hand or wrist within varied activities.

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Thursday, November 6, 2008

Coolest gadgets for keeping your mouse hand warm not cold


Check out the coolest gadgets for keeping your mouse hand warm not cold on Coolest Gadgets. The hand warmer designed specifically for your mouse hand does not use electricity. It's a cozy snuggly fleece blanket to crawl inside on a cold day or night.

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Saturday, November 1, 2008

Blog Catalogue - Features earth friendly hand warmer cold mouse hand

One of our all time favorite online blogging sites is Blog Catalogue. The site lists blogs in categories. It's the perfect blogger's social network. One of the best things the site has going for it is the nice people who run it! Everyone at Blog Catalogue is friendly and sincere. We are pleased to be a part of the Blog Catalogue network.


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Thursday, October 23, 2008

News Now for business and finance computer industry news points a finger at the mouse hand warmer


Mouse Hand Warmer listed on News Now Business & Finance Computer Industry News. Click Here for more details.
The recent press release for IGMproducts.com's Mouse Hand Warmer was picked up by News Now. The computer gadget industry has something newsy to write about. With this year's energy crisis a top priority, IGMproducts.com introduces an energy-efficient way to keep your mousing hand warm. Cover it with a warm, fleece blanket.

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Saturday, October 18, 2008

New Computer Mouse Is Also a Heart Rate Monitor

A mouse pad to keep your mouse hand warm.

by Donald Melanson

Watches that monitor your heart rate may be commonplace these days (because, you know, they're actually useful), but a mouse that keep watch on your ticker -- well, that's something you don't see everyday. ASUS seems to think that's a shame, however, and it's set out to rectify things somewhat with its new heart-monitoring Vito W1 wireless mouse.

Apart from an apparently really simple heart-monitoring application that comes with it though, this one looks to be about as standard as wireless mice get, with it boasting a 1,200 dpi resolution, a 2.4GHz USB receiver, five programmable buttons and not much else. No word on a price just yet, nor is there any indication of a planned release 'round these parts.

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Sunday, September 14, 2008

Keep your hands warm this winter




Product Reviews:

Mouse Hand Warmers:
If you sit and work at the computer for long hours and your mouse hand gets cold from being exposed to the chilly air, there's a solution. The Mouse Hand Warmer is designed to insulate body heat by keeping your mouse hand covered with a warm, fleece, cozy blanket. Slip your favorite mouse pad and mouse inside the hand warmer and work with plenty of room for movement. The non slip surface keeps the mouse pad secure on your desk top. Uses no electricity and has no cords to get tangled on your desk. This is one of the best, new computer gadgets we discovered to keep your mouse hand covered and warm. Works good in air-conditioned offices, too. Keep it on hand all year long. — Bernie Karr


With the northeast hit by a mammoth snowstorm over the weekend, it's time to break out the serious winter gear. But even the thickest gloves can only do so much to warm chilly fingers. Gloves with powered heaters can help, though it'll be back to blowing on your hands when you run out of juice. Good thing that's all you have to do to give your hands some extra warmth when you have a pair of Gorgonz Exhale gloves. Built into each mitt is a small port that funnels air through valves into pockets around your fingers. When it gets cold, all you have to do is follow instinct and blow warm air from your lungs into the ports, and the Exhale system does the rest — delivering the heat all the way to your fingertips. Best of all, it doesn't need any power, so spend your battery money on some hot chocolate instead. — Peter Pachal

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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Cold hands? Keep your mouse hand warm

There's nothing worse than trying to work with a cold mouse hand. That was the motivation behind a new computer accessory called the Mouse Hand Warmer. Wearing a long sleeved sweater and using a mouse hand warmer, your mouse hand stays warm, and you can work for hours without a cold mouse hand.
The above photo illustrates the use of the new hand warmer being introduced early this Fall by i-GlobalMall.com, Inc. Actually, it's a great gift idea for any computer user, especially the person who's always cold. If you've spent much time at all in front of a computer using a mouse, you'll understand completely. Drafts and chills in the air cause the exposed mouse hand to get cold and sometime feel numb.


Slip your favorite mouse pad and mouse inside the Mouse Hand Warmer and keep your hand covered by a warm, fleece blanket. The non slip surface keeps everything in place on the desk top. The net front works for both a wireless or USB mouse.

Click here if you'd like more information about this new product. It's like having a warm house for your mouse!

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Sunday, August 3, 2008

COLD HANDS: HOW TO KEEP YOUR HANDS WARM THIS WINTER

When your mouse hand gets cold, slip it inside a Mouse Hand Warmer.
Available online.



from PsychoVertical

Whether it’s ice or mixed climbing, mountaineering, winter rock or just making snowballs with the kids, getting cold hands and hot aches just isn’t fun. On hard climbs were tools are used leashless, or when you’re forced to crimp and jam with your fingertips, having dull blocks of ice attached to the ends of your arms can make these things feel impossible and terrifying, and on exposed faces and summits frozen hands and fingers may never thaw out, and once they stop working you’re really in trouble! So how do you avoid getting frozen hands? Well the simple answer is to sit in an nice comfy chair beside a big fire, and cradle a cup of warm milk in them. Is that solution not good enough? Have you got routes that need slaying, artic climbs you want to do, winter ascents begging to be deflowered? Well if that’s the case you need to understand one thing:-

IF YOU WANT TO USE YOUR HANDS THEY WILL GET COLD
A few years ago I made the first winter ascent of the East Face of Mermoz in Patagonia, one of the coldest routes I ever did. On it I wore a pair of Black Diamond Drytool gloves under a pair of Lowe Alpine fleece mitts – the ones you could flip your fingers out off. This combination allowed me to hold my tools well, jam and grab, and place gear without dropping it down the crag. On such a route you really needed big down or synthetic filled mitts, but these were out of the question on such a technical climb. A few months later someone was asking me about climbing in such conditions and they said “How do you keep your hands warm” to which I answered “my hands are always in agony – it’s when they stop hurting that I get worried”. This leads us onto:-

ACCEPT THAT YOUR HANDS WILL GET COLD – BUT DON’T EXCEPT THAT THEY WILL FREEZE
The most important thing when climbing in cold conditions is that you never ignore your hands – if you do you may lose them. This means that you need to be constantly moving them, rubbing them, warming them up, replacing frozen gloves – anything that will stop them from freezing. If you feel your tips going dangerously numb mid crux, hang on some pro and sort them out. Flesh can freeze very quickly if it’s cold, windy and your gloves are damp. The problem is that this ability to know what your fingers can take only comes with experience, so when starting out use caution. Personally I always have a pair of super warm mitts in reserve, so that if I find that no matter how I try to squeeze some heat into my hands they stay cold, them I can bang on my mitts and warm them up.

Anyway I thought perhaps I’d just give a long list of random ideas that have worked for me over the years and you can see what works for you.

ALWAYS KEEP YOUR MITTS CLOSE BY
Having thick warm mitts in the top pocket of a pack is no good if retreaving them's a chore – meaning you’re likely to forgoe the hassle. Having mitts clipped to the back of a harness, or stashed in a bum bag, means when you get to the belay you can quickly replace those skimpy gloves by instantly driving your hands into your mitts, meaning they warm up and are ready for the next lead. The most important thing when clipping mitts to yourself is that they can’t fill with snow – which they will do if clipped conventionally, even if you cinch them shut (spindrift WILL get through). The only option is to hang them upside side, with the fingers pointing skywards, by having a loop sewn in at the finger end (either factory or self sewn), or by folding the mitts in half and securing them so that snow can’t get in. Carrying a bum bag is another option, and this can also contain food, water etc (stow all other items in a small stuff sack secured to the bum bag so when you pull out your mitts everything fall out!).

USE DISPOSABL HANDWARMERS
They're cheap and can make a big difference, easily placed inside mitts, or inside gloves, or even in the wrist of a jacket in order to warm the blood going into your hands. Personally I don’t use hand warmers because over dependence will cost you money over time, and if things are that bad, and you can’t do anything without them – them maybe you should take up surfing.

USE NON DISPOSABLE CHARCOAL HANDWARMERS
Loved by fisherman and painters – these old school hand warmers feature a two part slim metal body that accepts charcoal sticks that are lit and then slowly burn – giving hours of heat. These of course can’t be placed inside your gloves, but they can be placed in pockets to warm fingers, or in mitts (not if they’re hanging from your harness) so you have toasty mitts straight off. These burners can also be used on cold bivys, placed between the legs to warm up your feet and kick off the bags warmth.

GET YOURSELF A MAGIC PLATE
Having a auto locking belay plate like a Petzl Reverso means you can warm your hands up while the second's coming up, giving you chance to warm them rather than having them clamped to the rope.

LEARN HOW TO WARM YOUR HANDS
I find that repeatedly warming your hands can get them through a cold stretch, perhaps climbing a cold pitch of rock with out gloves. This can mean a quick reheat between moves, warming your fingers just enough to feel what you’re holding. One thing I avoid is breathing on my hands, as this increases evaporative heat loss (via the dampness in your breath). A better solution is place your fingers on your neck, in your hair, or under an arm pit. Just hold it for a few seconds then carry on. Another option is to keep rubbing them hard, which not only increases blood flow, but also helps to reduce evaporate heat loss – as you tend t wipe moisture off as you do so. Also don’t forget the child hood trick up just pulling your hands up into your sleeves.

DON’T SMOKE OR DRINK CAFFINE
This will constrict your blood vessels. Save the parting for the evening.

TRY TO RELAX
Try not to get too hyped up as being tense will make your hands cold. Think about other things – probably warm things.

PROTECT YOUR WRISTS
Your wrists are a major source of heat loss, so you need to keep them covered – either by wearing garments that feature thumb loops in the sleeve, or by buying/making wrist-overs, that extend down over the wrist. This can be easily made from a pair of socks and work well with or without a thumb loop.

STAY WELL FED AND HYDRATED
If you’re dehydrated you blood flow will decrease to your extremities, meaning cold fingers and toes. Also eating some fat will boost your warmth – so maybe take along a bit of sausage!

LEARN SOME WARM HAND EXERCIES
Rotate the shoulders forward up and back in a circular motion for about 30 seconds, then rotate the wrists in both directions for the same length of time. Another option is to make a fist without bending your fingers (The final joint of your fingers is not bent.)

GO LEASHLESS
Having your hands above your head is a great way to get cold hands – so having the ability to shake them out is vital, meaning either leashless tools or tools with clipper leashes. A tight leash will also restrict circulation.

MAKE SURE YOUR CLOTHES ARE WARM ANOUGH
If your hands are cold stick on another hat!

DON'T WEAR THIN DAMP GLOVES
If your gloves are very thin, then it means they probably won't be be able to trap trap much dead air when wet - meaning they won't give you a 'wet warmth'. This means continuing to wear them when damp could result in colder rather than warmer hands. Try to get gloves that hold enough air when Wet (or still water) so that you can get a 'wetsuit' warmth going.

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Thursday, July 17, 2008

Welcome to the Mouse House Hand Wamer

Your mouse hand is a very special piece of equipment. You need to keep it warm when it's cold. The best way to keep your mouse hand warm is by slipping it inside a cozy warm mouse blanket. This blog will show you how to keep your mouse hand warm. Please be patient while it's under construction. Then, check back often for news and products to help you keep your mouse hand warm during the winter or whenever it gets a chill.


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