Wall Mounts

TV Bracket

Brackets R Us is the leading TV bracket supplier in the TV bracket industry. Brackets R Us launched with one objective in mind, to be the largest TV Bracket supplier that delivers diversity at an economical price without compromising on quality. After years of toiling hard in the TV bracket sector, we believe we have achieved this, but maintaining the pole position requires constant work, the sector moves forward at lightning speed, and there are always more designs to add to our TV bracket portfolio.

Our aim is to provide great looking high quality TV brackets to our customers, which compliment all of the popular makes and models of plasma and LCD TVs on the market. Technology moves at breakneck speed and our job is to make sure that the TV brackets we offer are as advanced technically as the plasmas they are made to support, so for TV brackets, which are design pieces in themselves, visit BracketsRus.

It’s true that a TV wall bracket plays the support to the plasma’s lead role but that doesn’t mean the TV wall bracket should be relegated to retiring wallflower. To best show off a top of the range plasma the TV wall bracket must be able to make the most of unusual spaces and be adept and versatile.

TV wall brackets from BracketsRus are made from ultra durable material to ensure they not only show off your sleek new toy but that they keep it safe too. Our TV wall brackets come with a 15-year guarantee for this reason.

We also aim to make TV wall mounts more accessible. Rarely do people consider TV wall mounts when buying a plasma TV and become overwhelmed by the range of TV wall mounts on offer. Brackets R Us has built a handy online tool called the TV wall mounts finder; all you need do is enter in the size of your plasma screen and it will present back a list of suitable TV wall mounts. You just then need to choose which will offer you the best viewing experience for the space that you have.

If you’re at all confused by what the different kinds of TV brackets wall mounts and accessories are best used for then our friendly staff are always happy to chat. They’re geeks when it comes to TV brackets wall mounts and the like and they love nothing more than to indulge their passion.

So if you’re looking for good quality LCD TV brackets at a price unbeatable anywhere else, and you want to buy your LCD TV brackets from a company that lives and breathes LCD TV brackets, then please visit Brackets R Us because we can kit you out at a bargain price in no time.

There are also extra bargains to be had across certain TV wall mount lines, some TV wall mount lines even have as much as 70% off, so don’t delay, buy a bargain TV wall mount from Brackets R Us today.

This post is a sponsored blog post

TV Brackets

TV Bracket

Brackets R Us is the leading TV bracket supplier in the TV bracket industry. Brackets R Us launched with one objective in mind, to be the largest TV Bracket supplier that delivers diversity at an economical price without compromising on quality. After years of toiling hard in the TV bracket sector, we believe we have achieved this, but maintaining the pole position requires constant work, the sector moves forward at lightning speed, and there are always more designs to add to our TV bracket portfolio.

Our aim is to provide great looking high quality TV brackets to our customers, which compliment all of the popular makes and models of plasma and LCD TVs on the market. Technology moves at breakneck speed and our job is to make sure that the TV brackets we offer are as advanced technically as the plasmas they are made to support, so for TV brackets, which are design pieces in themselves, visit BracketsRus.

It’s true that a TV wall bracket plays the support to the plasma’s lead role but that doesn’t mean the TV wall bracket should be relegated to retiring wallflower. To best show off a top of the range plasma the TV wall bracket must be able to make the most of unusual spaces and be adept and versatile.

TV wall brackets from BracketsRus are made from ultra durable material to ensure they not only show off your sleek new toy but that they keep it safe too. Our TV wall brackets come with a 15-year guarantee for this reason.

We also aim to make TV wall mounts more accessible. Rarely do people consider TV wall mounts when buying a plasma TV and become overwhelmed by the range of TV wall mounts on offer. Brackets R Us has built a handy online tool called the TV wall mounts finder; all you need do is enter in the size of your plasma screen and it will present back a list of suitable TV wall mounts. You just then need to choose which will offer you the best viewing experience for the space that you have.

If you’re at all confused by what the different kinds of TV brackets wall mounts and accessories are best used for then our friendly staff are always happy to chat. They’re geeks when it comes to TV brackets wall mounts and the like and they love nothing more than to indulge their passion.

So if you’re looking for good quality LCD TV brackets at a price unbeatable anywhere else, and you want to buy your LCD TV brackets from a company that lives and breathes LCD TV brackets, then please visit Brackets R Us because we can kit you out at a bargain price in no time.

There are also extra bargains to be had across certain TV wall mount lines, some TV wall mount lines even have as much as 70% off, so don’t delay, buy a bargain TV wall mount from Brackets R Us today.

This post is a sponsored blog post

Installing Pre homebrew apps: now even easier

Installing Pre homebrew: now even easier

While Palm is busily engaged in a game of domination with Apple to see which one can keep iTunes sync working or broken the longest, the Pre homebrew community hasn’t been sitting idle, introducing two new and painless ways to get homemade software up in your handset. The first is a desktop app called WebOS Quick Install that works on Mac, PC, and Linux, allowing installation with just a drag, a drop, and a click. The other is called fileCoaster, enabling users to download and install IPKs right on the phone itself, plus other files too. Two great apps for fans of unofficial softwares and good tidings for a warm future of basement innovation — only a month after the first custom apps came to light.

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Installing Pre homebrew apps: now even easier originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 10:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sanyo’s new eneloop bike gets carbon fiber frame, traction control brain

Sanyo's new eneloop bike gets carbon fiber frame, traction control brain

Carbon fiber, with its light weight and high strength, is the material upon which the modern motorsports world is built. Traction control, which decreases difficulty, threatens to destroy it. However, in the world of the urban commute, traction control is a great thing and carbon is generally unheard of. Not for Sanyo, which will soon introduce the CY-SPK227 eneloop bike with a frame made of the stuff, featuring two wheel drive and traction control. The rear wheel is powered by the chain, the front by an electric motor, and should the rider pedal more enthusiastically than slippery conditions allow the bike will compensate by adding more juice to the front. Total weight is about 43lbs, many times that of the composite wonders Lance straddled in France, but about 7lbs lighter than the company’s last entrant. It has regenerative braking, an LED headlight, magnesium suspension, a ¥627,900 price tag (about $6,600), and it releases in Japan in October — you know, right about when the skies start to threaten snow. A good test for that traction control, then.

[Via Fareastgizmos.com]

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Sanyo’s new eneloop bike gets carbon fiber frame, traction control brain originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 09:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson’s XPERIA X2 demoed on video

You know what frustrates us? Someone with their hands on a totally sweet piece of gadgetry who clearly doesn’t know what to do with it. Such is the case in the video below, which seems to depict a gentlemen fondling Sony Ericsson’s next XPERIA installment, the X2. While there’s not much to see of the device itself, the phone is apparently running a fairly recent version of Windows Mobile 6.5, and the company has clearly taken its skinning team to parts of the OS, as the user in the video manages to stumble past some pretty magnificent looking UI trickery. It doesn’t seem as dressed up as the X1’s Panel interface does, though this likely isn’t the final product. Truck on after the break to see the X2 in action, and try to quell your anger as the phone is repeatedly put to sleep during the demo.

[Thanks, David]

Continue reading Sony Ericsson’s XPERIA X2 demoed on video

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Sony Ericsson’s XPERIA X2 demoed on video originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 09:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: life-altering 3D projection gets splashed on German building

It’s not often that we take time to highlight the creativity and innovation involved in an artistic projection, but this one excited a few too many nerve endings to pass up. The latest in a long line of fantastical wall splashings comes to us courtesy of Urbanscreen, who has designed a downright mesmerizing 3D projection to “dissolve and break through the strict architecture of O.M. Ungers’ Galerie der Gegenwart. The project is entitled “How it would be, if a house was dreaming,” and it’s without a doubt one of the most amazing spectacles you’ll see in the next six to ten minutes. Hop on past the break to have your skepticism put to rest, your world view changed forever and your hope in humanity temporarily restored.

[Via freshome, thanks Hale]

Continue reading Video: life-altering 3D projection gets splashed on German building

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Video: life-altering 3D projection gets splashed on German building originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 09:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Foxconn Worker Had 16 iPhone Prototypes, Girlfriend Given MacBook

The NYT has more on the death of Sun Danyong, the Foxconn worker who apparently committed suicide after an iPhone prototype went missing. As compensation, his family has been paid about $44,000, and his girlfriend received an Apple laptop.

Sun apparently was given not just one, but 16 prototype iPhones on July 9 or 10 to deliver to R&D, and he reported one missing three days later. He committed suicide early in the morning on July 16, after allegedly suffering through brutal interrogations.

Foxconn’s China general manager James Lee told the NYT that Sun had a history of disappearing products: “Several times he had some products missing, then he got them back,” and that they “don’t know who took the product, but it was at his stop.”

The NYT closes with an episode that again shows the kind of people Sun had to deal with: Not long after Sun’s father finished telling journalists Foxconn treated the family well, a security guard with two men in Foxconn shirts appeared and threatened to beat up a journalist’s translator if they kept asking the family questions. Foxconn swears the guard wasn’t one of their guys.

I’m sure he had nothing to do with Foxconn, and was just some dude who asked to tag along with the guys in Foxconn shirts. You know, for fun. [NYT]

NEMS takes step forward, MEMS looking nervously over shoulder

Just as it’s starting to seem like MEMS motion sensor technology is gaining more widespread use, we’re now hearing rumblings of activity from the developers of its eventual successor: NEMS (Nano-Electro-Mechanical Systems). To contextualize this discussion (and to give laypeople a shot at understanding), MEMS sensors are the magic behind the Wii MotionPlus as well as a stunning tech demo recently conducted on a Toshiba TG01. The nascent nano version promises even greater sensitivity, and now scientists from TU Delft in the Netherlands claim they have successfully measured the influence of a single electron on an 800nm-long carbon nanowire. Just detecting such an event is a feat in itself, while the ability to measure its effects can be used in a huge range of ways: from transportation and medicine to ultra-sensitive gaming controllers. While accurate comparisons between the Dutch breakthrough and current generation sensors cannot yet be drawn, we can confidently say that this marks an important step toward making our dreams of playing a nanoscale piano a gargantuan reality.

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NEMS takes step forward, MEMS looking nervously over shoulder originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 08:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hilarious Helmet Turbine and Other Green Jokes

helios

Amongst the real gadget gems in Sierra Club Green Home’s “50 green Gadgets” list, there are some hilariously under-thought items. For every solar-powered Nintendo Wii system, there’s a Helios Solar Grill (the monstrosity above), which actually pipes heat from its parabolic sun-gatherer through to the grill on the other side, and manages to look like the kind of Jetson-junk “inventions” I drew as a kid.

Our favorite, though, has to be the Wind-Helmet Power Generator, a device so wilfully and impractically green that it is almost like the practice helmet Luke Skywalker wore in Star Wars, blinding the wearer to the obvious before them. The blurb:

The Wind-Helmet has a windmill in your helmet. Wind flows over the helmet, through the propeller in the rear, and stores energy in a set of rechargeable batteries for later use. Although there are a lot of power chargers out there, the Wind-Helmet allows for you generate power with something you will already be using. [emphasis added]

windhelmet

This is extraordinary. Lets take a look at the bike and consider what else “you will already be using”. Spinning wheels, perhaps? Wheels which have been used for decades to power the bike’s lights, or even trickle-charge iPods? Wheels which can generate power either with a dynamo or an almost drag-free rare-earth magnet setup?

But, you know, a giant, Tron-style helmet with a bunch of fans and turbines inside, hooked up to a battery pack via a cable is much more efficient, don’t you think? We have a couple of suggestions ourselves. What about a pump somehow operated by the turning wheels which would squeeze air into a pressure tank. It would then squirt out into a turbine and the energy produced then stored in batteries.

Or what about giant loops of cable buried beneath the road, and bikes loaded with magnets. Bike lanes could be painted in swooping zig-zags to make riders cross and double-cross the subterranean wires and power whole cities. Or perhaps that is a little impractical?

We kid, but there are a bunch of handy little widgets in the gallery, too. Did we mention the solar-powered Wii? Amazing.

50 Green Gadgets You Can Use To Help Save The Planet [Sierra Club. Thanks, Emma!]


Video: RunCore’s 1.8-inch Pro IV SSD line priced and tested

RunCore just got finished introducing its 2.5-inch Pro IV SSD family back in May, and already it’s looking to expand its reach with a new line of solid state drives in the 1.8-inch form factor. These ultra-small devices were taken for a spin by the fine folks over at TweakTown, and while the real world difference compared to an HDD was certainly evident in the side-by-side comparison (shown after the break), it’s the benchmarks that really had us smiling. In testing, the 128GB model managed to notch a 224MBps read and 136MBps write rate, and while both figures are more than respectable, the lofty MSRPs have us thinking twice about just how badly we flash in our lives. If all goes well, the crew will hit shops next month for $179.99 (32GB), $289.99 (64GB), $499.99 (128GB) and $899.99 (256GB), and if our wildest dreams come true, they’ll be slipped into unreasonably expensive portable media players shortly after.

Read – RunCore press release
Read – Video unveiling and benchmarks

Continue reading Video: RunCore’s 1.8-inch Pro IV SSD line priced and tested

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Video: RunCore’s 1.8-inch Pro IV SSD line priced and tested originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 08:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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