![]() Protected from low pressure water jets in any direction. Protected from tools and small wires greater than 1 millimetre. Protected from tools and wires greater than 2.5 millimetres. Protected from touch by fingers and objects greater than 12 millimetres. Protected from long trem immersion up to a specified pressure. Protected from touch by hands greater than 50 millimetres. Protected from long term immersion up to a specified pressure. Most IP addresses can be mapped to host/domain names (i.e. A computer may have either a permanent (static) IP address, or one that is dynamically assigned/leased to it. Protected from immersion between 15 centimetres and 1 metre in depth. IP (version 4) addresses consist of four numbers in the range 0-255 separated by periods (i.e. Protected from high pressure water jets from any direction. Protected from low pressure water jets from any direction. Protected from water spray from any direction. Protected from water spray less than 60 degrees from vertical. Protected from water spray less than 15 degrees from vertical. The second digit defines the protection of the equipment inside the enclosure against various forms of moisture (drips, sprays, submersion etc). The first digit indicates the level of protection that the enclosure provides against the ingress of solid foreign objects, from tools or fingers that could be hazardous if they came into contact with electrical conductors or moving parts, to airborne dirt and dust that could damage circuitry. Sometimes a number is replaced by X, which indicates that the enclosure is not rated for that specification. The rating consists of the letters IP followed by two digits, the higher the number the better the protection. What do the two digits in an IP Rating mean? Check out Rainford’s Vanguard range of IP Rated cabinets. Read our blog post about how to choose the best IP Rating for your enclosure. intrusion from foreign bodies such as tools, dirt and liquid water. This standard defines levels of sealing effectiveness against “ingress” i.e. IP ratings are defined by the international standard EN 60529 ( British Standard BS EN 60529:1992) The IP rating or IP code classifies the degree of protection provided by an enclosure, for electrical equipment with a rated voltage not exceeding 72.5 kV.
0 Comments
I think that if someone with Celiac’s Disease or a gluten intolerance had a craving for a late night cookie, this isn’t a bad one. Overall though, I liked the gluten free chocolate chip cookie. It would be really useful to add allergy labels to make this more clear to customers. Just looking at the flavors it is hard to tell if some of them have wheat in them or not. Since they have a gluten free chocolate chip cookie, hopefully other cookie recipes can be adapted in the future too.Īnother issue I had was the fact that there were no allergy warnings on the ice cream they had. When there are three vegan options, I would have hoped to see at least an equal amount of allergy friendly options. As someone who has been gluten free since I was eight-years-old, I was a little disappointed with the selection of allergy friendly options. Insomnia Cookies offers three vegan options as well as one gluten free option. The chocolate and mint flavor balance each other out without being overpowering.Ī Note About Allergy-Friendly Options from Abby Godsen Double Chocolate Mint - For anyone who is craving Girl Scout cookies, these taste exactly like thin mints. Like the Chocolate Chunk, it’ll be hard to stop yourself from having a good few of these.ģ. ![]() Peanut Butter Chip - Perfect for any peanut butter lovers, gives the perfect flavor without being too overly sticky or chewy. Before you’re even done with your first bite you’re already craving more.Ģ. Chocolate Chunk - This cookie elicits a really nostalgic feeling, and serves as a perfect fill in for students that may be missing home baked chocolate chip cookies. These are our top three picks from the menu.ġ. I think the late nights really help,” Stump said.Īt the event, Campus Citizen staff had the opportunity to sample some of their cookies. I do think it does a good job of accommodating students because there is a place called Topper’s Pizza that is open until like 3 a.m., and it’s always busy. “Yes, especially because you’ve got lots of people staying up late working on school work, actual work, going out with friends kind of thing, studying etc. Ryan Stump, a senior media arts and sciences major, who attended the grand opening also believes the late hours will be a key draw for IUPUI students. I know a lot of more local bakeries will close pretty early, so I think our late night business model is perfect for students because they’re up late studying, up late on the weekends going out and having a good time, they can come in and enjoy our cookies,” Carroll said. “I think it’s our late night focus, we kind of own the night in that aspect. Thursday through Saturday so that kids can come in on late nights and enjoy the cookies.”Īccording to Carroll, their late-night business model is what sets them apart from other bakeries in the area. “We’re open really really late at night, and I know that a lot of things in the area start closing down 10-11 o’clock, we’re going to be here till 1 a.m. ![]() Our main focus is college students and college campuses, so with IUPUI’s campus I think it’d be fantastic,” Carroll said. “We drive ourselves to putting locations in college campuses, of course we do have some in bigger cities. Store Operations Manager for Insomnia Cookies Ashley Carroll believes that Insomnia Cookies is perfect for a campus like IUPUI. Cameron published the list on CamWorld, and others maintaining similar sites began sending their URLs to him for inclusion on the list. In November of that year, he sent that list to Cameron Barrett. Jesse James Garrett, editor of Infosift, began compiling a list of “other sites like his” as he found them in his travels around the web. ![]() In 1998 there were just a handful of sites of the type that are now identified as weblogs (so named by Jorn Barger in December 1997). ![]() The conflict between access structure and writing space appears under a number of different names in the writings of Rebecca Blood, the weblog community’s foremost apologist and chronicler, who describes it as an antagonism that split the community at its core: those who, like herself, believed that weblogs performed a “valuable filtering function” and aimed to be “dependable sources of links to reliably interesting material” :54 increasingly found themselves opposed to – and outnumbered by – an “influx of short-form diarists” who wouldn’t link but posted “entry after entry of blurts and personal observations,” :149 thus “inverting the primary values of the community.” :154īlood counterpoints her account of a community riven by conflict with an untroubled founding narrative, first offered by her husband Jesse James Garrett, which holds that the weblog community coalesced out of virtually nothing in early 1999: The blogosphere had an immediate historical predecessor, the weblog community, in which the weblog held a rhetorically ambiguous and contested status between a writing space that answered an author’s expressive needs and an access structure through which an editor was meant to recommend and annotate high-quality URLs. ![]() Today’s blogosphere with its wealth of discursive practices is, in Jay Bolter’s phrase, a writing space. Working from the online archival record, this paper aims to reconstruct the emergence at Jorn Barger’s initiative of the weblog community from a predecessor known as the NewsPage Network. ![]()
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |