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Back Related Items: Binding: Apparel Brand: Teva Clothing Size: 7.5 M US Color: Brown Department: mens EAN: 0889830499648 Fabric Type: Synthetic and mesh Label: Teva Manufacturer: Teva Publisher: Teva Studio: Teva Features:
Rating: - Everyday ShoeI live on an island in the Western Pacific. I am a teacher and as a teacher I stand most of the day. These sandals are perfect. My first year I tried to get by with my college standby Birks, but I can't teach P.E. in them. Then, I tried Keens. They are a bit heavy for the cost and on this island is mostly older mainlanders who wear them. So, I tried these. I loved the mush sandals from Teva for a long time (if you don't won a pair, go put some in your cart now). These are perfect.I can stand in them all day teaching and then hit the beach when the bell rings. Now, if they would just let me wear swim trunks to school... Rating: - Excellent Whitewater ShoesI've had a pair of these for 3 years. I bought them for whitewater rafting and they are excellent.. they get a bit sandy though.. that's how I forgot them on the beach !! Am now buying a new pair and look forward to many great times wearing this excellent foot protection product from Teva! ! Rating: - Summer Footwear PerfectionThis is exactly the shoe I've been waiting for. Best of the sandal and running shoe worlds, dang close. Toes are shielded but foot breathes fully. Great for in water or out; pebbles fall through pretty easily. Unbelievably light, like half the weight of the Newports, which to me are nowhere near as good a shoe as the Dozer, and cost 50% more. They're just too bulky; these are like feathers, yet spongy. I've had mine for two months and couldn't be happier. I got 'em for 40; I'd pay 100. If they last for two summers it will be pure gravy. They're holding up perfectly so far, after 60 straight 100 degree days and plenty of water. They even give me a fair bit of support, and are wonderfully ... Read More Rating: - Good Sandal for the priceAfter wearing the Teva Dozer while white water rafting and hiking for a weekend, I feel they were very durable, light and comfortable. I ordered them in my size (11) and they fit perfectly. The only downfall is when sand gets in and starts rubbing your foot, it gets extremely uncomfortable very quickly. Just rinse them and that problem is solved. After getting wet, they dried fast. They are a good sandal for the price. Rating: - hiking sandlesshoes were smaller than expected. they did not have my correct size for an exchange. so I never got a chance to wear the shoes. |
Meraki offers wall plug, solar unit, apartment package: Meraki has added two products to its line up. A wall plug ($179) can be screwed into an outlet's center screw hole for theft prevention and stability, perfect for hotels and public venues. The long-awaited solar product is nearly ready, with a 4-December ship date ($749 with no solar panel up to $1,499 with highest-end panel).
Meraki switched battery technology to lithium iron-phosphate during the year-long delay, partly due to an increase in cost and shortage in solar panels. Meraki's also got a new bundle: $5,000 for a set of nodes designed to cover an apartment building.
Over at Ars Technica, I wrote a long recap of the state of municipal Wi-Fi, noting that Meraki seems to be on the winning side of the equation with its start-small approach. A number of municipal wireless projects (not all Wi-Fi) are getting rave reviews. We may be over the hump: applications (purposes as it were) are now driving network building rather than networks seeking reasons to be.
Violet prepares to ship an RFID tag reader, Mir:ror: The new device plugs in via USB to a computer and can read standard RFID tags, as well as new ones offered by the company. Some of Violet's tags look like postage stamps and are adhesive; others, like tiny versions of their Nabaztag/tag bunny. It's weird, but interesting, like all their stuff.
Qualcomm brings in Skyhook's Wi-Fi positioning: Qualcomm becomes the latest GPS giant to add Skyhook Wireless's technology to their platform. The gpsOne system, found in 400 million cell phones, will be enhanced in future versions with an option for Skyhook data to assist and integrate with GPS lookups. Qualcomm's sold so many chipsets due to E911 requirements for location finding.