Piece Tool
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Travel Wheelchairs Are A Welcome Aid To The Disabled Traveler
Accessible wheelchair travel is becoming a lot less complicated nowadays as the majority of sectors are now fully geared to disabled or mobile impaired people. Now that there are lightwight travel wheelchairs there are fewer problems for the disabled travel enthusiast.
There are many different sorts of wheelchairs available to people with all sorts of disabilities. For people that want their independence and to be able to travel unaccompanied or that have limited mobility lightweight travel wheelchairs are a must. Walking long corridors, like those from check in to an airplane departure gate can cause a huge amount of stress, even to someone who is only partially mobility impaired. Having a lightweight wheel chair allows for an individual to be able to travel much greater distances without the stress and the other great advantage to a lightweight wheelchair is its ease of storage.
Lightweight travel wheelchairs are superb for travelling in because they typically weigh no more than about 10kgs and can be folded and stored in very small spaces. They are absolutely ideal for fitting in the luggage compartments of cars. They can also be taken out of cars easily and can be assembled by almost anyone very quickly and safely.
Believe it or not these lightweight chairs can take the same weight as a standard wheelchair. A lightweight wheelchair will often be kept in a car of someone who does have partial mobility just in case they need assistance during a journey that might be undertaking.
Most forms of transport are now available to disabled travelers. This is due to two facts. Most forms of public transport have specially adapted seats near entrance and exit doors reserved for the disable and elderly and accessible storage for wheelchairs. The wheelchairs are so light that they may easily be stored. Easy access to public transport means that the chair user is much more able to travel to different places without fear of being stranded.
Ultalightweight chairs have recently seen huge advances in technology, the greatest advance being a reduction in weight. One wheelchair on the market today weighs only 6kgs as a result of the framework being made from an aluminium alloy. The wheelchair is still strong enough to take the weight of a 90kgs person. It still has all the standards such as breaks and foot rests that come with more standard models.
Worldwide there have been improvements for the disabled, be they in cities, towns, hotels, arenas or anywhere else. Almost all areas have improved access facilities for the disabled. Mobile impaired people no longer need to feel like prisoners in their own homes because the technology of travel wheelchairs has changed so much in recent years. Ten years ago no one would have believed that a wheelchair would weigh no more than 10kgs.
RIAA Claims It Succeeded In Getting Piracy Under Control Years Ago (Techdirt)
This one's just bizarre. Via Eric Goldman, we learn of an opinion piece in the
Tennessean newspaper, in which the RIAA argues that its strategy of suing tens
of thousands of file sharers "succeeded" in "bringing piracy under control."
The opinion piece is a response to an earlier story in the paper that claimed
(quite reasonably, I might add) that the sue fans strategy failed, because
"the suits ultimately proved ineffective in ending systematic online piracy."
The RIAA, however, says the goal has never been to end piracy, but to "bring
it under sufficient control" and they claim they succeeded.
The RIAA's argument makes little sense. Here's the basis for their success
claims:
> _ Our legal efforts served as an essential educational tool: Fans know far
more now about copyright laws and the legal consequences of stealing music
than ever before. Before initiating lawsuits in 2003, only 35 percent of
people knew file-sharing on P2P was illegal; afterward, awareness grew to 70
percent.
Where there was virtually no legal digital market before the lawsuits, today
the market exceeds $3 billion annually, and revenue from online platforms will
comprise more than 50 percent of total industry revenues ...
Cuisinart 4-Piece Stainless-Steel Kitchen Tool Set
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