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  2. AeroPress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AeroPress

    The AeroPress is a manual coffeemaker invented by Alan Adler, founder of AeroPress, Inc. It consists of a cylindrical chamber, and a plunger with an airtight silicone seal, similar to a syringe . Ground coffee beans and water are steeped inside, then forced through a filter at the bottom of the chamber by pressing the plunger down through the ...

  3. Alan Adler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Adler

    Alan Adler is an American inventor. His inventions include aerodynamic toys under the Aerobie brand, such as footballs with fins, flying rings and discs, as well as a manual coffee brewing device, the AeroPress .

  4. Metasonix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metasonix

    Founded by Eric Barbour in 1998, it specializes in vacuum tube equipment. [ 1 ] Eli Crews, writing in Electronic Musician in 2008, commented that "Eric Barbour of Metasonix has a colorful approach to design, employing an all-tube audio path in his quest for unusual and sonically extreme products."

  5. Triumph-Adler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph-Adler

    TA Triumph-Adler GmbH (formerly TA Triumph-Adler AG) is a German office equipment manufacturer based in Nuremberg and founded in 1896. The company currently manufactures computer printers and other document management systems .

  6. Samuel Barbour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Barbour

    In 1899, Barbour moved to the Perth area of Western Australia. He settled in Leederville. He took over his brother’s business as a cycle and sewing machine agent. [16] In 1902, The West Australian mentioned Barbour as a cycle agent in the election notices for the Municipality of Leederville. [17] Barbour took up the business of X-ray work for a

  7. People are literally freezing themselves to lose weight

    www.aol.com/article/2015/07/29/people-are...

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  8. Adler (cars and motorcycle) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adler_(cars_and_motorcycle)

    The Adler factory produced bicycles (from 1880), typewriters, sewing machines motorcycles, aircraft and calculators in addition to cars. Before World War I, the company used De Dion two- and four-cylinder engines in cars that ranged from 1032 cc to 9081 cc; beginning in 1902 (the year Edmund Rumpler became technical director), [1] they used their own engines as well.

  9. Air cycle machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_cycle_machine

    An air cycle machine (ACM) is the refrigeration unit of the environmental control system (ECS) used in pressurized gas turbine-powered aircraft. Normally an aircraft has two or three of these ACM. Normally an aircraft has two or three of these ACM.