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  2. 16 Home Repairs You Should Never, Ever Ignore - AOL

    www.aol.com/16-home-repairs-never-ever-210000085...

    Check exhaust vents, ducts, and garage doors (and anything else that provides access to your house) and look for signs of chewing, poop, or nesting. ... For more smart household tips, please sign ...

  3. 15 Smart Ideas for Making Your Garage a Powerhouse - AOL

    www.aol.com/15-smart-ideas-making-garage...

    These 15 garage renovation ideas include designer tips that transform the space into a dining room, lounge, or office space, helping to boost your home's value.

  4. Home Assistant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Assistant

    Home Assistant acts as a central smart home controller hub by combining different devices and services in a single place and integrating them as entities. The provided rule-based system for automation allows creating custom routines based on a trigger event, conditions and actions, including scripts.

  5. Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heating,_ventilation,_and...

    It can be via operable windows, louvers, or trickle vents when spaces are small and the architecture permits. ASHRAE defined Natural ventilation as the flow of air through open windows, doors, grilles, and other planned building envelope penetrations, and as being driven by natural and/or artificially produced pressure differentials. [1]

  6. Trickle vent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trickle_vent

    A trickle vent is a very small [quantify] opening in a window or other building envelope component to allow small amounts of ventilation in spaces intended to be naturally ventilated when major elements of the design—windows, doors, etc.—are otherwise closed.

  7. Garage door opener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garage_door_opener

    The electric overhead garage door opener was invented by C.G. Johnson in 1926 in Hartford City, Indiana. [1] Electric Garage Door openers did not become popular until Era Meter Company of Chicago offered one after World War II where the overhead garage door could be opened via a key pad located on a post at the end of the driveway or a switch inside the garage.

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