All of us suffer from the cold. You can say it's bad circulation or whatever 
but we all do suffer. I'm 39 years post injury and absolutely hate the cold. 
However, as I'm writing this, it's snowing outside and we're expecting single 
digits tonight. It's not that I suffer from the cold it's that I HATE the cold. 
Blankets, furnaces, woodburners-yuch! I just wish it were warm year round! We 
have 4-5 months of this cold as well as no sun-that's what I hate, too!
All of this and I'm supposed to be happy about the 'Holiday Season" Bah humbug! 
I was more excited about the 4th of July and the warm weather!! Thanks for 
listening.
Tom

--- On Wed, 12/9/09, John S. <alcibiat...@yahoo.com> wrote:


From: John S. <alcibiat...@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] USB heating blanket
To: "Quadius" <quad...@gmail.com>
Cc: quad-list@eskimo.com
Date: Wednesday, December 9, 2009, 4:05 PM







I haven't seen an electric blanket that didn't warn against being used by 
paralyzed people.
 
john

--- On Tue, 12/8/09, Quadius <quad...@gmail.com> wrote:


From: Quadius <quad...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] USB heating blanket
To: "bob quinn" <r...@sockets.com>
Cc: "Daniel Espinoza" <static...@roadrunner.com>, quad-list@eskimo.com
Date: Tuesday, December 8, 2009, 4:04 PM


I purchased a Sunbeam electric blanket quite sometime ago and used it with an 
X10 appliance module to turn it off.  Unfortunately I wasn't able to turn it 
back on, because you need to physically hit the switch.

I also used it on a low setting of 2.  The only problem I had with it was I 
tended to get a little too warm during the middle of the night and had to shut 
it off.  Then I ended up suffering from being too warm the entire night.  I 
really hate to call for help unless it's absolutely necessary.  If you're going 
to use an electric blanket, I would suggest you make sure that you have someone 
on hand during the first tryout.

Keep in mind, my experience is probably quite a bit different than the average 
person on this list.  I live in Florida and therefore the temperature doesn't 
get nearly as cold as it does for everyone else.
Good luck,
Q


On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 2:47 PM, bob quinn <r...@sockets.com> wrote:


Another thought: With an AC-powered blanket you could use an X-10 controller 
connected to your computer (CM11-A or Firecracker) to power on/off. 


At 07:31 AM 12/8/2009, Daniel Espinoza wrote:




How does just wanting to get some feedback from you guys, at Craig Hospital 
they warned me to not use a heating blanket where I couldn't feel for obvious 
reasons. I was wondering what your thoughts are on using this heating blanket I 
found to be used while on my computer  
http://www.improvementscatalog.com/product/code/361025.do?cm_mmc=Amazon-_-ExecutiveGifts-_-2009-_-361025%20BRN&code-macs=MP9W028&code=MP9W028
 .
I will not be using it to heat my lap as one of the primary ways it says to use 
it, but for the second way to use it, over my shoulders and on the back of my 
neck. It's getting cold lately and was just wondering what your thoughts were 
on it. It's heated via USB from your computer, meaning you would have to be 
close to the computer which I am at night. The reason I am really thinking 
about this is mainly to stop the pain I get from the hardware in my neck when 
it gets cold. The things I like about it mainly is the fact that it heats up 
via a USB with a low setting and a high setting, meaning it isn't plugged into 
the wall but into a USB port which I can enable or disable from a software on 
my computer so I don't have to wake someone up or even have them adjust it as I 
can just disable the port, or ports. The second and the main reason I like it 
is because it's not plugged into the wall, even though I am sure there is a 
fuse on it if the USB hub detects a
 short or failure in the USB device it will tally depending on what operating 
system you are running, which gives you not only a warning but a way to shut it 
off immediately. The third reason I like it is more of a personal preference 
but it is a geek gadget. Let me know what you think, basically I am depending 
on your feedback before I purchase this. Thank you in advance!
 

Danny Espinoza 26/m/California
Occupation before accident:
Network engineer / SR. Network security engineer
What happened:
I broke my c2,c6,c7 in a horrible car accident
Traumatic brain injury from blood going to central cortex from spinal cord
not vent dependendent anymore. :]
My website: 
http://wwwthespinalcordinjurednet
 My social networking sites:
http://www.myspace.com/DannyLNX
http://www.facebook.com/DannyLNX
 

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