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NVC Lighting recently announced a series of management changes. The company’s high ranking managers including founder and Chairman Wu Changjiang, Vice Presidents Wu Changyong, Mu Yu, Pei Jinhua, Yang Wenbiao and others have all resigned from company subsidiary boards.
With Germany taking home the World Cup 2014 trophy this year, Simon Greenwood, Commercial Director Europe at GE Lighting shares in this blog entrry some lighting techniques adopted for the stadiums.
Targeted primarily toward food service and food preparation applications, the SNL LED Sanitube Food Service Strip is tested to the National Sanitation Foundation (NSF) standards for use in splash zones.
Dialight announced a new low profile LED linear luminaire for use in applications requiring greater clearance levels.
Lexus presented the “STROBE” project – an LED spectacle in which acrobats and stuntmen suspended across Kuala Lumpur’s night skyline were lit up in succession to create the illusion of acrobatic motion at impressive speed.
Electrolube, the global manufacturer at the forefront of electro-chemicals technology, has developed a clear polyester resin for the LED industry that delivers the high performance of a polyurethane resin without the use of hazardous isocyanates.
Osram, in collaboration with the Munich luminaire manufacturer Markgraf Licht, has developed an LED track spotlight that requires no external control unit.
The Vertical Gym is a low-cost, flexible design for a multi-level recreation complex, comprised of a pre- fabricated kit of parts that can be assembled in 3 months.
Belleds Techologies launched a new video today showing how the Q light bulb notifications are easy enough for a cat to enjoy.
Power management company Eaton today announced that more than 4.8 km – totaling nearly three miles – of the io™ light-emitting diode (LED) lights from its Cooper Lighting Division have been installed in Terminal 2 (T2) of the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India.
Looking at the current lighting market, smart lighting has already become a new product that manufacturers such as Philips are rushing to release.
The most common kind of light bulb in the United States—the incandescent—is only about 5 percent efficient. The phosphorescent organic light-emitting diode, on the other hand, makes light out of 100 percent of the electricity that goes into it.