Lifx’s bacteria-killing smart bulb works, but here’s the small print
These things take time
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The Lifx Clean is a new smart lightbulb with an intriguing twist. Not only is it a fully functional color-changing lightbulb, the company also claims it is capable of disinfecting surfaces and the air around it. First announced last August, the $69.99 Lifx Clean is now shipping to preorder customers in the US, with wide availability planned this spring.
Lifx has an array of scientific studies as well as its own lab tests to support its claim that the Clean is the “world’s first antibacterial, germicidal smart light.” But can the lightbulb work as well in the average home as it did in the lab?
Lifx s bacteria-killing smart bulb works, but here s the small print msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UpdatedThu, Feb 18, 2021 at 8:10 am ET
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Yes, there used to be a covered bridge between Enfield and Suffield. (Enfield Historical Society)
ENFIELD, CT Hard to picture this nowadays, but for nearly a century, there was a covered bridge spanning the Connecticut River from Enfield to Suffield, at the bottom of Bridge Lane (hence its name). This postcard from the Enfield Historical Society shows the wooden structure sometime in the 1800s; the story of the bridge and its spectacular demise is amazing.
Pages 14 and 15 of a great book of photographs from the 1880s through 1950s, entitled Images of America: Enfield Connecticut, details the construction of the original uncovered bridge in 1808, its collapse in 1821, and completion of the replacement span, depicted above, in 1832.
UpdatedThu, Dec 24, 2020 at 6:12 am ET
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The holiday wonderland of Pearl Street in 1955. (Ed Malley, courtesy of Jim Malley)
ENFIELD, CT Today s installment of this weekly Enfield history series, courtesy of a fabulous book of renowned local photographer Ed Malley s pictures compiled by his son Jim entitled
Enfield: 1950-1980, features a look at how Enfield used to be during the holiday season. This image from 1955 depicts Pearl Street, looking southbound.
At that time, downtown Thompsonville merchants used to string holiday lights across the roadway. Committee members included Al LaRussa of LaRussa Appliance Store, Vincent Sferrazza of Vincent s Apparel, Myron Marek of Marek Jewelers, and Robert Gray of Faber s World of Carpets