Douglas County’s Commissioner of Dirt, Mike Winters, has our weekly local lawn and garden program. Click here to download for later listening: MWLGS 1 11 23
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Wednesday, August 9, 2023
MIKE WINTERS LAWN AND GARDEN SHOW 1.11.23 - kqennewsradio.com
Douglas County’s Commissioner of Dirt, Mike Winters, has our weekly local lawn and garden program. Click here to download for later listening: MWLGS 1 11 23
Online Notice for K230CG – Public Files – EEO – © 2021 Brooke Communications
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Tuesday, August 8, 2023
Tips for Choosing Decorative Outdoor Lighting
Monday, August 7, 2023
NAD Electronics Announces CS1 Endpoint Network Streamer - Digital Journal

NAD CS1 adds network streaming to any music system
Pickering, Ontario, Canada - January 24, 2023 - NAD Electronics, the highly regarded manufacturer of high-performance audio-video components, today announced the NAD CS1 Endpoint Network Streamer, a compact, minimalist design that makes it easy to add streaming capability to any music system. The CS1 will be available in retail shops and NADElectronics.com with a retail target price of US$349 / £299 / €399 / CDN$499 in March 2023.
Employing audiophile-grade components, the NAD CS1 can play high-resolution audio up to 24-bit/192kHz. It features Bluetooth, Ethernet, dual-band Wi-Fi and supports the most popular streaming and casting protocols, including Apple AirPlay 2, GoogleCast, Spotify Connect, Tidal Connect and Roon. Certification for network sharing via DNLA/UPnP protocols expected to be complete with retail available of CS1 in March 2023. That means listeners don’t have to install a dedicated app to use the CS1; they can control playback with the music apps they use every day.
OPTIONS UPON OPTIONS
There are many ways to play music through the NAD CS1 Endpoint Network Streamer. Listeners can use Bluetooth to pair the CS1 with a smartphone, tablet, or computer.
The CS1 offers many options for playing music over a home network. Listeners can use AirPlay 2 to stream CD-resolution audio from any app on an iPhone, iPad, or Mac, or from an iTunes library on a Windows PC. With GoogleCast, users can cue up music in any Cast-enabled app on a mobile device or personal computer, then transfer playback to the CS1.

NAD CS1 front
Spotify Connect and Tidal Connect users can cue up music in the apps for those services, then easily transfer playback to the CS1. Roon subscribers can play music from their digital libraries and from streaming services with resolutions up to 24-bit/192kHz.
AUDIOPHILE-GRADE SOUND
The NAD CS1 Endpoint Network Streamer delivers the audio performance for which NAD is renowned. It features an advanced differential digital section based on Texas Instruments’ PCM5141 DAC, a design known for its extremely low noise, excellent dynamic performance, and immunity to clock jitter. It also has full MQA rendering and decoding capability for playing master quality music from Tidal.
FLEXIBLE CONNECTIVITY
Users can connect the CS1 to their home network via Wi-Fi or hardwire its LAN Ethernet port to their network router. The CS1 has a pair of RCA analogue outputs for connection to a stereo receiver, integrated amp, preamplifier, or a pair of powered speakers. The CS1 also has optical and coaxial outputs for sending digital audio at up to 24-bit/192kHz resolution to powered loudspeakers with digital inputs, or to a home theatre receiver or external DAC.
“Streaming has profoundly altered the way people discover and experience music,” said Cas Oostvogel, Product Manager of NAD Electronics. “The CS1 makes it easy to add streaming to a legacy stereo or home-theatre setup. Or someone could configure a low-footprint system for a den or home office by combining the CS1 with a pair of powered speakers. Streaming doesn’t get simpler than this.”

NAD CS1 from rear
Key Features of the NAD CS1 Endpoint Network Streamer:
• Compact, minimalist design• Built-in Bluetooth 5.0
• Dual-band Wi-Fi plus LAN Ethernet port
• Support for network sharing via DLNA/UPnp* protocols
• Stereo analogue, optical digital, and coaxial digital outputs
• Premium differential DAC design based on Texas Instruments PCM5141 DAC, with support for 24-bit/192kHz high-resolution audio and MQA decoding
• Apple AirPlay 2 support allows CD-resolution streaming from any audio app on an iPhone, iPad, or Mac
• GoogleCast support allows playback at up to 24-bit/96kHz resolution from any Cast-enabled app on a smartphone, tablet, or personal computer
• Spotify Connect and Tidal Connect support lets users cue up music on a smart device, then transfer playback to the CS1
• Roon subscribers can stream audio to the CS1 from their personal libraries and online services supported by Roon in hi-res * Certification in process as of publishing date About NAD Electronics Founded in 1972 and now sold in over 80 countries, NAD Electronics is renowned for its award-winning line of high-quality components for audio, home theatre and custom installation applications. Since the beginning, NAD’s commitment to four core values – innovation, simplicity, performance, and value – have earned it a cult-like following that catapulted it to becoming a household name amongst audiophiles and music lovers alike. To this day, the brand continues to design and manufacture some of the most acclaimed and affordable hi-fi components that include modern features and technologies meant to appeal to a new generation of audiophiles. Media Contact
Company Name: NAD Electronics
Contact Person: June Ip
Email: Send Email
City: Pickering
State: ON
Country: Canada
Website: www.nadelectronics.com
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Sunday, August 6, 2023
WaterRower Review: The Home-Gym Rowing Machine You Need ... - The Wall Street Journal
By .css-1m43ll3font-size:1rem;line-height:1.625rem;letter-spacing:normal;font-weight:normal;font-family:"Escrow Text",serif;font-style:italic;-webkit-text-decoration:none;text-decoration:none;-webkit-transition:all 0.2 ease-in-out;transition:all 0.2 ease-in-out;-webkit-font-smoothing:antialiased;-moz-osx-font-smoothing:antialiased;white-space:normal;margin:10px 0px;.css-1m43ll3:hover-webkit-text-decoration:underline;text-decoration:underline;color:#366;Logan Hill
When the pandemic hit, and my tiny Manhattan apartment became my home office and gym and therapist’s office and everything else, I watched as my friends started buying giant, high-tech, internet-enabled Pelotons. .css-x3124afont-size:0.875rem;line-height:1.125rem;letter-spacing:0.03em;font-weight:700;font-family:"Retina Wide",sans-serif;text-transform:none;font-style:normal;-webkit-text-decoration:underline;text-decoration:underline;-webkit-font-smoothing:antialiased;-moz-osx-font-smoothing:antialiased;white-space:normal;color:#000;@media (max-width: 640px).css-x3124afont-size:0.8125rem;Pelotons. And I won’t lie: I was tempted. I love cycling around the city. I was feeling like I’d better figure out a way to do cardio workouts at home. But I couldn’t imagine parking some sci-fi “Tron” cycle in the middle of my retro living room, amid my old books and vintage furniture. I needed a cardio machine that took up less floor space, and looked less like it had been teleported from the year 2050, to remind me that if I want to live to see that year, I’d better start working out more.
So I read every home-exercise guide I could find, then settled on cheap resistance bands, which made me feel clumsy, and mostly stretched my patience. Eventually, I spotted a WaterRower online and immediately fell in love with the low-tech, wooden rowing machine—partly because, in a world of futuristic exercise equipment promising to disrupt exercise as we know it, it is reassuringly old school. I love that it’s basically the exact same device that was invented by a Yale engineer in 1988, and manufactured in Rhode Island from locally sourced wood. More importantly, when I last checked, it’s the only piece of stationary exercise equipment that looks so good in a living room you can buy it from the MoMA store.
$1,160 at Amazon
It stores upright, so you need only 22 inches by 20 inches for that. And when upright, the WaterRower cuts a lean, sculptural figure at nearly 7 feet tall: long, simple planks of blonde ash wood, extending up from the bulbous, clear water tank at its base. It looks less like exercise equipment and more like an eccentric prop for a vintage Paul Thomas Anderson movie (though its most famous on-screen appearance was in “House of Cards,” as the Wall Street Journal newsroom reported). When I strap in for a workout, it looks like it belongs on my hardwood floors. Not like I’ve been invaded by Equinox.
Another benefit: It’s quiet. As someone who spends his days writing screenplays and watching movies, I often find my biggest problem with actually going to a gym—and with most in-person human activity, honestly—is that I have to stop watching my beautiful, big TV. But unlike so many workouts that demand your full attention, or exercise bikes and air-resistance rowing machines that make tons of noise, the WaterRower is so unobtrusive that I can hear the TV clearly over the whooshing water as I work up a sweat. I never rowed before—I’ve vaguely regarded rowing as the hobby of bad guys in teen movies—but it’s now been a part of my nearly daily routine for two years. And my wife, who doesn’t have to adjust a thing even though she’s a few inches shorter, has joined my crew. (My editor says this is where I have to remind you that you should consult your doctor before starting a new fitness routine so you don’t pull a muscle or even, as The Wall Street Journal newsroom reported, pull a Mr. Big.)
I purchased the basic Natural model in ash for $1,199, which felt pricey upfront but, over the two years, has been a bargain compared to a big-city gym membership. People have asked me if the water gets murky; mine has stayed crystal clear, though the company does offer a free “purification tablet” in case.
If you love internet-connected classes, WaterRower’s in-house and third-party apps might be for you. But the standard model’s simple, included performance monitor is enough for me. I bought the optional Bluetooth adapter ($59.95), but I rarely use it—and I don’t like the idea of paying a subscription fee to watch some trainer yell at me on an LED screen. Instead, I track my workouts and monitor my heart rate on my Apple watch. And, mostly, I just use this wooden machine to enjoy a straightforward full-body workout that taxes 80-plus percent of my muscles, like I’m still in 1988: I fold it down, I row until I’m drenched in sweat, and then I stand it back up. And I feel better.
Updated Jan 3, 2023
By .css-lr59tdfont-size:1rem;line-height:1.625rem;letter-spacing:normal;font-weight:normal;font-family:"Escrow Text",serif;font-style:italic;-webkit-text-decoration:none;text-decoration:none;-webkit-transition:all 0.2 ease-in-out;transition:all 0.2 ease-in-out;-webkit-font-smoothing:antialiased;-moz-osx-font-smoothing:antialiased;white-space:normal;margin:0;.css-lr59td:hover-webkit-text-decoration:none;text-decoration:none;color:#747474;Nick Guy
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