Word: volts
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...more than a dozen individuals who spent months and tens of thousands of dollars assembling nearly a ton of explosives. This time, police speculate that only six plotters, including the suicide bombers, may have been involved. Their equipment? A few sticks of TNT, some sacks of ball-bearings, nine-volt batteries, and three backpacks. In 2002 the nearly immediate discovery of key forensic evidence?the chassis number of the car used in the main bombing?started detectives on a trail that would lead them to sweep up all but a few of the plotters. This time, recognizable photographs...
...that the type of explosives and other materials used point to their involvement. Even Ali Imron, now serving a life sentence in a Jakarta jail for his part in the first Bali attacks, shares the view that Azahari has struck again. The use of TNT sticks and nine-volt batteries, Imron told a local paper last week, was classic Azahari...
POWER POD Made by Earhugger in Utah, it charges any phone with the power source most convenient: a computer USB port, a car cigarette lighter, a 9-volt battery or a wall plug. --By Jeninne Lee--St. John
...with headphones is illegal, so Griffin has designed a smart solution. Just slip the SmartDeck adapter ($29.95) into any cassette player and operate your iPod via the stereo controls. If your battery becomes drained after days of driving, plug your iPod into TuneJuice ($19.99), which converts an ordinary 9-volt battery into poddable energy, to get eight extra hours of playtime. Your TV, DVD and stereo all come with remotes, so why not your iPod? Picture biking to work with the controls on your handlebars, or docking your iPod at your computer and selecting songs from the other side...
...with headphones is illegal, so Griffin has designed a smart solution. Just slip the SmartDeck adapter ($29.95) into any cassette player and operate your iPod via the stereo controls. If your battery becomes drained after days of driving, plug your iPod into TuneJuice ($19.99), which converts an ordinary 9-volt battery into poddable energy, to get eight extra hours of playtime. Your TV, DVD and stereo all come with remotes, so why not your iPod? Picture biking to work with the controls on your handlebars, or docking your iPod at your computer and selecting songs from the other side...