Pressure sensitive (self-seal) adhesive closure is reliable and tamper-evident. Anti-stat release liner peels off quickly. Easy to load contents and seal package when the packing process needs to be fast and efficient.
Exterior Film
Multi-layer (co-extruded) polyethylene film. Durable, moisture resistant with exceptional puncture resistance and tear strength. Clean white, aesthetic appearance.
Construction
Sideweld heat seals and bottom fold construction offers superior bursting strength. Your contents will remain secure from the point of origin to its destination.
Interior Insulation
Foil-lined foam insulation keeps your temperature sensitive product at its required state and perishable items fresh while providing effective cushioning for more fragile products during transit.
Product Description
Cooljacket thermal mailers are the ideal way to protect your perishable items during transit. These light-weight insulated mailers are made from a durable, moisture resistant, multi-layer blend of co-extruded polyethylene film. The exterior film is laminated to a unique insulating lining that not only keeps your perishable items fresh, but also protects from damage. The bright white exterior film creates the professional image you are looking for and our pressure sensitive self-seal adhesive closure system is reliable, tamper-evident and easy to use. This is the perfect mailer for laboratory specimens, pharmaceuticals, perishable food items and most other temperature sensitive products.
Custom Solutions
Cooljackets can be sized to meet your specific requirements. Make your Cooljacket even 'cooler' with custom printing! Our six color printing capabilities enables us to print even the most complex designs.
Benefits
• Superior insulated properties combined with gel packs keep perishable product at the required temperature during transit. • Compared to insulated totes and foam coolers, you will save on freight costs, warehouse storage space and pallet space. • Cushioned insulation helps protect product from damage.
How to Properly Clean All Your Gadgets Without Ruining Them
No matter how clean a house you keep, your computers and gadgets are bound to get a little dirty here and there. Here's what you need to clean them, and how to do it without hurting them.
Your gadgets aren't as resilient as they might seem, and just spraying Windex on everything and rubbing it down with a paper towel can cause all sorts of damage to a device. However, they are remarkably easy to clean as long as you do it right—and you can do most of it with just a few simple household items (or at the very least, a trip to CVS). Here's how to do it.
Clean Your Monitor With White Vinegar
LCD screens are pretty delicate, and you don't want to press hard on them, because that can burn out the pixels. Instead, turn your monitor off (so you can better see the dirty spots), and grab a dry microfiber cloth. Many monitors and other gadgets come with one. From there, just gently wipe the screen. If you have a more hearty build-up of spots or gunk, resist the urge to press hard and wet the cloth with a 50-50 mix of water and white vinegar. You can use a special monitor cleaner if you desire, but the vinegar/water mix should work just fine. If you can, though, use distilled water instead of tap water, as tap water is likely to leave white spots on your screen from salt or other deposits.
Remember, as you're doing this, that you want to use a soft cloth, preferably microfiber. Do not use anything paper-based, like paper towel, Kleenex, or toilet paper, since it can scratch up your monitor. Also remember never to spray any liquid on the monitor itself—always spray it on your cloth first. Photo by Jay Reed.
Clean Your Keyboard with Compressed Air and Rubbing Alcohol
We've mentioned this before, but our friends over at the How-To Geek have a great rundown on how to deep clean your keyboard. If your keyboard is only mildly dirty, you should be able to get by with two things: blowing some compressed air in between the keys (to blow out dust) and cleaning dirty keys with a swab of rubbing alcohol to remove oil, grime, and germs. Alternatively, we've become very big fans of the Mr. Clean Magic eraser, and it'll do wonders for a grimy keyboard, especially if it's noticeably oily. If your keyboard's rather disgusting, though, you might have to pop out the keys and really dig in with a toothbrush. Check out their full guide for more info on how to do that.
Also, don't forget to turn your keyboard off (if it's wireless) or unplug it (if it's wired) before you start cleaning. If you're just giving it a quick wipe-down, though, and don't want to get behind your tower, you can use an app like previously mentionedToddlerTrap (Windows) previously mentionedKeyboard Cleaner (Mac) to turn it off while you touch it up. Photo by Liszto.
Clean Your Mouse with a Bit of Water or Alcohol
With the exception of old-school mice or the Apple Mighty Mouse, most mice shouldn't need to be opened up to be cleaned. Generally, you can just turn it over and take a cotton swab to the rubber pads, wetting it with water or alcohol if necessary. For the mouse buttons, you should be able to clean it in much the same way you did the keyboard—use some alcohol on a cotton swab to rub away dirt and grime. If you absolutely have to, you can look up a guide to taking apart your mouse, but know that this probably voids your warranty and shouldn't be necessary in most cases. Also, remember to turn off or unplug your mouse before cleaning. Photo by Dave Bleasdale.
Clean Your Laptop Body with a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser
If you have some non-acetone nail polish remover around, it's been known to clean up laptops (especially lightly-colored ones, like MacBooks) quite well, but nothing works quite as well as the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser. Get it wet, wring out as much water as you can, and lightly rub it over your trackpad, keyboard, and laptop body. It should clean them up, remove any grease from your fingers, and give it that new, fresh-from-the-store look. Don't press down too hard, since the Magic Eraser has a tendency to "shed" when rubbed hard, which will just dirty your computer up more. If your computer's grimier than that, clean your keyboard with an alcohol-soaked swap as described above in the keyboard section.
Clean Your Touch Screen Gadgets with Water and Vinegar
Like your monitor, the best cleaner for a touch screen device is a 50/50 mix of distilled water and vinegar. That said, touch screens are a bit more resilient than LCD monitors, due to the fact that they're meant to be touched, so you can press a bit harder if you have a particularly stubborn spot (don't go overboard, though). Just like everything else, use a microfiber cloth and spray the cloth with a small amount of liquid, not the screen, before wiping it down. The last thing you need is to get your phone wet, void your warranty, and break something important (like the charging socket). Also, if your smartphone is filled with dust, dirt, and other disgusting sediment, you may have to open it up and give it a deeper clean, a process that our friends at the How-To Geek have gone through in detail. Photo by Ben J. Gibbs.
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Pomegranates offer more than
just incredible taste—they are nutritional and healing powerhouses. Here are 13
reasons to start eating pomegranates or drinking their juice if you aren’t
already:
1. Anti-aging effects: Pomegranates contain
plentiful amounts of antioxidants. They rate high on the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s ORAC scale (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity)—a measure of how
well free radicals are absorbed. Pomegranate juice measures 2860 on this
scale.
2. Kidney protection: New research published
just days ago in the journal Renal
Failure showed that an extract of pomegranate prevented kidney damage
and protected the kidneys against harmful toxins.
3. Liver
protection and regeneration: More new research published in the
journal Toxicology and Industrial Health showed that
pomegranate juice not only protects the liver, it helps it to regenerate after
it has been damage.
4. Immune-boosting: Pomegranates
and pomegranate juice are packed with immune-boosting vitamin C—an essential and
quickly depleted nutrient at this time of year.
5.
Anti-allergic: Pomegranates are high in substances called polyphenols
which have been shown to reduce the biochemical processes that are linked with
allergies.
6.
Protects against heart disease: New research published in the journal
Atherosclerosis shows that pomegranate improves the
body’s ability to synthesize cholesterol and destroy free radicals in the
vascular system.
7. Prostate-cancer protection:
Research conducted at the University of California, Riverside, and published in
the journal Translational Oncology indicates that pomegranate
juice and pomegranate extracts caused cancer cell death.
8.
Breast-cancer protection: Scientists at the University of California,
Riverside, also studied the effects of pomegranate juice and its nutritional
components: luteolin, ellagic acid, and punicic acid against breast cancer.
They pubished their results in the journal Breast
Cancer Research and Treatment and concluded that pomegranate juice and
its extracts “are potentially a very effective treatment to prevent cancer
progression…”
9. Skin-cancer protection: Consumption
of pomegranate was associated with a decrease in both main types of skin
cancer—basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, according to new
research in the British Journal of Dermatology.
10.
DNA-protection: The antioxidants and/or phytonutrients in pomegranates
also appear to interact with the body’s genetic material for protection.
11.
Blood pressure normalizing: Early research published in the journal Plant Foods
for Human Nutrition found that pomegranate extract may help prevent
blood pressure increases associated with eating high fat
meals.
12. Metabolic syndrome regulating: Research
published in the journal Food and Function shows that pomegranate helps
regulate blood sugar, improves the body’s sensitivity to insulin, decreases
inflammation, and improves numerous other factors involved in metabolic
syndrome—frequently implicated in obesity and often a precursor to diabetes.
Because of these effects, pomegranate may aid weight loss.
13.
Anti-infectious: New research published in the journal Food and
Chemical Toxicology found that an extract of pomegranate increased the
effectiveness of a drug used against gram-negative bacteria. Many gram-negative
bacteria are known for drug resistance.