Wireless Home Intercom System Makes You Know Who Is At Your Door
"Hey Lin, doorbell's ringing,". The wireless home intercom system can tell you who is at the door. That's not unusual except for the fact that he's standing next to the door while I'm somewhere far away tucked in my back office. He's not sure what they want, and he's unsure how to deal with it.

Could it be a solicitor? An unexpected guest? A bill collector?
Many of us find a ringing doorbell quite intrusive, an invasion of our privacy. Our homes are our castles, and nobody's going to cross our threshold unannounced. Notice the pained expression on your neighbor's face the next time you ring his doorbell. You can e-mail and tweet and text, so why risk it?
One incident from a while back stands out. "Bob" came to pick up our daughter for what would be their first date. He was unsure of our exact address on the darkened block and decided to start ringing doorbells and simultaneously shine his flashlight on doors. After a few minutes there was a commotion, and we came outside to find Bob spread-eagled and being frisked by the local police. Someone had called the cops on him, sure he was up to no good. (He actually wasn't, but that's a whole other story.)
Now our kids are grown and gone, so the bell's certainly not being run by other kids looking for a play date. I doubt if anyone is at the door telling us we've won the lottery. So who does that leave?
AJ was trained from a young age as a Service Dog for the hearing impaired by Dogs for the Deaf, a non-profit organization located in Oregon. After a few years of the easy life, AJ required some maintenance training. Erik, a dog trainer for Dogs for the Deaf reevaluated AJ and after interviewing many local dog trainers, felt that K9CC was the “preferred choice in dog training”!!! AJ’s obedience training needed touching up around distractions, which, has come along great. AJ is confident in his obedience around real world distractions. The alert was the most important issue and had to be changed from a very excited and pushy ‘paw alert’ to something less likely to unbalance the handler.
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Could it be a solicitor? An unexpected guest? A bill collector?
Many of us find a ringing doorbell quite intrusive, an invasion of our privacy. Our homes are our castles, and nobody's going to cross our threshold unannounced. Notice the pained expression on your neighbor's face the next time you ring his doorbell. You can e-mail and tweet and text, so why risk it?
One incident from a while back stands out. "Bob" came to pick up our daughter for what would be their first date. He was unsure of our exact address on the darkened block and decided to start ringing doorbells and simultaneously shine his flashlight on doors. After a few minutes there was a commotion, and we came outside to find Bob spread-eagled and being frisked by the local police. Someone had called the cops on him, sure he was up to no good. (He actually wasn't, but that's a whole other story.)
Now our kids are grown and gone, so the bell's certainly not being run by other kids looking for a play date. I doubt if anyone is at the door telling us we've won the lottery. So who does that leave?
AJ was trained from a young age as a Service Dog for the hearing impaired by Dogs for the Deaf, a non-profit organization located in Oregon. After a few years of the easy life, AJ required some maintenance training. Erik, a dog trainer for Dogs for the Deaf reevaluated AJ and after interviewing many local dog trainers, felt that K9CC was the “preferred choice in dog training”!!! AJ’s obedience training needed touching up around distractions, which, has come along great. AJ is confident in his obedience around real world distractions. The alert was the most important issue and had to be changed from a very excited and pushy ‘paw alert’ to something less likely to unbalance the handler.
Read more
espow - 4. Mär, 02:44