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Apartment Therapy Re-Nest | Make Your Own All-Natural Carpet Ref. Host® Carpet Cleaning - Better than Wetter (TM) Sleepypod® Hepper | Modern Pet Furniture | Home. 43 Folders Series: Inbox Zero. These are posts from a special 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. You can visit each of the posts by clicking the title. And don’t miss the “Related Articles” for our all-time popular posts on productively dealing with email. Looking for the Inbox Zero video? The full 1-hour video for Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation at Google is available for free down here — or check out this post about the video and slideshow. Posts in the Inbox Zero series 43F Series: Inbox Zero [Introduction] - “Clearly, the problem of email overload is taking a toll on all our time, productivity, and sanity, mainly because most of us lack a cohesive system for processing our messages and converting them into appropriate actions as quickly as possible.”Inbox Zero: Articles of faith - “When I first suggested the email DMZ and said there was a way to get your inbox to zero in 20 minutes, I wasn’t lying.

Related articles. SNOW WAY TO CLEAN A RUG. Wool. Raw wool. For those of us who live in colder climates—especially when our shelters do not have completely regulated temperature and humidity control—unprocessed wool is just the ticket for warm clothing, rugs, and blankets. Raw wool—with its relatively high oil content—gives extra-good protection from cold, wind, and moisture. Its one real drawback is that it does seem to collect and hold more than its share of grime. You'll want to remove all that from time to time even if you're not deeply offended by dirt. A clean fabric, you know, lasts longer than one that's subjected to abrasion by ground-in particles of soil.

Cleaning wool presents problems, however, especially if the article is the size of a blanket or floor covering. It's lucky, therefore, that the same cold weather which generates the need for woolen textiles often provides an effective means of cleaning them. Cleaning is best done at a temperature of 25° F or colder, and on shaded new or powdered snow.