EarthTronics CF23CW1BT2 23-Watt 4100K Micro Spiral Compact Florescent Light Bulb, Cool White, 12-Pack
From the Manufacturer Your choice of lighting in your home matters. Lighting represents a significant portion of the electrical energy used within your home. This 23-Watts Micro T2 EarthBulb will provide the same amount of light as a 100-Watts incandescent bulb while cutting energy use by up to 75-percent. This means that over the course of the long 12,000 hour lifespan you could save over $92 on electricity costs versus an incandescent bulb and also help the planet by eliminating 1340-pounds of CO2 from being released into the air. This 23-Watts CFL light bulb may be used in table, floor and desk lamps, ceiling fixtures, wall sconces and most general lighting applications. Our electronic ballast provides for instant on, no flicker starting. The medium screw base means that it will fit just about anywhere that you are able to use an incandescent bulb. About EarthTronics, the maker of the EarthBulb: EarthTronics develops products and technologies that address the planet's demand for energy. They believe this demand creates not only challenges, but opportunities. From lighting to alternative energy products to medical equipment.EarthTroincs is not bound to specific products or technologies. They ARE committed to reducing the amount of energy their customers use. It's good for your bottom line and it's good for the planet. That commitment is even reflected in where EarthTronics has chosen to locate their company: in the Michigan Alternative and Renewable Energy Center (MAREC), a world-class research and development facility on the shores of Lake Michigan. At EarthTronics, efficiency meets innovation.
- ASIN
- B004WQPEB8
- Embedding
- CLIP ViT-L/14 · 768d
- Distance metric
- cosine
- Doc fetch
- 2mscache hitGET /v2/namespaces/amazon-products/documents/B004WQPEB8
- Similar query
- 20msnearest_to_id → /query
Doc fetch goes through Layer's Aerospike pull-through cache; cache hit served the row without touching turbopuffer. The similar query asks Layer for nearest neighbors of the stored product vector — queries don't go through the doc cache, so no cache header is set.