NECA Convention 2009 Seattle: The Blog

NECA Convention Site

How Do I Get My CEUs?

Almost every pre-convention workshop, management seminar and technical workshop at NECA 2011 San Diego offered Continuing Education Units for participants who got their badges scanned when they entered and exited the sessions. Retrieve the records of CEUs earned at NECA 2011 San Diego can be done two ways:

1. ON-SITE: The CEU Counter at the NECA Registration Desk can print out a copy of your CEUs earned from Friday, Oct. 20-Monday, Oct. 24. CEUs earned today, Tuesday, Oct. 25 WILL NOT be included on this record.

2. ONLINE: NECA will email all NECA 2011 San Diego convention registerees on Thursday, Oct. 27 with a link to the website where they can log in to retrieve their CEU record for the event. If you don’t receive the email, go to www2.cmrreg.com/neca11ceu. You will be prompted to enter your name, NECA username ID, or badge number (so don’t throw those badges out when you leave San Diego, just in case you forget your name!) The website will not be live until Thursday, Oct. 27, so don’t panic if you can’t retrieve the information yet.

Please note, not all courses at NECA 2011 San Diego may meet your state’s requirements for continuing education credit. Check with your state authorities to confirm eligibility.

Bright and Shiny LEDs!

Guest Post by Ginger Wilson

First, I’d just like to say that I’m not an electrician, nor do I play one on TV. But as a graphic designer, I’m attracted to all things bright and shiny. And when I heard that Philips Color Kinetics was presenting a hands-on pre-convention workshop on LEDs, I had to take a look.

LED Pre-con 1
Their room was set up with four boards with working samples of LED installations. After the Philips staff talked about the products, we got to see how things work up close. Eden and Scott, the workshop leaders from Philips, were nice enough to walk me through one of the boards, and I’m happy to say that bright and shiny can also be practical and energy-efficient…and really, really cool.

The first half of the board was set up with white lights. The eW Profile Powercore and Cove Powercore have white LEDs at the temperature you select. The lights come right on with no warmup time when you flip the switch, and there’s no annoying flicker. They can be strung together to light large areas or installed one-by-one to provide task lighting. That’s fun, but a white light is a white light.

LED Pre-con 2
So we moved on to the iW Cove Powercore. With this fixture, you can mix the cool and warm white lights to create the color temperature you want. It’s dimmable, too. Even better, when it’s attached to the iW Scene Controller, you can save different settings and then bring them back by just touching a button. You don’t realize how much of a difference choosing the right white temperature makes until the “shades” are right in front of you.

On the other side of the table were the lights that had attracted me in the first place: the ColorBlast Powercore. Big, bright RGB LEDs that can light interiors and exteriors and when hooked up to the ColorDial Pro, are programmable so you can save several light shows and play them again later by touching a button.

Finally, the ColorGraze Powercore uses the same RGB colors but in 12-inch sections so you can put them together to color wash a wall. They had a couple of sections hooked up to an iPlayer 3, which allows you to create light shows. Eden told me that Philips is working on lighting a bridge using the ColorGraze Powercore and the iPlayer 3. Stringing the lights together and programming the iPlayer, she said that Philips is going to “make the bridge dance.”

Now that you know how much I love the bright and shiny, you can understand how the notion that itty bitty light bulbs can make a bridge look like it’s dancing fills me with joy.

The boards used in the workshop are on display at Philips booth at the NECA Show. Come see the bright and shiny for yourself!

Pre-convention Classes for Code Geeks!

Readers of NECA’s Contractors Code Letter will know about our special National Electrical Code-focused pre-convention workshops, including Sneak Peak at the 2011 Proposed NEC Code Changes, presented by Mike Johnston, NECA Executive Director, Standards and Safety. The half-day seminar on Friday, Sept. 11, will cover both the 2008 NEC and highlight some of the more than 5,000 proposed changes for the 2011 NEC.

Significant Changes to NFPA 70E 2009, also on Friday, Sept. 11, will cover how changes in the de facto electrical safety standard will impact on-site safety practices and project costs. The pre-convention workshop will be lead by Palmer Hickman, NJATC Director of Code and Safety Training and Curriculum Development.

All pre-convention workshops and many NECA 2009 Seattle management seminars can earn Continuing Education credits for attendees. Most pre-convention workshops only cost $125 for each registrant – a great bargain for professionals to need continuing education credits!

If you’re in the Seattle area, pre-convention workshops are a great way to take advantage of NECA’s training without spending too much time out of the office or away from home. If you’ve already made your plans to be at NECA 2009 Seattle, make the most of your time there by registering for a special pre-convention workshop today!

Register today!

NECA NewsCast “Live from Chicago” – Day 1

NECA NewsCast host, Matthew Walton, reports on Day 1 of the NECA 2008 Chicago Convention and Trade show. This first special installment of NECA NewsCast “Live from Chicago” includes close look at many of the pre-convention workshops, including the LED workshop led by Ruud Lighting.


Find Us!

Sign up for email updates

Tags

Categories

Recent Posts

Pages

Archives