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Security is one of the most important issues we face in our day-to-day life. We lock the door to our homes and cars, we remind our children to return straight home from school and watch the evening news for safety issues in our neighborhoods. For millions of individuals intent on keeping their families and homes safe, wireless security systems have been a welcome solution.
While access control is valuable for monitoring who enters a home through conventional entry points while the home is occupied, an alarm system is necessary to thwart invaders attempting when the house is empty.
When selecting an alarm system, be sure to consider all options available. These options range from notification of the local police department to a simple keypad outside the home. There are different levels of security within a home alarm system that can be specialized to the uniqueness of the individual and his or her family’s needs.
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Ranking third among the U.S. states in area, California has a diverse topography and climate. A series of low mountains known as the Coast Ranges extends along the 1,200-mi (1,930-km) coast. The region from Point Arena, N of San Francisco, to the southern part of the state is subject to tremors and sometimes to severe earthquakes caused by tectonic stress along the San Andreas fault. The Coast Ranges receive heavy rainfall in the north, where the giant cathedrallike redwood forests prevail, but the climate of these mountains is considerably drier in S California, and S of the Golden Gate no major rivers reach the ocean. Behind the coastal ranges in central California lies the great Central Valley, a long alluvial valley drained by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. In the southeast lie vast wastelands, notably the Mojave Desert, site of Joshua Tree National Park
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