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	<title>Comments on: 8&#039;x10&#039; Premium Recycled Felt Jute Rug Pad for Hard Floors</title>
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	<link>http://8x10-arearugs.com/8x10-premium-recycled-felt-jute-rug-pad-for-hard-floors/</link>
	<description>Discount 8x10 area rugs with large, clear pictures, detailed descriptions, feature lists, ratings, and honest customer reviews.</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 Feb 2012 09:07:07 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>By: rockrawchu</title>
		<link>http://8x10-arearugs.com/8x10-premium-recycled-felt-jute-rug-pad-for-hard-floors/comment-page-1/#comment-399</link>
		<dc:creator>rockrawchu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Sep 2011 09:24:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>When apartment-hunting, how can you tell if a place has good inter-unit sound insulation? I&#039;m going to be looking for a studio or 1-bedroom to live alone in soon (in Atlanta, if it matters). One of the more important qualities to me is that there be strong sound insulation between different units, whether in a complex or a converted house or whatever. Street noise honestly doesn&#039;t bother me that much; it&#039;s the feeling of lack of privacy that comes from being able to hear your neighbors (and vice versa) that I hate. So far I&#039;ve lived with roommates in old apartments that had great sound insulation between units, and varying degrees of insulation between rooms in the same unit. I know the answer is sort of &quot;listen when you&#039;re in there&quot;, but I&#039;m not sure this really suffices. There&#039;s no real way to know when you&#039;re viewing a place if the neighbors are even home, what they&#039;re doing, etc. Basically what I could use help with is, are there any, uh, &quot;comorbid&quot; characteristics I can look for...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When apartment-hunting, how can you tell if a place has good inter-unit sound insulation? I'm going to be looking for a studio or 1-bedroom to live alone in soon (in Atlanta, if it matters). One of the more important qualities to me is that there be strong sound insulation between different units, whether in a complex or a converted house or whatever. Street noise honestly doesn't bother me that much; it's the feeling of lack of privacy that comes from being able to hear your neighbors (and vice versa) that I hate. So far I've lived with roommates in old apartments that had great sound insulation between units, and varying degrees of insulation between rooms in the same unit. I know the answer is sort of &quot;listen when you're in there&quot;, but I'm not sure this really suffices. There's no real way to know when you're viewing a place if the neighbors are even home, what they're doing, etc. Basically what I could use help with is, are there any, uh, &quot;comorbid&quot; characteristics I can look for...</p>
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