Friday, October 26, 2007

A pretty good idea

I wonder how they deal with copyright issues ....



Make your own cookbook with TasteBook

Posted Oct 25th 2007 5:00PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: Internet, Web services, Beta


Say you've got a few dozen recipes bookmarked from various websites. Then there's that stack of recipes you inherited from mom. You could print out your online recipes and slap them in a binder along with your index card collection. Or you could use TasteBook to create a professional-looking cookbook.

The site just launched a public beta. You can save recipes from partner sites including Epicurious and add your own. When you're done, you can order a printed copy of a 100-recipe book for $35. If you have fewer than 100 recipes, you still have to pay $35, but you get a credit toward future recipe books. 


Thursday, October 25, 2007

More on home automation

It just seems smart to me to put your home thermostat and other power hungry items onto some sort of automated system:

1-wire thermostat control

posted oct 24th 2007 10:10pm by will o'brien
filed under:
home hacks



for some reason, computer controllable thermostats are pretty freakin' expensive. i found a reference to a 1-wire thermostat in this(mirror) sample senior project on home automation. it turns out that dallas semiconductor put one together a while back as an application for their tini platform. (web-application server on a chip). the write-up has since vanished from their site, but i found it thatnks to archive.org. the thermostat used to run about $50, and a similar model still seems to be produced. the 1-wire interface is pretty simple - maxim's tini board to control it: not so much. just using the 1-wire interface with an inexpensive thermostat and controlling from a pc seems pretty viable to me. just in case, i mirrored the 1-wire interface schematics here.

How To Clean Up

4 Decluttering Techniques



Organized Home has a few great ways to get rid of clutter in your home or at work. For most of us, clutter is just the result of bad habits and indecision.

The first method described attempts to force decision making in a very simple way:

The Four-Box method forces a decision, item by item. To apply it, gather three boxes and a large trash can. Label the boxes, "Put Away", "Give Away/Sell" and "Storage." Items to be thrown away belong in the trash can.

What I like about having these 'clutter destinations' is that you can keep them in your work area and use as immediate inboxes. Instead of just the one IN box, you have the three [plus trash] where you place items that come in.

This is very similar to GTD's system where you take items from your inbox and put them into reference, projects or someday/maybe items. However, the latter would be the equivalent of keeping clutter in your home.

Instead of just one inbox, for your growing clutter, you keep a series that force action immediately:

- Storage/Reference
- Work/Prokects
- Trash
etc.

Organized Home has 3 other strategies that should help.

Declutter 101: Strategies To Cut Clutter - [OrganizedHome]

25 manly skills

Popular Mechanics has a list of 25 items that every man should be
able to do... I disagree a bit, but whatever.
http://tinyurl.com/3dlg4o

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Re: Torrent search thingy

I actually want to find a good torrent site for music and stuff,
anyone have suggestions?
Limewire is so-so (I was about to coutn it dead, but theyahve a new
"junk rating" which filters out the crap stuff)

On 10/23/07, Joshua Bierman <josh.bierman@gmail.com> wrote:
> doubt its safe though, better off with google
> http://www.completorrent.com/
>

list of useful apps and the like

http://www.andrewsellick.com/73/100-great-free-and-open-source-tools-

for-web-developers

Torrent search thingy

doubt its safe though, better off with google
http://www.completorrent.com/

getting real answers to tough questions


Google Answers was a great service I used and recommended. Sadly it was closed. Many of the free-lance researches from Google Answers moved to a new independently owned site, Uclue, that offers a similar service. You ask a question, announce a price you think an answer is worth, and if a top-notch researcher thinks your fee is fair, they will research your question. Questions can be quickies worth $5, or more complicated queries costing $200.

In my experience their answers are solid and reliable. You can always ask for clarifications. As with Google Answers, the results are public. That means it pays to search the site for previous similar questions. It also means that your answer won't be confidential. (Indeed. The answer to a question I commissioned on Uclue was Slashdotted.)

If you want advice, go to the free and free-wheeling Yahoo Answers. You'll get your money's worth. If you want help on a particular question that the exact right person can answer quickly, I think Ask Metafilter is by far the best guru (and it is free for members). But if what you need is some real research and serious sleuthing, the kind of answer that is not just sitting in someone's head, I believe your best bet will be Uclue.

Figure how long it might take you to answer your own question -- if you could at all -- and you'll see that Uclue answers are a real bargain.

-- KK

Uclue


http://tinyurl.com/3czjf

soylent green, the lego edition

http://picasaweb.google.com/bmibeck/GreenMachine

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

FOR JACK - HOME BREWERY

home brewing beer brewery

posted oct 16th 2007 10:16pm by will o'brien
filed under:
misc hacks



i saw this last month in popular science, but it wasn't online for a while. this (nearly) all-in-one brewery was built by [john carnett]. it does everything but requires malt extract for now. it boils wort, cools it for fermenting, delivers the brew to the kegs and most interestingly to me - uses cold plate cooling to cool the beer just before it exits the tap. i'm pretty sure they're using peltier junctions, but i'd like to know for sure. props to [nate] for inadvertently reminding me of the thing when he sent in this effort to brew beer inside a pumpkin!

When looking for where to live, the apt edition

Hubbuzz, the neighborhood apartment finder

Posted Oct 17th 2007 8:00AM by Chris Gilmer
Filed under:
Business, Internet, Web services, Search



Finding a neighborhood to live in which suits your individual taste is sometimes a huge challenge. After all is said and done, you must be happy with the place you call home. Hubbuzz helps find an ideal apartment for you, with the amenities you're looking for, in an area which you'll enjoy living.

Other websites like apartments.com and rent.com provide the same type of apartment searching with many more listings, but are much more complex to navigate than Hubbuzz. Further, those traditional sites don't offer an in depth look at what neighborhoods are truly about. 

Current cities to choose from in the Hubbuzz neighborhood database include Los Angeles, Denver, San Diego, Colorado Springs, Northern Colorado and Dallas-FortWorth. When selected areas are chosen, an event calendar, featured neighborhoods, and area facilities like parks, shopping and restaurants are pinpointed to get a better idea and feel for the area in question so you can make a more informed decision about your new abode.

It's great having all of this information in one single location. Previously, it's been a pain to search multiple sources to grab all details on an area in which you want to live. Plus, when you use Hubbuzz to find an apartment, they'll give you $100 bucks back when you sign a lease at a complex listed in their database.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Top Ten Inventions of 2007

um....the year aint over.... oh well.


R&D Magazine has sponsored the "Oscars of Inventions" for 45 years. These research and design awards are coveted by government as well as private industry inventors. The 100 winners selected by R&D Magazine for 2007 are stunning innovations - resourceful, effective, inspiring. A significant portion of the 2007 awards are homeland security/military innovations; others are environmental, health, and there's even innovations for kids, like a must-have-Holiday-toy robot!





My favorite so far:
2. No More Blood Tests!
 



Electro Needle Biomedical Sensor Array



Some of the 2007 awards have gone to inventions that seem just short of miraculous and the Electro Needle Biomedical Sensor Array comes close. This is a small patch device with electro-chemically treated probes. When the patch is applied to the skin, it has the ability to ascertain chemical readings present in a patient's blood without having to withdraw any blood. Thus, readings such as "carbohydrates, electrolytes, lipids, enzymes, toxins, proteins, viruses, and can be detected in a patient's blood or interstitial cellular fluid." No more for "good" veins? You mean no more vials and vials and vials taken? One great step for medicine; 15 great steps for the sick folks in the emergency room. Developed by the Sandia National Laboratories.

Always wanted a heads up display

$25 head mounted display

posted oct 7th 2007 9:47pm by will o'brien
filed under: misc hacks, portable video hacks

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Useful Health Monitoring Hack

pervasive health monitor (got granny?)

posted aug 22nd 2007 11:05pm by will o'brien
filed under: misc hacks

improving your photos after the fact

(the next version of the software asks where you were for vacation and creates all the photos for you, no more need to lug around a camera....gah)

Algorithm draws on millions of images to seamlessly fill blanks in photographs
August 17, 2007 The advent of digital photography has opened up a new world of image editing possibilities including the ability to fill-in blanks or replace unwanted parts of an image. A new algorithm devised by James Hayes and Alexei A. Efros of Carnegie Mellon University facilitates this process by drawing on a huge database of more than a million images from the World Wide Web in order to seamlessly fill in the missing areas of incomplete photographs.
There could be many reasons for an image to feature an undesirable blank area - a patch of bright light that needed to be cropped out or perhaps a shadow, a person or an object ruined an otherwise perfect shot.
The algorithm tackles this problem by completing a given image in a number of different ways leaving the user to select the one which is deemed most suitable. This can be achieved without the user having to label the image fragments being used, or for that matter, offer any direction at all.
'Holes' in images are 'patched' as suitable image fragments are found and re-arranged to complete the image in a manner that is claimed to be semantically valid. That is, the patched area is consistent with the rest of the image. Hays and Efros claim that their algorithm is a means to restore data missing from an image that 'should have been there'. Existing methods of filling such blank areas have largely involved drawing image fragments from other parts of the same picture. This algorithm is quite unique in that it draws from an exterior database and also in the means by which it achieves this.
To learn more visit this page on the Carnegie Mellon University Graphics site where a PDF paper and Presentation are available for download.

A closer look at the black art of aerodynamics in Formula One

August 21, 2007 Aerodynamics is now viewed by Formula 1 teams as the single most important piece of race car design the rules allow them to control. A good aerodynamic setup makes an F1 car slippery in a straight line, maximizes acceleration and top speed, and provides huge amounts of downforce to mash the car's tyres into the tarmac and add extra grip in the corners. Massive money is spent on tweaking the wings and body shape for that elusive perfect flow of air. Toyota's Head of Aerodynamics, Mark Gillan, explains further in the second part of Panasonic Toyota Racing's 'Inside a Formula 1 Car' series.
If you've ever stuck your hand out of a car window on the freeway, you'll understand that as speed increases, the flow of air around the car becomes a significant force to push against. Imagine the strength of that force at a Formula One car's top track speed of around 360kmh.
First and foremost, aerodynamics is the science of manipulating and making use of air flow. In Formula 1, ferociously high speeds mean the air is a formidable force and it can be used to the car's advantage.
Put simply, the bigger the frontal area of an object, the more wind resistance it will encounter, so a bigger object will travel slower than a smaller object with the same amount of power to propel it.

Read on, its pretty cool:

'new' idea in motorcycles

Confederate's Renovatio – the handmade American streetbike goes modular
If you thought Confederate's previous motorcycles, the Wraith and Hellcat, were outrageous to look at, wait 'til you see the company's latest project. The virtually frameless Renovatio takes minimalism and modular design to the next level and flags a bold future direction for this iconoclastic New Orleans-based streetbike manufacturer.
Confederate, in their short history, have made it their business to stand apart from the crowd, delivering high-end hand-made streetbikes with industrial-retro-meets-goth looks, fat v-twin engines and no consideration at all for the racetrack performance that seems to drive most of the motorcycle industry these days. The company's Wraith and Hellcat have sold well for a boutique brand, most famously to Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt – these eye-popping bikes are among the few vehicles on the planet that can legitimately match the world's biggest movie stars in the head-turning stakes.
The Renovatio concept is set to take the company's avant-garde look a big step forward. Confederate's conceptual design team leader, Ed Jacobs, has released his vision for the company's next major model, which the company expects to refine and push to production by sometime in 2008.
The Renovatio (latin for "rebirth") retains the Wraith's carbon-fiber girder fork concept and tractor-style seat, at least in some sketches, but introduces a new modular design language that all but does away with a traditional frame. Swingarm, seat, tank and front-end are all pretty much mounted to the 1686cc v-twin engine – and in some incarnations the Renovatio's seat is suspended in midair from the tank.
Confederate intend for the Renovatio to be a modular design platform – hence the different seat and tank options shown in the design sketches and the large circular mount points located all over the vehicle. At the heart of the beast is a 90-degree v-twin powerplant derived from General Motors' LS7 7.0 litre V8. It should put out around 150hp in the normally aspirated version, or closer to 190hp with the optional supercharger. Either way, those are enormous numbers for a big twin and the Renovatio will be suitably overpowered for the street, particularly given its lightweight carbon fiber/aluminum construction.
Pricing will be at the premium end – The Wraith and Hellcat both sell for well over US$50,000, reflecting the thousands of hours of work that goes into their construction and the exotic materials they're made from.
The Renovatio is an exciting concept from Confederate and we look forward to seeing how these CAD sketches translate into a road-going production motorcycle.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

The good news, or lack of it

While the general news is usually glum here in the US (remember, fear sells), the scientific news is often filled with a neat-o feeling of hope. These are the headlines mailed to me today (my comments in parentheses):

SCIENCE IN THE NEWS
from Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society (these guys are good)

British Outbreak May Be Linked to Human Action
(a story on the latest H&M disease outbreak being caused directly by
human activity)

Team Finds Largest Exoplanet Yet
(cool)

'Baby Einstein': A Bright Idea?
(an article that finds that kids who watch this stuff have lower
vocabularies than kids who don't.... another US generation down the
tubes)

G Whiz! Craft Identifies Source of Faint Saturnian Ring
(cool)

Cooking Up More Uses for the Leftovers of Biofuel Production
(cool)

Yangtze River Dolphin Driven to Extinction
(first major vertebrate killed off in 50 years, all due to human
stupidity)

Scientists, Executive Clash Over Quake
(did the quake cause the cave-in, or the other way around? Either
way, people died due to risky mining practices.... all for coal)

Breast Implants Linked to Suicide Risk
(again, no causality, but bad either way)

Coral Reefs Vanishing Faster Than Rain Forests
(likely human caused.... )

Ancient Ape Was an Early Swinger
(cool)


So apparently you have to be in outer space, fighting big oil or an
ape from the past to get the cool factor. 6 to 4 on the side of oh-
crap!

Not what I would call heartening news.... then again, we did it to
ourselves AND at least this will sell science publications (not).

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Care.com

Last time I used www.sittercity.com and had VERY good luck.

Caregivers unite at Care.com

Posted Aug 3rd 2007 3:00PM by Chris Gilmer Filed under: Internet, Kids, Web services


If you are looking for a babysitter, tutor, pet sitter or even an elderly caregiver check out Care.com.
This site allows users to join and search the network to find the best possible family care individuals through safe and trustworthy options. Users start off by entering their name and address, and then get connected to care givers. A free account allows users to search with limited profiles, but an extended account allows full profiles, background checks and contact information for the family care individuals that suit specific requirements.
Care.com seems like a great research tool for ensuring your family is safe with the caregiver choice you choose. There is a free account, and 3 Premium accounts to choose from starting at $25 for one month of unlimited access, up to $125 for premium 12 month unlimited access.

Embedded Linux Router Hacked for Sprinkler Control

Why buy a sprinkler controller when you can make your own. And if you are making your own anyway, might as well make the DIY Sprinkler Controller better than any off the shelf models available. At least that is what Arek Jankowski decided to do!

"Arek combines a wireless router, NAS, and a USB Bit Whacker to take control of his sprinkler system. Reflash the router and NAS with linux, add some PHP and USB controlled phototriacs to the sprinkler controller and control it all from the comfort of your PC. I wanted to have a way of controlling both systems from my PC. The idea was to create something that would allow me to remotely turn on and off the sprinklers for each zone without going down to the basement to set it up on the Hunter controller or without going down to the garage to open the faucet. I have a wireless access point set up in the house for my wife's laptop and this is what I also used in this project. The project involved hardware, software and a little bit of plumbing work. Below I will describe what I did to get this all working."

hacking contest - sort-of

RedPost Kit Contest - Your Design Created by Artist John Mishler
How would you like win a cool design made by John Mishler? Even better, the design he would create would be a concept thought up by you! Your design will be created around the RedPost/Kit, a Linux-based picture frame that boasts a 19″ LCD, Wifi and a built-in MiniPC.

Contest Site

"Contest outline:
Submit the following to contest@theredpost.com by August 17, 2007:
* colored drawings of your design along with an explanation, if needed
* description of where you plan to install your creation and how you plan on using it
John Mishler, Master Sculptor, will choose a winner by August 24, 2007
* the winning design is solely up to John's artistic discretion
* final design may be modified slightly at John's discretion, with the winner's permission
* He'll complete your design within 4-5 weeks
Design guidelines:
* the base will be the raw metal (steel) RedPost/Kit frame
* you can integrate any (almost) materials into the design: plastic, wood, bolts/screws, metal (welding certain metals to other metals isn't possible, for example, steel and aluminum)
* John will favor designs that fit best with his artistic style (check out his website/artists statement for more info), simplicity - no more than 3 paint colors
* the frame is 18-1/8″ wide x 15-1/4″ high x 2-5/8″ deep with a 1-3/4″ border around the screen (
PDF diagram)"

this is of course for jack

I love coffee

Coffee May Protect Women's Memory, Study Says
Caffeine May Boost Memory for Older Women, Study Suggests

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Escher, sent to me by Jack





Impossible Illustration Brought to Life

What happens when you try to take an 2D illustration of an impossible 3D construction and turn it into a real-world sculpture? We figured that it would create a dangerous rift in the space time continuum bringing about an endless solar winter that would engulf our planet in darkness. Luckily in the case of this unusual Escher Waterfall Sculpture none of that occurred.



Instead we discovered that by closing one eye, and viewing this sculpture from just the right angle we could bring the amazing work of M.C. Escher to life. Of course a casual glance with binocular vision destroys the entire illusion... but hey it's still a very cool little sculpture that really captures the detail of the original Waterfall woodcut.



Product Features

  • Detailed Sculpture of M.C. Escher's famous impossible Waterfall woodcut
  • 6" High, Fully Painted
  • Imported from Japan
  • Limited edition of 500 units

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Some great Papers to read

If you are thinking of becoming an entrepreneur, read these:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=275190

good advice

I picked this up somewhere, can't remember where, found it in my mutli-clip clipboard, decided to post it, not certain why the numbering is messed up:

So, if your cell phone has no other numbers stored in its memory, make sure it has these numbers:

  1. Local Fire Department - Because you may need them and it may not be enough of an emergency to call 911. Very good for those pesky cat-stuck-in-tree situations
  2. Local Police Department or Law Enforcement - Same reason as above.
  3. Nearby Hospital(s) - These are great when a loved one isn't home hours after they said they'd be. A lot easier to have them preloaded into your phone instead of sifting frantically through the yellow pages!
  4. ICE (In Case of Emergency) - If you're ever in an accident and are incapacitated or killed, the authorities who find you will likely look for this entry in your cell phone numbers (and call it). A spouse or relative capable of making decisions on your behalf would be best here.
  5. Taxi Company Dispatch - Just in case you find yourself stuck on the side of the road (or maybe you've had a few drinks). This is especially helpful in the latter situation since you won't have to sheepishly ask the bartender to call you a cab.
  6. Water and Power Department - In case your water or power ever get shut off and you'd like to know why (especially if it's the power and your regular phones don't work).
  7. Doctor and/or Pediatrician - Another one for you parents. When little Junior suddenly breaks out in hives and you'd like to speak to somebody (but don't want to spend the cheddar on the emergency room just yet), this is another one that's good to have. Also, these can be very difficult to locate in a time of stress, so record it next time you have the chance.
  1. Poison Control - So, you think you little Timmy might've just ingested two big mouthfuls of Pine-Sol? Not sure if you should take him to the hospital or use his sweat to clean the floor? These people generally answer very quickly and are very helpful - a must for the parents.
  2. Animal Control - This isn't just for mountain lions and wild bore who show up on your back stoop. Maybe your neighbor's dog's brain made a wrong turn at Albuquerque and now he thinks little Maddy is a kabob of some sort. You'll obviously want the tranquilizer-toting folks in coats to come down and diffuse the situation, pronto.
  3. Coworker or Boss - Because you don't want to call the company switchboard to tell them you ran out of gas on the Interstate and managed to wet your pants in the process. Shoot for a direct line or cell phone.
  4. Your Next-Door Neighbor - Hear about a house fire on the news? Give old Ted next door a ring and have him poke his head out to make sure your house is still standing (and offer to return the favor).
  5. Tow Truck Company - Preferably one that will drive long distances if need be. Other than that, this one needs no explanation.
  6. Car Insurance Carrier/Broker - The first people you should call if you're in an accident (unless somebody is hurt, then you call them second). They'll tell you want to write down and if you need the police. Another number you don't want to go fishing through your Costanza Wallet for if you can help it.
  7. Pizza/Chinese/All-Night Take-out Food - Because once you find a good place that's open late, that's a number you keep and call often.

I lIke Stuff

I read Kevin kelly's Cool Tools blog every now and again.  I use it to put together imaginary survival kits for the car.  This is, of course, aside from all the 'normal' stuff that goes into such a kit

For instance, I would use this to hold it all:
Viewtainer
Cheap, mini-tool storage


The Viewtainer is an inexpensive, flexible plastic tube with a rubbery cap at both ends. Originally, they were intended to hold small parts (screws, nuts, bolts, etc.). On one end the rubber cap has a slash in it, so when you squeeze the tube, you can dump the parts out. Although these Viewtainers may work well for storing parts, I've found that one of the larger Viewtainers, which is about 8" x 3", is an awesome mini-toolkit container that's easy to access and stash. It's amazing how many different useful (and in some cases, full-size) tools, you can fit into such a tiny container: screwdrivers, sockets, specialty bits, pliers, mini-saws, tire irons, flashlights, and on. I keep one in my car, one in my bike bag, and one in my study on the second floor so I don't have to run out to the garage every time I need a screwdriver. -- Sam Mapadatha Viewtainer $4 (8" x 2.75") Available from and manufactured by Viewtainer


And in it I would include:


One of these:

http://tinyurl.com/3xo2lk

Atwood Mini Tools
Keychain-size, steel pocket utensils

The beauty of these tools is they feel like a fetish item in your hand and, due to their size, you can always have them with you. They're handmade by Peter Atwood and have incredible strength because he uses a specialty stainless steel made via a powder metallurgy process ("The powder is compressed under significant force to a homogenous, solid state and the steel is rolled to required stock size. Molecules are uniform, inclusions of impurities are insignificant"). Both of my EDC knives -- a Swiss Army Cybertool and a SOG Multi Tool -- have slightly bent tips on the main blades because I tried to open or pry something I shouldn't have. That will never happen with the Mini Son of Prything I carry in my pocket or my Prybaby. The trend in tools is to include more and more features. An Atwood piece - and there are a variety of them worth checking out -- is generally designed to do a couple of things really well, and it does: open a package, pull a nail, cut some tape, strip a wire, etc. There are obviously other discovered tasks -- like propping up a new power supply in my computer while I get a couple of screws in -- but it's calling on that intended purpose that is most gratifying. -- Greg Needham Atwood Mini Tools $35+ Available from Atwood Knife & Tools


And one of these: 

http://tinyurl.com/39xklh

Credit Card Survival Tool
Wallet-size multi-tool

I have two friends who've been carrying these slim, multi-tools for a few years now and swear by them. I've only used the mini-screwdriver and bottle opener, but those functions alone seem worth it. It's stainless steel and will add some weight to your load, but no more than the average metal beverage pop-top. Why junk up your keychain when you can slip another "card" into your wallet? Added bonus: can opener, straight edge, knife edge, et al. -- Steven Leckart

Credit Card Survival Tool $5 Available from Fishboy Manufactured by BCB Survival USA [This item was previously available via Amazon, so you may want to check if it's back in stock -sl]


And next to that would be one of these:

http://tinyurl.com/2cz4hj

Gas-O-Haul Collapsible emergency gasoline can

This disposable fiberboard container folds flat and has a bladder that can hold a gallon of gas (about 14" by 6" by 2"). I've yet to have a car emergency, but I've used it for a prosaic fill up on a lawn mower. No leaks, easy to carry and cheap to replace. Keeping one around is handy and comforting, and it's way better than the bulky plastic ones that have bounced around in the back of my car for years. -- Vincent Gas-O-Haul $9 Available from Genuine Hot Rod


ANd an empty one of these:

Sigg Aluminum Water Bottles Non-plastic beverage containers

These bottles are a great solution for anyone looking to get away from plastic. In the last few years, studies have suggested that using plastic bottles may be harmful to your health. For instance, plastic bottles made of polycarbonate (#7 recycle code) contain a substance called bisphenol-A (BPA), which acts as an endocrine disrupter that mimics estrogen and has been linked to aneuploidy, adipogenesis, and other scary problems with funny names. Found in plastics with recycle codes 1-5, phthalates (the chemical that softens plastic) can be carcinogenic and act as endocrine disrupters, too. Even water standing at room temperature in a plastic bottle can leach phthalates from a bottle, not to mention a bottle that goes through temperature changes throughout a day. Granted there's been great debate over all these studies and whether the levels of leached phthalates in the average plastic bottle are really high enough to merit health concerns. Either way, just think about the toxic byproducts of plastic production: dioxin (a carcinogen) and plastic waste. Enormous amounts of plastic waste from all those bottles that aren't recycled create equally enormous vortexes of plastic garbage in various oceans, where they wreak havoc on marine life. Moving away from plastic is healthier for the planet. The Sigg bottles are just a tad heavier than their plastic counterparts. The water-based, polymer coating is taste-neutral and acid-resistant (think fruit juices), and guaranteed for the life of the bottle (5 years according to the manufacturer). They come in a variety of eye-catching designs and sizes. You can also purchase a variety of caps (i.e. the sport top) that increase the utility of the bottle for your specific needs. -- Ari Cohn Sigg Aluminum Water Bottles $16 Available from Amazon (1 liter, in blue)



And this seems very useful:

http://tinyurl.com/3b5om5

Stanley Tripod Flashlight Portable, hands-free LED lighting

I replaced my D battery Mag-Light with this small LED light that only needs AA batteries. I get whiter light, longer life, and more intensity. Tripod lights have always been great tools (I work at Amazon, so I see a lot of gear). The problem with the traditional ones is they get very hot, use lot of battery power, and burn out fast. Stanley's tripod light - the first LED version - takes all the advantages of LED and combines it with the convenience of a fold up stand.

I have already used it for a variety of household projects since I bought it last year. The best use has been to install dimmers. Usually I'd have to do this during the day or ask my wife to hold the flashlight. With the tripod light, I can now do it by myself at any time. -- Jason Goldberger Stanley Tripod Flashlight $24 Available from Amazon Manufactured by Stanley



My love of tools

I have a love of finely crafted tools and knives. This company adds
the two together, now if only I could justify $36 for knife/tool I
will likely never use.

http://www.atwoodknives.com/

I would buy this....

If I weren't moving soon:

Silver and Frosted Glass Airplane Light




Meant primarily for chidren's rooms, the Airplane light has a nice satin silver and frosted glass look to it. Not that you adults can't have one also,  I mean we all deserve a little bit of fun in our lives. But single people may have some trouble with dates if this were a primary feature in the living room, and I can't believe most spouses would be any more interested. The choice is still yours.

Product Page (£74.00, about $150)

Filed Under: Household

cool toy (jack style)

« Dancing Transformer: Robots In Discos | Main | Claim: iPhone Hacked To Make Calls on Telstra »

Make Your Own Wooden Automaton

By Rob Beschizza July 31, 2007 | 11:00:03 AMCategories: Robots  


No glue, no tools, and no microprocessors are required to assemble your own simple robot using The Designing Automata Kit, available in the west thanks to the MAKE Store. See it as a complex mechanical puzzle, perhaps, where you get to win every time!

Crafted from Thai rubberwood by the Cabaret Mechanical Theatre in London, the set is $60.

Product Page [Make]


http://tinyurl.com/2qdmat