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!