On the first Friday of each month I’ll share a recipe with you & then you share a recipe (or two or three) with all of us! I’ve got a special treat for my 4rd Rock Your Recipes party. Today I’ve invited Jenny from Planner Perfect Meals to share a recipe for you! Jenny has [...]


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Its been awhile since I posted anything on the grand baby front. Here's a 3D picture of the little guy just waiting to make his entrance (we're in the count down now).
Nick and Jessica
Here's a couple of pictures of the baby's room...you can see my painting hanging on the wall :-)
For unique gifts visit
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Add to myYahoo!April Fool's Day is a great chance to have a bit of fun and blame it on the occasion. If you're keen to add some mischief to your workplace, getting in early and setting the pace is the way to start the day. Just be sure your workplace and co-workers can handle it, and that you're ready for some pranks aimed right back at you!
Read The Full Article:
http://www.wikihow.com/Play-Office-April-Fool%27s-Day-Pranks
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The starting point for our machine is some classic laboratory glassware: A 500 ml flask and a 10 ml graduated cylinder.
The flask is fitted with a rubber stopper that has two holes drilled through it. We've inserted a length of rigid FDA food-grade plastic tubing into each hole. One side has a long length of tubing, that goes nearly to the bottom the flask, and the other has only a short piece of tubing. If the flask contains a liquid (say, whisky, for example) and has this stopper on top, then if you should gently pump air into the short-tube side, it will force the liquid out on the other side. Aside: This is a classic mechanism in chemistry: the glass "wash bottle," (see examples here, the predecessor of today's squeeze bottles. It's also a good example of a rudimentary but effective pneumatic pump for fluids.)
In our implementation, the tube that tips is actually the 10 ml graduated cylinder, suitably modified and mounted. The main challenge is to create an angled opening of the tube end, like the ones normally seen on bamboo deer chasers. The angled end makes it so that you can easily pour in liquid, even when the tube is at an angle, and also assists with gracefully decanting the contents once full. Our graduated cylinders are made of glass, but cutting them is possible with a thin diamond saw blade, along with steady hands, and plenty of patience. (There are plastic graduated cylinders available, but the heft, sound, and appearance of real glass can't be beat.)
Next, we need to grip the graduated cylinder and allow it to pivot. We used a commercial 1/2" plastic pipe to actually hold the cylinder, and bolted that to a laser-cut Delrin backing. The pivot pins themselves are 1/8" diameter plain aluminum rivets-- just like small nails without a point on the end, and are held in place with strong epoxy.
Drink Making Unit 2.0 can be loaded with up to six fluids to dispense, so we have six tipping graduated cylinders. In the photo above you can see the six cylinders. Above the opening of each cylinder there is a tube leading from the flask, from which the liquid pours out to fill the cylinders.
When the cylinders tip, they need something to tip into. We arranged them in a semicircle, each tipping into a wide-mouth funnel.
And, from the funnel, the fluids that are dispensed drip downward, into the cocktail glass. 
Our controller, pictured below, sitting next to the barbot, features an AVR microcontroller, eight pushbuttons, and a 6x8 LED bar graph display, all hidden beneath a tortoiseshell-plastic lid.
One of the challenges for the controller box is to manage the air flow to the six flasks. Two obvious strategies would be to use an air pump followed by six solenoid valves, or to use six separate air pumps.
We opted for the six separate air pumps, after coming across these "Penn-Plax" battery-operated air pumps, intended to keep your pet fish happy when the power goes out. They cost about ten to fifteen dollars each, and are available online or at some local pet stores. (Also, don't let the "silent" branding fool you-- these are at least as loud as regular plug-in aquarium air pumps.)
These pumps run on two D-cells, configured in parallel (1.5 V), and use about 100-200 mA when running under light load. Since we plan to only operate one of our pumps at a time, we actually only need one set of batteries for the entire set of six-- and this gets a lot smaller.
The pump mechanism is self-contained, and comes out with either zero or one screws, depending on the particular version of the pump.Aside: There are a couple of different mechanisms in our set of pumps. This particular one has a piston mechanism, driven by the DC motor, some of others had a diaphragm.Second aside: Once you've removed the pump mechanism from the case, you've got a very nice project box complete with a battery holder and power switch!
To provide a microcontroller-friendly control input for each motor, we used simple motor driver, consisting mainly of of a 2N4401 transistor with a flyback diode.
We likely would have hand-wired the components, except that we happened to have on hand a pile of tiny circuit boards already implementing that circuit. (And before anyone asks: it's the circuit board from the forthcoming Egg-Bot kit diamond engraver attachment.) To make up for the voltage drop in the transistor (the saturation voltage) we ended up actually running the motor drivers from 3 V (two D-cells in series), with a reduced duty cycle.
The microcontroller in the circuit is an ATmega164P, a 40-pin AVR, located in the middle of the big black breakout board. The six air pumps are controlled by six of its outputs. We also wired up a big LED display-- 48 LEDs in an 8x6 grid. We used 10 mm diffused-lens, warm-white candle-flicker LEDs for an unusual old-timey look-- something like a cross between neon and jittery incandescent.
The LEDs are driven by three 16-bit LED driver chips (type STP16DP05, MAX6969, or one of several other exact substitutes). The LED driver chips are controlled in an SPI chain out of the ATmega164P. The chips are mounted on a stacked pair of Meggy Jr RGB bare circuit boards. (There are no other active electronics on those boards-- we're just using them as breakout boards for the LED driver chips.) While this grid only uses three LED driver chips, there are actually four of the chips installed on those Meggy boards. The fourth chip is used to control a set of infrared LEDs, which we'll discuss a little later.
Here's what the back of the LED matrix looks like: Lots of wires (one for each LED) and hot glue to mount them in the holes.
Drink Making Unit 2.0 is controlled by eight tactile button switches-- one "reset" on the left, a "go" button on the right, and six in the middle for configuring quantities. Each goes to one input on the AVR.
The LED grid, buttons, and pumps all mounted in the controller box. Note that we have two different styles of pump here, all of which came out of pumps with the same brand and model number on them. We've also added two power switches (visible on the upper right), one for the microcontroller and LEDs (3xAA, 4.5 V) and one for the pumps (2xD, 3 V).
One other detail, which we mentioned earlier, is that we need to be able to detect when the graduated cylinders tip. To do that, we use a photogate consisting of an infrared LED and an infrared-detecting phototransistor. The IR LEDs are driven by the fourth LED driver chip, and the six phototransistors are read by the AVR's analog inputs. When the cylinder tips up, it blocks the beam, and so we can detect it. In the photo above, you can see the wiring to the infrared components, held in place by the yellow cable ties.
The top cover of the box is a sheet of tortoiseshell-colored acrylic, laser cut with holes for screws and buttons. We also made a nameplate and swappable labels to label different possible fluid sets.
Add a little bit of code, and there we go.
Drink Making Unit 2.0 will be
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Add to myYahoo!Photo (CC-BY) Chris M, of a Very Large Array. Number stations, making their appearance in the post-war radio landscape, were shortwave radio stations of streams of symbols, mysterious to their listeners and apparently code. Here, the idea of lost and indecipherable broadcasts inspires a wonderfully-varied collection of reflective artists, in a free, Creative-Commons licensed compilation … Continue →
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http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/createdigitalmusic/~3/34i7ZmDZg-o/
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Sometimes it seems that everything is against us. Nothing is working. It's as if the rules of the universe themselves were built to set us back. Well, not for Andy Price.
If the image above looks weird, it is because Andy found the perfect way to defy gravity.
With a little fairy dust, a Whiskey bottle and some tubing, Andy DIYed his gravity defying device. Oh, yea, did we say this was not a composite?
Andy Explains:
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Add to myYahoo!Why shouldn’t a digital download be better, not worse, than a CD release? Sit in a studio as most of your favorite albums are recorded, mixed, and mastered, and odds are the digital material is being recorded at higher bit depths and sample rates. And while the perceptual record is more mixed, there’s also no … Continue →
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http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/createdigitalmusic/~3/NsHOOQ4nZeE/
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Add to myYahoo!Here is an easy-to-fold paper orchid that can be used for decorations or display.
Read The Full Article:
http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Paper-Orchid
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Materials: Grundtal Double Towel Rail
Description: I measured my fabric for my sling, adding a generous allowance on all sides for the casing and hems (1 inch in my case). I then hemmed the (short) sides of the rectangle (making sure the finished width matched the width of the rail) and then sewed the casings for the rails on the long sides. I then simply unscrewed the rails, slipped the sling on and...voila!
See more of the book sling.
~ leila@rook
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Add to myYahoo!I shared this tutorial originally over at The DIY Club but love to have it here on my site too.
I fell in love with a Pottery Barn vignette as I often do. This one was for Easter. PB one is pink but I wanted yellow.
Problem: Silk flowers/branch, pitcher, 2 bunnies = $200 for seasonal decor! So pretty much not going to happen on my budget.
However, out of reach decor inspires DIY projects.
Materials:


















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