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Ten common mistakes made by photographers using WordPress

July 28th, 2012 David No comments

Ten common mistakes made by photographers using WordPress

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photographer sky clouds Ten common mistakes made by photographers using WordPress

If you are a photographer or artist who relies on WordPress for your blog or portfolio, chances are you aren’t utilizing all the available tools or adhering to the best practices that could help your site stand out.  Below is a list of ten mistakes that photographers (including myself) make when using WordPress.

1. Non-readable image filenames

Image filenames are an important factor in optimizing for search engines. Below are a few examples of non-optimized filenames:

  • DSC000234481.jpg
  • picture1.jpg
  • 20110301-tda-0023.jpg

The filenames above might work well when archiving photos in your image software program, but they are useless on the web.  Including descriptive keywords in filenames on the web will give search engine spiders a clue about the picture.  For example, here are a few optimized image filenames:

  • shark-attacks-california-surfer.jpg
  • libyan-rebels-fight-qaddafi.jpg

Don’t go overboard with keywords or you will dilute the value of each keyword included.  Use - instead of empty spaces, which show up like this in urls: %20.

2. Empty alt and title attributes

Search engines have a difficult time interpreting the content of images.  The more relevant text you include around the image itself, the easier it is for search engine spiders to interpret the content of the image.

The alt attribute provides some alternate text to describe the image if a browser has image loading disabled and is important to the usability of your website in case your visitors have poor eyesight or are using assistive reading technology.  In photography terms, the alt attribute is comparable to the image title metadata.  Google confirmed in 2007 that the alt attribute is their primary point of focus when trying to understand the content of an image.

The title attribute is displayed on tags when hovering your mouse over an image (also known as a “tooltip”).  It should provide advisory information about the image for which it is set.  Below is an image tag with optimized filenames, alt and title attributes:

1
2
3
</pre>
<img title="Surfer attacked by sharks in California in 2011" src="http://example.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/shark-attacks-california-surfer.jpg" alt="Shark attacks California surfer" />
<pre>

Adding alt and title text to images in WordPress is easy. After uploading an image using WordPress’ Add Media button, click Show and you will see the Title and Alternative Text fields.  Click this screenshot for a larger view.

3. Squished images after changing themes

A common point of confusion is that changing the image sizes on the Media Settings page will resize all existing photos in WordPress.  It doesn’t.  WordPress creates thumbnails when you first upload the photo.  Chances are you set your Media Settings to a size required for your previous theme.  If you change themes, you might need to resize these previously uploaded images.

First, make sure that you have set your Media Settings to the correct size specified by your theme’s instructions. Then, install Viper007Bond’s Regenerate Thumbnails plugin.  It allows you to automagically resize all images that you ever uploaded into WordPress based on your new images sizes on your Media Settings page.  This will save you hours of work.

In some cases, the Regenerate Thumbnails plugin doesn’t work. This is typically due to the fact that you uploaded very large, sometimes even the original, image into WordPress and the plugin simply cannot process all of the large images.  If this is the case, ensure that your thumbnail sizes are set to the correct size according to the theme’s instructions and upload the photo again.

4. Website is not cached

Is a slow loading website hurting your photo business?  It could be.  Photography websites tend to load lots of large images, which translates into slow loading pages.  By creating a “cached” version of your website, you could speed things up to 10X faster.  Thankfully, there’s a plugin for that.

The W3 Total Cache plugin by W3 Edge will decrease the load time of your website, resulting in a faster page loads and happier visitors.  The W3TC plugin improves the user experience of your site by improving your server performance, caching every aspect of your site, reducing the download times and providing transparent content delivery network (CDN) integration.  While there are other caching plugins available, my experience is that the W3 Total Cache plugin provides superior results when configured properly.

5. No CDN

The closer your visitors are to your content, the faster it will load.  A Content Delivery Network is a team of servers located around the world containing copies of your static media content.  When a visitor located in New York loads your website, they will be served content from the closest data center located in, say, New Jersey, instead of loading the data from your web server located in Hong Kong.

The W3 Total Cache plugin contains an option for hosting all static media content at the CDN of your choice.  There are many CDN options available, but the most popular by far is Amazon Web Services’ S3 account.  It is cheap and integrates with the W3TC plugin.

6. Poor lead generation

Make it easy for your site visitors to call or email you.  Put your phone and email (or link to contact page) in the footer or sidebar (or header) of every Post and Page.  Better yet, include a short personal bio, with photo, to make your site a bit more personable.  Use the GPP About You Widget plugin to add a bio box to help generate leads and connect with potential customers.

7. create an opt-in, opt-out mailing list

One of the best ways to piss off past or potential clients is to send unsolicited email.  Even worse, if your email doesn’t contain an unsubscribe link, amongst other things, your well-intentioned email marketing campaign is technically, well, spam.  The CAN-SPAM Act is a must-read if you market your business to a list of email addresses.  Not surprisingly, there is a plethora of email marketing services available.  Here are a few that integrate well with WordPress so so you can turn site visitors into regular readers and potential customers:

8. Resize images before uploading

If you are uploading your original, high-resolution images in WordPress, you have essentially just given the entire world access to your digital negatives.  Any image that you upload to the internet can be downloaded, period.  Resize your images to the maximum size required by your theme before uploading them into WordPress.

9.  Forgetting to assign Featured Images

WordPress 2.9 introduced the ability to assign “Featured Images” to specific Posts, Pages, and Galleries.  Many themes now use this feature for creating thumbnails on the homepage and archive pages.  If are using a theme and you can’t figure out how to give your posts a thumbnail, chances are you haven’t set a Featured Image.

WordPress 3.1 hides some screen options (including Featured Images) on Posts & Pages edit screens by default.  To show the Featured Image box, click the Screen Options link in the top right corner when editing a Post or Page and check the Featured Image box.  Here is a video tutorial that shows how to use Featured Images in WordPress.

10. Don’t use Flash

Flash is like a black box to search engines.  It looks nice, but isn’t searchable.  If you choose to use Flash content on your website, make sure you have included a description in HTML nearby your Flash content that describes the content contained inside the Flash.

The Rinser Toothbrush Has a Built-In Water Fountain for Easy, Single-handed Mouth Rinsing

July 25th, 2012 David No comments

the Rinser toothbrush is your standard teeth-cleaning implement with a little secret: it has a tunnel in its chest that creates a water fountain when you place it under faucet. This makes it easy for you to rinse out your mouth without setting the toothbrush down and picking up a cup or something else.

Aside from the primary purpose of this clever multi-tool, you can replace the brush heads when they get worn out. They just snap on and off so you don’t have to buy a new brush every month. Currently the rinser brush is available for pre-order. $22 gets you one brush and one brush head replacement, but you can pre-order more if you want. It’s not the cheapest toothbrushes in the world, but it’s one of the more clever ones.

Rinser Brush | via The Awesomer via Swissmiss

[LINK]

Categories: Gadgets, Home Tags: , , ,

Convert a Bread Box into a Charging Station

July 17th, 2012 David No comments

original Convert a Bread Box into a Charging Station

This DIY project proves a bread box can be useful not just for hiding bread. Conceal messy cords and the ugly power strip in this unusual charging station for all your gadgets.

Creating this bread box charging station is pretty simple: Drill a hole in the back for the power-strip cord and insert a rubber grommet. Then use MDF board for the divider, with 1/4-inch slits for the cords.

We’ve shown you lots of other clever ways to make a charging station, but this idea’s interesting if you ever want to hide your electronics or the charging station in plain sight. Just close the lid!

Home Office Storage on a Dime | Better Homes and Gardens via Apartment Therapy

[LINK]

 

The First-Timer’s Guide to Building a Computer from Scratch

July 2nd, 2012 David No comments

If you’ve never done it before, the idea of building a computer from the ground up can seem very intimidating—but it’s one of the most satisfying projects a Tech enthusiast can take on.

Being more of a software gal than a hardware geek myself, I was the only Lifehacker editor who had never built a PC from scratch. So when I needed a new PC late last year, I took the plunge and built my custom system. I’m so glad I did—the project turned out to be one of my proudest accomplishments of 2008. If you’ve cracked open your PC before to install a new hard drive or TV capture card, but you’ve never built a whole new system from the ground up, it’s not as difficult as you might think. Here are my notes for first-timers who want to build instead of buy their next computer.

medium 6fed49ac2db05f5de8084d29806292e0 The First Timer’s Guide to Building a Computer from Scratch

Why Build Instead of Buy

“But computers are so cheap these days,” you say. “Why waste the time and energy building your own system when you can get a great machine fully assembled and shipped to your door?” that’s a great question. Building your own PC will not save you time. It might save you money, but that’s not even the best reason to do it. For me, it was a fantastic hands-on educational experience. It gives me a deep sense of satisfaction every single day when I press the power button on my tower, watch it light up, and know that I plugged in the wire that goes from that light to the motherboard. Building your PC takes the mystery out of what’s going on inside that black box you spend hours on per day.

There are other good reasons to build instead of buy, too. With your own build you can customize your system just how you like and make your perfect media center or gaming machine. You can save money if you already have some parts (though see my warnings on the dangers of a “Frankenbuild” below). Upgrading your PC in the future becomes easier and cheaper since your parts aren’t tied to a particular manufacturer. With a custom build you can do fun stuff like overclock your CPU and get more bang for your buck, or install OS X where it was never intended to run.

In short, building your own PC makes you feel like a badass.

medium 464cbd54a85c65a4accac90fc757d7b3 The First Timer’s Guide to Building a Computer from Scratch

What You’re Getting Into

Don’t get me wrong, though: building a PC (for the first time especially) takes research, time, gumption, patience, and a willingness to deal with several WTF moments. If you’ve never cracked a PC’s case and installed parts, like a new hard drive or a video card, start there first. If you’ve got that experience under your belt, you might think that building a new PC is just a matter of snapping together a few parts. It is, but building from the ground up takes much more than an hour or two. My build took two full days, one online order, one returned motherboard, two trips to Fry’s, one condescending sneer from a sales associate when I asked a newb question, and one trip to Radio Shack. If that sounds like a lot, well, it was, and there were moments in the process when I wished I’d just bought a Dell. But when it finally all came together, all the sweat makes the results even sweeter.

medium 2b848d7607286c3414696514170c15b5 The First Timer’s Guide to Building a Computer from Scratch

Where to Start: Researching and buying Your Parts

You scared off yet? No? Good. Let’s get down to it. There are a gadzillion articles on the internet about building your own PC, but many are way out of date, or just don’t get specific about what exactly you should buy. When I had to start researching what parts to purchase, of course I turned to savvy Lifehacker readers to help me out. Several readers mentioned Ars Technica’s excellent system buyer’s guide, which breaks down exactly what parts you’d want for one of three levels of computer: a “budget box,” a “hot rod,” or a “God box.” The 2008 guidepublished last fall; make sure you use the most recent one when you start your research. I started by plugging parts from Ars’ “hot rod” system list into Newegg to get a sense of price and see if there were any deals, coupons or upgrades. In the end I didn’t use Ars’ exact recommendations, but it was an awesome, up-to-date, jumping-off point.

Your research into parts is the most important stage of the process. For first-timers it can be bewildering, and you will have questions. Just keep reading, take notes, consult with forums or sales associates, and remember that if you make the wrong purchase you can always return it for the right one. In the photo to the left you’ll see my build’s case, motherboard, power supply, CPU, and RAM. (I had a video card, DVD drive, and a hard drive from an old machine I planned to use in my new build.)

See this entire comment thread for more resources on deciding what parts to buy for your budget.

 

medium 956860051476deecc7c1589dd67b9d10 The First Timer’s Guide to Building a Computer from Scratch

Get Down and Dirty

Once you’ve got your hot little hands on all the parts you need, the real fun begins. There are two stages to your build: the hardware stage, and the software stage. Adam’s already covered how to install each individual hardware component. Here’s the list:

Once you’ve got everything plugged in and mounted inside your case, leave the case sides off and plug in your keyboard, mouse, monitor, and power, and press the On button. This is the moment of truth. The first time you see the lights come on and the system setup appear on-screen, you’ll feel like you’ve just arrived at the top of Mount Everest.

If the machine doesn’t power on, or there’s no video signal, or the keyboard doesn’t work—just unplug everything and check your connections. It took me a few hair-pulling, teeth-gnashing attempts to get my new build to boot properly. If it doesn’t work the first time, take a breath, unplug it all, and try again. Don’t cry; that won’t help.

Once you’re into the machine’s BIOS setup, key around and make sure the motherboard recognizes your DVD or CD drive and your hard drive. You’ll need those working in order to install your operating system. Everything there? Now set your boot sequence to check your optical drive first. Insert your operating system’s disc into your CD or DVD drive, and restart the machine. Now your operating system’s setup will launch on boot, and you can install away.

In the meantime, blast very loud rock music, strut about the vicinity, arms upraised, and revel in your greatness.

 

Mistakes I Made That You Can Avoid

When you build your first PC, keep a few things in mind I wished I’d realized before I started.

  • Beware of the “Frankenbuild.” A great way to save money on your new PC is using parts that you’ve already got around. But I was overly optimistic about what items from my very old Dell tower would work in my new system. I assumed my hard drive would work (it did, but it was an IDE drive, which I wound up replacing with a faster SATA model), I hoped my video card would work (it didn’t), and I thought my DVD drive would work (it did). In the end I wound up buying parts I thought I’d be able to reuse, so my total price wasn’t as low as my initial estimate.
  • Expect mishaps. I bought the wrong motherboard. Well, not the wrong one, but one that didn’t have a FireWire port, which I wanted. Well, I had a FireWire card, but it didn’t fit into the motherboard. Anyway, I figured all this out after I installed the CPU, which meant I had to remove it from the board, break the thermal compound seal, and ship the motherboard back. When I got the new motherboard and reinstalled the CPU, because the thermal compound left there didn’t work anymore, the machine would start and within 10 seconds overheat and shut itself off. Next thing you know I’m scraping hardened thermal compound off the CPU with Goof Off and a credit card, and reapplying fresh from a tube I had to pick up from Radio Shack. Lesson: there will be mishaps. Expect crap to go wrong. Be confident in your ability to fix it after you Google the solution to the problem hundreds of people have had before you did.
  • Read the frakkin’ manual. With years of tinkering in my PC’s case under my belt, I went into my build eager to start working and only skimmed the user guides and online howto’s before I started. Don’t do that. Open and read the full-on manual that comes in the box with every single one of your parts. If you’re not sure about something said manual includes, do your research before you plug anything in.
  • Buy locally if you can. My initial parts order was from Newegg, which was great price-wise, but really sucked when I had to return my motherboard, because I had to pay shipping fees and a restocking fee. With a Fry’s down the road, I regretted not just buying everything at the store itself from the get-go to to make returns easier.
  • Give yourself lots of time. I wrongly assumed I’d be able to finish my build in a day, but it took two whole days and stressed me out because they were work days. Don’t build a new PC when you’re on deadline or otherwise pinched for time. Give yourself a whole weekend and a clean and spacious work area that you can leave filled with packing debris and electronic parts strewn about for a few days.

 

Have you built your own PC? Are you considering taking the leap? Let us know how it went or what you’re thinking in the comments.

Gina Trapani, Lifehacker’s founding editor, loves turning on her new PC every single day. Her new weekly feature, Smarterware, appears every Wednesday on Lifehacker. Subscribe to the Smarterware tag feed to get new installments in your newsreader

[Link]

App in the Air

June 28th, 2012 David No comments

appintheair screen1 2large 642x481 App in the Air

AppAdvice has teamed up with AITA Limited, our latest AppAdvice Dailypodcast sponsor, in order to offer you a chance to win one of three $10 iTunes Gift cards. the credit can be used towards App in the air in-app purchases and anything else your little heart desires.

Whether a frequent flyer or occasional vacationer, App in the Air helps you stay up-to-date on flight details and everything that’s going on in and near the airport with a combination of technical information and social network integration.

appintheair screen3 4large 300x225 App in the AirQuick and easy access to everything App in the Air has to offer, including notifications.

Start by entering your name and flight information to create a virtual boarding pass, which you can share with friends via Twitter or Facebook. Flight tracking details include a map, plus check-in, boarding, taxi, take-off, and landing times. In addition, you can receive instant alerts for any gate changes or delays by adding the Notifications package via a $0.99 in-app purchase.

Beyond flight data, App in the Air offers great resources while at home, plus in and around the airport terminals. For each airport, separated into Departure and Arrival, you have access to overall flight delay status, weather, currency converter, chat, and a crowd-sourced tips area.

The tips area contains several sections for general activity, food establishments, transportation, rules, and much more. Each section consists of user submitted recommendations and reports. Tips can be what coffee shop is best to visit for morning travelers, which public transportation is cheaper or easiest, where the free Wi-Fi hotspots are, and so on.

appintheair screen5 6large 300x225 App in the AirGet recommendations and reports from other travelers just like you via tips and IM.

Along with tips, App in the Air also provides a chat system. You can strike up a conversation for a time distraction, ask where the quickest security lines are at the moment, or anything else you would like immediate feedback on.

That’s it! Now, get your own copy and enter to win a little extra moneyApp in the Airis designed for iPhone and iPod touch running iOS 4.3 or later, and available in the App Store as a free download.

To have a chance at winning one of the three $10 iTunes Gift Card codes, just leave a relevant comment below before June 22 at 11:59 p.m. PDT. Gift cards are only valid for United States iTunes Store accounts. Only one entry per person is allowed. Please be sure to also check your junk email boxes so that you won’t miss out if you win. {Link}

 

Bluetooth 4.0

June 18th, 2012 Dan No comments

By Mike Elgan

wireless technologies have been transforming domestic life since the availability of home radios in the 1920s. Since then every new kind of wireless technology and every new application has brought more transformative changes to the home. 

Television, for example, used to receive its signal wirelessly, which enabled its fast adoption in the 1950s. As the use of cable TV spread, transforming a wireless signal into a nonwireless one, wireless remote controls added another convenience.

Cordless phones changed when and where you could make and receive calls. Wireless garage door openers and other special-purpose wireless devices subtly improved people’s lives in small ways. You probably have a Wi-Fi network in your home, which you use to connect computers, laptops, phones and possibly your TV to the Internet.

You probably also use another wireless technology called Bluetooth. If you have a wireless headset with your cell phone, or a wireless keyboard or mouse with your computer, you’re using Bluetooth.

Both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are geeky technologies working invisibly and behind the scenes to subtly and profoundly change homes all over the world. They’ve eliminated cables, reducing clutter. And they’ve freed you to place consumer electronics devices anywhere.

Now a brand-new technology is about to really change things again.

table>
why the new, improved Bluetooth will change your house. The fourth generation of Bluetooth technology is revolutionary. It’s not just a little better than the Bluetooth you’re currently using. It’s massively better. 

Today most chatter about Bluetooth 4.0 is about advanced gadgets, such as the highly anticipated Pebble E-Paper Watch (shown). The device will use Bluetooth 4.0 to let you control your phone, as well as household appliances and media devices like your TV, from your wrist.

Bluetooth 4.0 is also called Bluetooth Smart Ready, and one of the best things about it is that it uses much less power.

If you use a wireless mouse or keyboard, you know that the batteries have to be changed or recharged every few weeks or, at most, every few months. Bluetooth 4.0 would enable them to never have to do anything with the batteries. These devices would be charged when you open the box and remain charged for more years than you would want to use them.

This is great news, and not just for lazy wireless keyboard users. I’ll tell you why in a minute.

Where Bluetooth 4.0 comes from. Bluetooth 4.0 isn’t something you buy at the store. At some point, one by one, a gazillion gadgets will add or upgrade to the new technology. The most aggressive company to build Bluetooth 4.0 into its products is Apple. This is surprising, because Apple often lags behind other companies in the introduction of new standards and new technologies. 

The iPhone 4S was the first phone ever to support Bluetooth 4.0. The current iPad (shown in use above) is the first tablet to support it. In fact, every major Apple product, including desktops and laptops, shipped in the past year comes with Bluetooth 4.0 support.

By the end of the year, we can expect every major Bluetooth device, from phones to tablets to peripheral devices, to support the new Bluetooth 4.0 standard.

And that’s just the beginning.

What happens when everything is connected. The reason Bluetooth 4.0 will completely change everything in the home is that it will accomplish the following feats: 

1. It will replace proprietary technologies. A wide range of household gadgets, from TV remote controls to room temperature thermostats to doorbells, use nonstandard tech to communicate wirelessly. New capabilities in Bluetooth 4.0 will mean all these gadgets can just use the new standard. When that happens, you’ll be able to easily connect to, monitor and control things with your phone and tablet. Current tablet products, such as Control4’s 7-Inch Portable Touch Screen (shown) use Wi-Fi or proprietary wireless technologies. Because of those technologies, the use of tablets for controlling things is rare. Bluetooth will make home tablet remote controls and control panels commonplace.

2. It will enable more things to be wireless. Bluetooth 4.0 will make it cheap and easy for companies to add wireless connectivity to random things: lamps, washing machines, refrigerators, coffee makers, air conditioners, ovens and much more. You’ll be able to control and monitor things from your phone or over the Internet that you previously had to control by touching the object.

3. It will let you automate things. Once an appliance or piece of functional furniture can be controlled through Bluetooth 4.0, it can be easily automated. You just need the software to control it. Your smart phone and tablet are based on an “app” economy, so you can expect literally thousands of home-control apps to come on the market over the next few years.

4. It will help appliances talk to one another. With all your stuff connected via Bluetooth 4.0, the appliances in your house can talk to other appliances without your involvement. The thermostat can turn on the air conditioner. An incoming phone call can pause your TV show. The alarm clock by your bed can turn on the coffee machine. The cell phone in your pocket can turn on the lights in and around your house as you pull into the driveway.

Futurists have been making bold predictions about the coming age of the “smart home” for decades. All these visions involve wireless technology for connecting devices to the Internet, to user control devices and to each other.

Bluetooth 4.0 is that technology. And now it’s here.

 

via Manage lights, refrigerators and more through your phone or tablet when the latest wireless technology rolls into all your home devices.

Wake Up! It’s a Defusable Bomb Alarm Clock

June 2nd, 2012 David No comments

the best way to get out of bed in the morning may be to scare the hell out of yourself — and your overnight guests.

By Michael Irons

alarmclock5101 Wake Up! It’s a Defusable Bomb Alarm Clock

It’s tough to get up in the morning. Whether you drank too much the night before, or had trouble sleeping, or simply find it difficult to face the dreary reality of existence, your phone or alarm clock may not always be able to get the job done. But what if your clock were actually a “bombthat you had to diffuse? Well, that’s exactly what the Defusable Clock ($43) is. Plus, it looks cool on a nightstand.

clock275 Wake Up! It’s a Defusable Bomb Alarm Clock

The fully functional alarm clock can, with some imagination, be made to look just like a bomb MacGyver would disarm with a golf pencil and bottle cap. The $43 kit includes only the clock, not the casing. So you’ll need to decide what type of explosive device you want it to become (we suggest bricks of phony C-4 or bundles of fake dynamite). Buttons on the control pad allow you to adjust the clock’s settings — time, alarm, snooze, etc. — but you can always hit the big red button to initiate a 10-second countdown sequence if you want to show it off / send someone into cardiac arrest. When time runs out, it “explodes” with loud noise and flashing LED lights.

To diffuse the clock, you need steady hands and some luck: Choose the correct wire and you’re home free. Pick the wrong one, and boom! Two are dummy wires. The wires are randomly sequenced, so you’ll never know which one you should snip. (Of course, if you literally cut them, you’ll also have to replace them. But much like your kid sister, it’s cheap and easy to do.)

iTunes Mastered

March 1st, 2012 David No comments

Listen to anyone involved in making Music, specifically someone involved in engineering music, and they’ll tell you that iTunes has resulted in poor sounding music. Music files just can’t get the same fidelity as a CD or vinyl record. Well, Apple has taken a step to remedy this problem and introduced a platform called mastered for iTunes.

mastered for itunes iTunes Mastered
The problem with iTunes is that it compresses music into an AAC file (or rips a CD to an MP3), which loses some of the nuance. AAC compresses music by eliminating some of the sounds you won’t hear, or just won’t miss. It’s the same way that the JPEG format cuts out colors that you just won’t see.

To get technical, music is typically recorded using 24-bit samples at 96kHz (or even up to 192kHz now), a CD will then handle 16-bit 44.1kHz which is about 15 percent of the data of the original recording. Even an iTunes Plus song compressed to a 256kbps AAC will be one-fifth the size of the CD recording, or three percent of the data from a 192kHz recording.

Because the AAC files compresses the song, it ends up not sounding the same way it would in a studio. Listeners using the bundled Apple earbuds, or cheap headphones in general won’t notice the difference, nor will they probably care too much.

However, there are users out there now with higher-end headphones that try to make the music sound better. Those users could be plugging in a pair of Beats, a mid-range pair of Sennheisers, or they could be plugging their iPhone into high-end audio systems. Those users need music that sounds better than the average compressed music file.

To answer this need Apple has put up a page on iTunes called Mastered for iTunes.

The albums on this page have been mastered to work around the limitations of the file format and the hardware the music is played on. Apple has given engineers guidelines and a toolkit to help make these albums sound better.

With the tools, engineers can check out how tracks will sound when a user buys them from iTunes. It’s extra work on the engineer’s part, but it’s important to the process to get the music to sound right.

Without the tools, songs will still sound “good” to most users, but won’t sound perfect. For example, Masterdisk Chief Engineer Andy VanDette has completely remastered all of Rush’s catalog to be Mastered for iTunes.

By making the albums Mastered for iTunes VanDette can make sure the albums sound just like they did 35 years ago when Rush started making music.

Of course to appreciate those sounds you’ll still want something better than a cheap pair of headphones. The tracks still probably won’t sound as good as a lossless file would sound, but you’d need to be an audiophile or a music engineer to hear the differences.

As devices start to get bigger storage capacities those lossless files, or just higher resolution AAC files could be a possibility.

For now it’d just be nice if more albums were added to the Mastered for iTunes page. It’s about time the music industry started mastering music to sound as close to studio-quality as possible on when played through a smartphone or iPod. [Source]

Skirt Steak

February 28th, 2012 David No comments

skirt steak 4 Skirt Steak

I’d like to introduce you to my favorite cut of beef. Maybe you’ve already met. If not, meet Skirt steak, butter in meat form. rich and full of flavor, if you’ve never had Skirt Steak, I urge you to try some soon.

skirt steak 1 Skirt Steak

Skirt Steak isn’t the cheapest cut of meat, but as rich and satisfying as it is, you don’t really need as much. You can spend bunches on all cuts of meat to totally be disappointed, but we’ve yet to meet a piece of skirt steak we didn’t like. Plus as simple and quick as it is to prepare you’ll have a drool worthy meal on the table quicker than one of those fancy steak restaurants, and not have to wait in line.

Sometimes we prepare skirt steak with a marinade to give it some extra flavor. If you want to keep things simple, it’s not necessary. That’s up to you. A marinade recipe is listed below, but feel free to mix it up, adding different flavor combos.

skirt steak 2 Skirt Steak

Our favorite way to cook Skirt Steak is in an iron skillet. A few minutes each side, in a hot skillet to get a good sear is perfection in my book.

skirt steak 3 Skirt Steak

Of course, we like it medium rare, so cook a little more if needed.
skirt steak 4 Skirt SteakEnjoy alongside your favorite side dish. A simple green salad or some baked beans would be a perfect match.

Happy Cooking!

Prep time: 30 minutes

Cook Time: 6 minutes

Total Time: 36 minutes

Makes about 3 servings.

Ingredients

  • 1 pound skirt steak
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 3 teaspoons soy sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • 2 teaspoons rice vinegar

Instructions

  1. If using marinade, mix all ingredients together in a zip top bag, add skirt steak, coat well and marinate refrigerated until ready to cook. Marinate for at least 30 minutes if time allows.
  2. In an iron skillet over medium-medium high heat place the skirt steak. Slightly press down to create sear. For medium rare, cook for 3 minutes. Flip steak and cook for an additional 3 minutes. If more done steak is desired cook for longer.
  3. Let steak rest about 10 minutes, then cut thin slices against the grai
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Wally One Boat

September 13th, 2011 David No comments

wally one xl Wally One Boat

It’s not exactly cheap, but the Wally One boat (€580,000; roughly $840,000) is likely the most affordable in the company’s line of legendary sea cruisers. A replacement for the company’s prior Wally Tender, the One is designed to be the ultimate day boat, offering a small kitchen area, a sleeping area for two — three if you’re adventurous — a 43-foot length, Yanmar 370hp engines, and a top speed of 40-50 Knots.[Uncrate]

pixel Wally One Boat
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