$1 Image Stabilizer For Any Camera - Lose The Tripod - video powered by Metacafe
The steps for this project are in the June 27 dead-tree edition, but here's the video tutorial.
$1 Image Stabilizer For Any Camera - Lose The Tripod - video powered by Metacafe
The steps for this project are in the June 27 dead-tree edition, but here's the video tutorial.
Posted at 02:09 PM in D.I.Y. | Permalink | Comments (0)
Need a Mother's Day card in a hurry? We're here to help.
These cards were written by F5 guy Dan Conover and designed by F5 page designer Rodolfo Larios. Simply pick the card you like, double-click on it to open it full-size, and then select "Save Image As" to download it to your computer. Print them out, fold them and personalize them for your Mom.
The F5 Signature Squirrel: Rodolfo's squirrel pages get lots of attention, so he just had to add this one to the list.
Continue reading "F5's download & D.I.Y. Mother's Day card kit" »
Posted at 06:17 PM in D.I.Y., Top 5 | Permalink | Comments (0)
F5 HOW-TO: Patch that bike flat! from Dan Conover on Vimeo.
In the first of two additions this week to the Friday 5 Channel on Vimeo, I provide a How-To guide to fixing a flat bicycle tire. I know a little bit about this procedure, too: Until I upgraded to Armadillo tires on the Trek SU-100 that I ride to work, I was fixing two flats a month on average. That's because I live in the North Central neighborhood, and for whatever reason the city seldom gets around to cleaning Upper-Upper King Street.
I don't give a demonstration of how to remove the rear wheel, partly because there are so many ways that chains and shifters can be set up, but also because it's just kind of annoying compared to removing the front wheel.
And yes, if you're in a big hurry you can strip the tire off the rim, remove the tube, patch the puncture, re-inflate and go -- all without taking the wheel off. But that' kinda like showing off for most of us.
I know this is kind of basic for some people, but here's the truth: I was in my 40s before I fixed my first flat, and people pay good money every day to have a bike mechanic fix their flats. You can do this.
Posted at 09:13 AM in D.I.Y., Take 5, Video | Permalink | Comments (0)
This week's section is devoted entirely to rounding up the best cool Web apps, free downloads, useful sites and sweet programs, all with an eye toward providing you with ways to improve your life -- in both cyberspace and meatspace.
Of course there's always more stuff than you get fit into a newspaper page, even when you leave out every third word like "cool" and "nifty." So here's a more complete list of cool, nifty stuff, broken down by categories. And of course, this being the Web, everything is linked.
I began this list on April 10 over at my personal blog, so this list includes some suggestions from readers there. Now: What would you add? What would you replace?
THE BIGGIES (regardless of category)
SOCIAL & COMMUNICATION
BLOGGING & PUBLISHING
BROWSING
TRAVEL
PRODUCTIVITY
BUY & SELL
VIDEO & AUDIO & IMAGE
SEARCH
FUN & MISC.
Websites:
* Reddit
* MetaFilter
Firefox:
* It's All Text
* Scribe Fire
* Adblock+
Posted at 04:07 PM in Blogs, D.I.Y., Geekery, Get smart, Modern life | Permalink | Comments (0)
Looking for a quickie April Fool's prank... or just sly, remorseless revenge for one?
Try this: Turn your victim's computer keyboard into utter gibberish.
We tested this one at Friday 5 Labs last week, and it actually works. Try it on your own computer before you set out to prank your computer-using friends. It's annoying, for sure, and if your victim is compu-phobic in the slightest it's likely to cause a major meltdown. But it's also easily reversed, and will cause no permanent harm.
Follow along after the jump...
Posted at 02:45 PM in D.I.Y., Fun 5, Geekery | Permalink | Comments (0)
LAWNMOWER HOW-TO: F5 tune-up guide from Dan Conover on Vimeo.
I've been mowing grass on the cheap since the Ford administration, which means I've brought home some epically cruddy lawnmowers. Some I got for free and nursed back to "health." Others I bought and then couldn't give away. I've had mowers that went BANG and then fell forever silent, power-assisted mowers with bad attitudes, mowers with strange wheel-base set-ups and mowers with what could best be described as perpetual head-colds.
And what have I learned from all this? Two things:
This week's Friday 5 is meant to help you get your lawnmower ready for the grass-growing season ahead, but I'm a guy who learns better by watching than reading. Which is why my wife Janet and I went out and produced these videos to help you through your pre-season lawnmower tune-up -- we figured that if regular people could witness a dork like me doing a tune-up, they'd feel more confident about doing it themselves.
And that will save you money.
Also, because we figured some of you would only want to see instructionals on specific tasks, I've broken the video up into five shorter chapters, too (ed note: video links will follow as these are posted):
You can now watch all my Friday 5 videos on their own Vimeo channel. Free subscription via RSS!
While this hasn’t been scientifically proven (so far as we know), we consider this statement a corollary to Murphy’s Law: “The more dire the situation, the less likely that the only batteries you can find will fit your flashlight.”
So here’s a bit of emergency knowledge that’s worth tucking away for tropical storm season: The only differences between C batteries and D batteries are size and storage capacity. Both varieties deliver 1.5 volts of power.
Which brings us to today’s tip — which comes from Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories via Lifehacker.
If you’re ever in a pinch, use regular, electricity-conducting U.S. quarters to make a quick C-battery adapter for D-battery device. Two or three quarters per battery will generally do the trick.
But what about those pesky four-battery configurations, found on things like boom-boxes and battery-powered camp lanterns? Here’s a quick fix from one alert Lifehacker reader:
“My solution was to just get some tape and wrap the batteries until they were about the same size. This kept them from unlodging from their positions...”
Meanwhile, the staff here at Friday 5 Labs has come up with an alternate solution: Use those quarters to buy actual D batteries...
Posted at 06:01 AM in D.I.Y. | Permalink | Comments (0)
Crabbing is a great summer activity for new arrivals, parents with young children or anyone who would enjoy doing something outdoors that doesn’t require complex tackle, a boat — or even knowledge about local waters.
The best part? You can outfit yourself with a fairly complete set of equipment for less than $20.
Where to go
Some spots are better than others, but basically
any tidal creek will have crabs in it. Ask around at your neighborhood
bait-and-tackles to find out where the locals are catching jimmys and
jennys these days, or just go exploring. A popular place for beginners
is the Pitt Street Bridge in Mount Pleasant, which provides easy public
access to Cove Creek.
(Photo: That's Scott Fish of Pittsburgh, Pa., and his 11-year-old son Mitchell "pulling and dipping" at Pitt Street Bridge. You can also barely make out his younger son, 9-year-old Justin, too. The Fish family takes the crabs they catch back to the Sea Cabins pier on Isle of Palms and use them to catch bonnethead sharks. Mitchell caught a junior-record bonnethead using blue crabs for bait this week. Dan Conover photo)
The “get” list
Less is definitely more when it comes to crabbing, and few recreational crabbers do it because they like the nifty gear.
Must haves: 1. A dip net (48-inch spread on a plain wooden handle, $7 at Haddrell’s Point Tackle and Supply in Mount Pleasant) for scooping up crabs; 2. A hand line, to which you’ll attach the bait. You can make do with regular twine, or you can chuck out $2 for a 25-foot, pre-weighted crab line with a hook to hold the bait in place; 3. A standard 5-gallon plastic bucket (if you have to buy one expect to pay about $8) with handle.
Nice-to-haves: Collapsing crab traps made of wire or cotton cord ($2 and up). Go-withs: Extend the reach of your collapsing traps with a 50-foot line ($3.29); You can also bring a standard cooler and fill it with ice, which mellows out live crabs quickly.
Bait: The preferred bait is the chicken neck (less than $2 will get you four of them at a fishing store), but crabs will bite just about anything. Check your kitchen for old, freezer-burned chicken wings and drumsticks before you pay good money for bait.
Posted at 03:27 PM in Animals, D.I.Y., Food, Pure Lowcountry, Top 5 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Have you ever noticed how some people’s comments on blogs and forums just look better than others?
That’s because they’re using invisible HTML tags to dress up their thoughts. Learn these five simple tags (using the shifted characters above the comma and period keys on your computer) and bask in the glow of your new cyber-geekiness.
Italic <em>: Makes plain text italic (the “em” stands for “emphasize”). Close it out by adding a </em> tag at the end of the passage you want italicized. Example: “Very <em>cool!</em>” looks like this: Very cool!
Bold <strong>: Same thing as the italics tag. Close it out with a </strong> tag.
Hyperlink <a href=”http://www.example.com”>: Copy the full web address for your link and paste it between the quotation marks. Define the text you want to make clickable by adding a </a> tag at the end of it.
Inset quote <blockquote>: Decrease the margins for longer quotations with a <blockquote> tag. Close out the quoted material with </blockquote>.
Send e-mail <a href=”mailto:[email protected]”> : Treat this one like a hyperlink, closing it out with a </a> tag. The difference? People who click on the link will get a blank e-mail form with the address you specify in the “Send to” field. The address goes after the colon and don’t add any spaces.
Here are some ways you can improve your mileage, what with gas nearing $3 a gallon:
— Janet Edens
Posted at 06:02 AM in D.I.Y., Take 5 | Permalink | Comments (1)
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