Soak Onions in Water for Tear-Free Cutting [Food Hacks]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerMay 22, 2010 at 07:00PM

Soak Onions in Water for Tear-Free CuttingIf you’re looking for a way to decrease the eye-stinging power of cut onions without resorting to wearing a dive mask, a simple soak will do the trick.

The sting of onions is so powerful that people are always on the lookout for new ways to banish it without suiting up like a bio-hazard team. At the cooking-centered blog The Kitchn they highlight a trick shared by Rick Bayless of the show Mexico: One Plate at a Time:

His sous-chefs were busy prepping onions and he quickly stopped the camera operator to make sure he got a shot of their large buckets filled with water and drowning onions. (Onions can’t swim without water wings – didn’t you know?) He said that all the onions in his restaurants get a quick dip in the “pool” before being used in any dish: fresh or cooked. They don’t need to soak long, just enough to get them washed off after being peeled and having their ends cut off. Not only does it eliminate tears, it also brings out their true flavor without being so harsh.

This is definitely an interesting twist on cutting onions under the water and certainly easier. Have a clever kitchen trick to share? Let’s hear about it in the comments.

Moon Zoo Is a Crowd-Sourced Index of Interesting Lunar Features [Friday Fun]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerMay 21, 2010 at 11:00AM

If you’re an astronomy buff and looking for a little bit of Friday Fun, you can pore over high-resolution photos of the Moon and help NASA flag and identify previously unseen craters.

Moon Zoo is an interactive project between NASA and the public, powered by the Zooniverse engine. Participants can mark craters, identify interesting features—fissures, abandoned space gear, alien outposts?—and help map the surface of the Moon in unprecedented detail.

If you’re going to take a break and do a little aimless browser clicking, you might as well head over to Moon Zoo and be the one who discovers the long-lost Moon Death Ray of Dr. Zindartha. Have a favorite and fun project to share in the vein of Moon Zoo’s crowd-sourced discovery? Let’s hear about it in the comments. Thanks ptsgp!

Empire Strikes 30: Ars looks back at an amazing film

By bkuchera@arstechnica.com (Ben Kuchera), Ars TechnicaMay 21, 2010 at 07:51AM


Star Wars: The Empire Strikes back is one of the best science fiction films ever made. It’s also 30 years old today, so we give you official permission to feel old. While every movie in the original trilogy is endlessly quoted and referenced in pop culture, Empire Strikes Back is the film that comes the closest to being a great movie.

The film is jet black in tone. Luke lost the only person he knew that connected him to his father, and to the legacy of the Jedi Knights, when Obi-Wan was struck down by Vader in A New Hope (or as older Ars staffers still refer to it, Star Wars). Han Solo is biding his time with the rebels before leaving to return to his life of being a professional smuggler and scoundrel; the bounty on his head is becoming too much to bear. The rebels may have destroyed the Death Star, but they’re still undersupplied and on the run, holed up on a frozen hell of a planet. Darth Vader is scouring space to find them, and he seems oddly preoccupied with a young pilot named Luke Skywalker. It only goes downhill from there.

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A Good Watch: 3-Saw Edger Video

By Gordon DeWitte, ToolmongerJanuary 05, 2010 at 03:14PM

There’s a neat YouTube video referenced on the Make blog showing a Jackson Lumber 3-Saw Vertical Edger in operation. A “lumber’s eye” view of a 3-saw edger is shown in the picture above: lots of heavy-duty exposed saw blades with an enclosure for the operator. I really liked watching those blades ripping through a large log, and then doing it all over again after the log is rotated. It would be kind of cool to have a 3-saw vertical edger in the garage — yup, that’s my 3-saw edger over there in the corner, behind the Bessemer converter — but the neighbors would probably complain about the noise.

How Lumber is Made [Make Online]
Jackson Lumber 3-Saw Vertical Edger at Work [YouTube]
Jackson Lumber Harvester [Manufacturer’s Site]

Memorize Volume Conversions with a Helpful Graphic [Memory]

By Kevin Purdy, LifehackerJune 14, 2010 at 08:30AM

Memorize Volume Conversions with a Helpful GraphicIf you’re anything like me, you’re doing a sad number of Google searches for things like “one gallon into pints”—while the garlic is quickly browning. This simple visualization of gallons, quarts, pints and cups locks in such volume conversions.

Image by Emma Christensen for The Kitchn. Apologies for an earlier misattribution.

Apartment Therapy’s The Kitchn blog points us to this clever visualization of how many of each major kitchen measurement fits inside one another. I found a big-enough graphic of the trick at a fifth grade math wiki page, but there are likely better and more printer-friendly sizes out there. If you like the idea, of course, you’re free to draw or Photoshop it yourself—and share the results in the comments, if you please.

Got a better way of remembering how many of something goes into something else? Tell us your grandmother’s little trick in the comments.

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System Slowdowns [Downloads]

By The How-To Geek, LifehackerJune 11, 2010 at 05:00PM

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System SlowdownsWindows only: Soluto bills itself as an “Anti-Frustration Software”, and it’s not hard to see why—it tracks all the applications in your system boot process, and tells you exactly which ones are slowing you down.

Once you’ve installed the software and rebooted your PC, Soluto springs into action, tracking every single process that runs during the boot process, and then allows you to easily drill down into the list of processes to see exact times for each one. To make it easier for the layman to understand what processes can be removed, the applications are grouped into “No-brainer” or “Potentially removable” groups.

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System Slowdowns

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System SlowdownsOnce you’ve identified an application that you’d like to deal with, you can drill down into the details and control it directly from this screen. You can “Pause” the application, which will effectively remove it from the boot process, or you can “Delay” it, which will change the service to run on a delay instead of directly during the boot process—which will get you to a working desktop a little quicker.

The graph next to the buttons shows you what other users did, so if you really have no idea what something is, you can use the wisdom of the crowd—though we’d like to point out if you really aren’t sure, you might want to Google it first, or ask a more geeky friend.

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System Slowdowns

Clicking the Read more link next to the application name will bring you to a screen that shows even more details about a process,including the process name, what percentage of Soluto users have it installed, and a lot more information.

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System Slowdowns

Other than tracking your boot process, you can also enable tracking while you are running your PC, which will allow Soluto to try and identify more problems with system slowdowns, compatibility, and other issues. You can choose the “My PC Just Frustrated Me” option, which will pop up a screen with some suggestions on what applications might be cause, and send the report to Soluto—though you won’t immediately see any results from doing so.

To better understand how Soluto works, check out this short video which does a great job of explaining the software, how to use it, and how it can help you troubleshoot the boot process:

Soluto Is an Awesome Tool to Speed Up Your System Boot, Fix System Slowdowns

According to our conversations with Roee Adler from Soluto, the software will always be free for end-users. Soluto’s application does send some information about your PC back to Soluto’s servers in order to analyze your system, but they assured us that it was limited strictly to data about the processes, drivers, and system components, and no personal information is transmitted or kept anywhere.

Soluto is a free download for Windows only, and definitely worth a look if you’d like to troubleshoot your system boot speed issues.

Coming soon: an open source Dropbox alternative with collaboration

By Lee Mathews, Download SquadJune 11, 2010 at 12:00PM

Filed under:

Dropbox is a great little service (and app). Developer Hylke Bons seems to like it — but he’s got designs on building an alternative with a few improvements. As he writes on his blog, “Dropbox has a great user experience, but it has downsides as well: you can’t host your own server; it’s not open source and has some freaky things in its license agreement.”

Dubbed SparkleShare, Bons is building his project using Mono, GTK+, and Git. Like Dropbox, SparkleShare sets up a local folder which is automatically kept in sync — though not in the cloud. Instead, you and your friends/coworkers set up connections to each other’s shares (or you can keep everything to yourself, of course). That’ll make SparkleShare an extremely interesting option for teams who need to collaborate via the ‘Net — and for users who want to keep files in sync without floating them in the cloud.

And since you’re hosting your own server, there’s no monthly fees to worry about — which is always a bonus.

A Linux release is the first item on the agenda, with OS X and Windows versions to follow. Bons is seeking contributors — if you’re interested in helping out, drop him a line on the SparkleShare web site!

[via OMG! Ubuntu]

Coming soon: an open source Dropbox alternative with collaboration originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 11 Jun 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DropboxOpen sourceDownload SquadMicrosoft WindowsSparkleShare