Archive

Archive for the ‘Random Thoughts’ Category

Found a Recipe for Legoland-style Apple Fries

August 23rd, 2009 7 comments

I rarely post recipes on my blog (Callie is the expert in that department), but I recently came across a recipe for the apple fries they serve at Legoland (I think they were the best thing in the whole park). So I looked it up here and grabbed the recipe. I tried it out this evening, and it was very good! Not as crispy as the ones from Legoland, but the taste is really close. Here it is:

Apple Fries:
8 medium Granny Smith apples, sliced
1/4 cup butter
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg

Melt butter in a heavy skillet over medium-low heat. Add apples, brown sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg. Saute 15 to 20 minutes, or until apples are tender. Serve with ice cream (or Callies magic butter cream frosting).

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

God be with you ’till we tweet again

April 5th, 2009 No comments

This weekend I attended LDS General Conference. But this time there was Twitter. It changed the whole experience for me, as I found myself interacting with hundreds of people, sharing favorite quotes and making comments. I used http://twitterfall to see all the other tweets tagged with #ldsconf. In all, 775 “tweeple” posted 5936 tweets (Thanks to @ldsconf and http://hashtags.org for correcting me and helping me keep track). The most was 242 by @heartensoul4u. I have to say, this changed my church conference experience. I stayed awake the whole time! Last October marked the the first significant use of Twitter at LDS General Conference, but I think it increased significantly this year. It was nice to be part of that.

Just for fun, I made a Yahoo! Pipes LDS General Conference Tweetmap to show where the last 100 tweets came from. I wanted to map all 2000+ tweets, but Twitter’s search API only allows 100 at a time. Good enough for now. If you’re curious, all the tweets have been organized by speaker here: http://conference-tweets.appspot.com. Enjoy!

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts
Categories: Conferences, LDS, Random Thoughts Tags:

BarTor Android App: the best illegal money you’ll ever spend

April 1st, 2009 No comments

I already twittered this, but the image needed to be shared as well, so here it is:

From gadgetreview.com:

“Simply put, use this app to take a picture of a bar code of any media you like (CD’s & Movies) and it’ll forward the information to your favorite torrent program and start downloading.  On sale now at the Android App Store for $2.99, it could be the most illegal money you ever spend.”

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts
Categories: Random Thoughts Tags:

Free certification in IP Telephony Repair for anyone who can tweak T-mobile @home router

April 1st, 2009 2 comments

(This is an older blog post I finally decided to publish. Perhaps T-mobile’s VOIP @home system works now that it’s 6 months later. I guess this is the price you pay for being an early adopter — or at least with T-mo.)

OK, so I made the certification thing up. But I really think that anyone who has enough technical skill to set up T-mobile @home service successfully should earn a Certificate in IP Telephony Repair from ITT Tech. Here’s what you need to know to get your router working properly with Comcast (By the way, I am now an official, card-carrying member of the Linksys Support Forums):

The trick that fixed it for me was opening port 5060.
SIP uses UDP (and sometimes TCP) on port 5060. I believe SIP is needed for any VOIP calls. So the way to open port 5060 is to make sure that that port is not being forwarded to any IP. For example in Application and Gaming
Regards,
MrBinum

Hmm… UDP, SIP, TCP… Got all that? Good. So here is what you actually need to know in order to open port 5060: Assuming you have the standard WRTU54G-TM router, go to Applications & Gaming –> Port Range Forwarding. Then enter whatever under Application (I put “VOIP” but I don’t think it matters). Next enter “5060″ under Start and “5060″ for End. This is the port you want to open. Then put “both” for Protocol (both means TCP and UDP). Now enter your router’s IP Address. It should be 192.168.0.1. Finally, check “Enable.” This seems to be working for me now, but please correct me if my instructions are wrong. Hopefully this will help others to figure out how to get their VOIP working consistently. Tom

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Response to “More on Apple in Education” from TheMacSucks.com

March 10th, 2009 No comments
Thin client compared to full size PC tower

Thin client compared to full size PC tower

This is another one of those comments that turned into it’s own blog post. The gist of the article on themacsucks.com is that macs are overpriced and education dollars could be better spent on other solutions. It got me thinking about an age-old debate: Which computer is best for education? Here is my response:

First of all, congratulations on a very clever way to set up your blog. Hitting the mac love/hate nerve should help your pagerank as thousands of mac fanboys go one the defensive and still others take the opposite side. I won’t take either side, but as a former High School Computer Science teacher I have to offer my 2 cents…

Focusing on ratios such as kids/computer and dollars/computer ignores the more central issue: What do you want to do with the computers? Simply creating more “computer time” does not improve learning. Throwing more computer hardware at teachers and kids doesn’t improve learning either. We found this out the hard way in California. It’s amazing to me how little thought goes into spending 100′s of millions of dollars on technology.

There is also setup and maintenance to consider. This is rarely ever included in the cost of new systems. Installing and maintaining software is often left to the classroom teacher, which is a major reason why so many school computers end up sitting idle, collecting dust. I am a former Computer Science teacher in Southern California, I designed my own computer lab, set up and managed my own software, etc, etc. I chose to buy Dells, but I also spent hundreds of hours of my own time setting up and imaging computer after computer. If I had to do it again, I would probably go with a solution better suited to a classroom environment. Something like Edubuntu running on a thin client system would be a great way to cut down on maintenance issues and dramatically lower costs. All you need is a single thin client server and a bunch of thin clients with screens, keyboards, and mice. And by the way, thin clients don’t need to be upgraded every few years like stand-alone computers. Their life-cycle is more like 10-15 years.

Let’s face it, for most of what we do these days, all you need is a browser, a PDF viewer, and OpenOffice. But I wouldn’t rule out buying macs for something like video editing, even if it means buying fewer machines. It really depends on what you are trying to help people learn. If Edubuntu can’t do it, then I have to go elsewhere until it can. I only wish we could take some of the money we plan to spend on school technology and put it towards projects like Edubuntu. Then we’d get a decent video editor and much, much more! And while I am wishing, I wish my school district had listened to Kevin Haugh. He advocated for thin clients back in 2001 and no one listened.

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts
Categories: open source, Random Thoughts, Rants Tags: