Archives de l’auteur : kodiak
Linux-Hacker.net
Xinha
Xinha Here! is a Firefox extension wrapper for the Xinha HTML editor. It (…) opens a Xinha HTML editor in your browser allowing you to edit the data in a WYSIWYG on any website without coping and pasting to secondary HTML editor. (…) the Xinha editor is installed on your local machine rather then a server (…). This extension goes great with the SpellBound spell checker extension.
Color code your Backpackit.com tasks using The Printable CEO as guide»Leon Kilat ::: The Cybercafe Experiments
Max Limpag : the best of two worlds (signal vs. noise 37 signal’s Backpackit (more about that here) & the printable CEO), or how to Color code your Backpackit.com tasks using The Printable CEO as guide.
Lock Picking 101
www.eirikso.com
Eirikso (the author of the video of the seasons in Norway), also wrote on IPod video : How to get video on to your iPod and Flying 8 hours with a video iPod and a kid.
MisterHouse
MisterHouse is an open source home automation program. It’s fun, it’s free, and it’s entirely geeky.
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AM/FM
Use an AM/FM radio to receive aircraft transmissions.
With all the high-tech listening options out there — iPods, MP3 players, satellite radio — who needs AM/FM? But before you toss that radio relic into the trash, try this project to eavesdrop on air traffic radio transmissions.
You’ll need: AM/FM radio, screwdriver.
How to do it: (Note: Aircraft radio signals broadcast on the 108 to 136 MHz range, whereas FM radio signals use the 88 to 108 MHz range. To pick up aircraft signals, all you’re doing is adjusting your dial to pick up the higher frequency.)
Open the back of your radio (by either sliding the case open or using a screwdriver) so you can see the parts of the circuit board.
Examine the circuit board and look for the part under the tuning dial that selects the stations. Look for two or three small square metal pieces on the circuit board; these are the filter transformers. One of these filter transformers will have two or three small glass diodes next to it (diodes look like clear beads with wires on each end). This is the transformer that you need to adjust.
Turn your FM radio on and turn to a spot between stations so that you hear a background hiss.
Using a screwdriver, turn the top of the filter transformer until the hiss gets as loud as possible. This converts the FM portion of the radio so it can receive AM signals.
Now you must extend the range of the FM band. To do this, look at the radio’s tuning dial (still in the open part of the radio) and find a pair of small copper coils next to a large square tuning capacitor on the main board. Using the flat part of the screwdriver, spread the coils apart so there is as much space as possible between each coil. By doing this, you have extended the broadcast range and can receive aircraft signals
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Lifehacker, the Productivity and Software Guide
Switching to Mac – you should too
Switching to Mac – you should too, a list of what Desktop Linux should be.