• kitchencheatsheet

  • I was reading the following article about the Engineering Slide Charts and realized that it was now available as an App for my phone.

    Engineering Slide Chart in Play

    great-innovations-ultimate-engineering-screw-chart-front-detail

    The slide rule may be a quaint anachronism in this age of ubiquitous computing, but there’s still a place for the slide chart, the volvelle, the nomogram, and other hand-held “paper computers.” These are still published by a few companies, and are a handy source of on-the-spot reference data, particularly in field or workshop environments that may be inhospitable to or inconvenient for electronic devices or books. Slide charts containing key screw, bolt, and nut data have been around for decades, and the folks at Great Innovations identify TAD’s Universal Reference Calculator, discontinued in the mid 1990s, as inspiration for their chart.

    The thing itself is simple enough: a clear plastic outer sleeve printed with dimensional drawings and callout fields on both sides, and an opaque plastic inner card printed with the callout data. Sliding the card back and forth in the sleeve indexes all the callout data simultaneously, and of course can be used bidirectionally—you can get key dimensional data from a known fastener size, or figure out fastener size from some real measured dimension. Overall, the chart is about 1/16? thick, flexible, and measures 8.75? × 11?—about the same size as a standard sheet of printer paper.

     engineering-screw-chart-front

    The front includes sliding tap, drill and stress area callouts for SAE and metric screws, in both standard and coarse threads, as well as key dimensions—such as countersink depth, counterbore depth, socket cap size, etc.—for various types of screw heads, points and nuts. Detail boxes cover metric and SAE shoulder bolt dimensions. The areas not occupied by the sliding chart fields are filled up with static tabulated data—metric/SAE drill equivalent diameters, fractional/decimal drill diameters, common unit conversions, metric prefixes, and SAE bolt grade markings.

    engineering-screw-chart-back 

    The back has sliding indices for sheet metal and wire gages, dimensioned thicknesses, densities, and minimum bend radii; critical dimensions for tapered pipe threads both NPT and BSPT; and a hardness converter for Shore durometers A-OO with typical reference materials (e.g. “Shopping Cart Wheel”) and conversion factors for Brinell and Rockwell A-C hardnesses, as well as approximate tensile strengths. Static tabulated references include the numbering system for carbon and alloy steels, a circular actual-to-nominal pipe size gauge, and a slew of handy equations from statics, dynamics, electrical engineering, and statistics. One of the long edges is printed with an English ruler, and the other with a metric rule. No space is wasted; pulling out the sliding inner card reveals three more handy tables printed in the “dead spaces” between the keyholes—densities of common metals, a key to common mechanical drafting symbols, and a key to AWS standard weld symbols.

    I use the chart in my workshop quite often—mostly, so far, to look up tap drill sizes and gauge nominal pipe diameters. It’s compact and durable and water- and grease-proof, and has saved me a lot of time running back and forth between my web-connected smartphone, tablet, laptop, or whatever (all of which I like to keep clean) and my dirty workshop and tools. Mine is a review unit I got for free, and I would recommend it enthusiastically to others if not for the price of $24.99, which is about $10 more than I think I would pay for the thing. A functionally-equivalent app is available for both iOS and Android for $5 less, but in my mind that sort of defeats the purpose, which is that you can keep the chart on-hand in an environment that might not be hospitable for a handheld electronic device, and don’t have to worry about keeping it clean, charged, or safe from damage.

    Engineering Slide Charts

  • Reg Hardware Awards 2012: The Winners…

    …and The Loser

    By Register Hardware

    Almost 17,000 votes were cast by Reg readers when we asked you all to name the best – and the worst – tech products of 2012.

    We asked you to tell us which kit you though most warranted a Reg Hardware Award from shortlists in a variety of categories: laptop, tablet, e-reader, home entertainment device and smartphone, but we also asked you to pick your favourite technology retailer, media service provider and mobile service provider.

    We know you like your games, so we asked you to choose the best game of 2012 and to select the classic title you think most worthy of a place in our Antique Codeshow Hall of Fame.

    Finally, giving you the rein, we asked you to name the best technology product of 2012 – and the choose the worst, to receive our decidedly uncoveted Rusty Dodo Award.

    All your votes are in, and we’ve totted up the tallies, so here are the winners.

    Laptop of the Year

    Apple MacBook Pro 15in with Retina Display

    Runners Up Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon, Samsung Series 7

    Tablet of the Year

    Asus Google Nexus 7

    Runners Up Apple iPad 4, Samsung Galaxy Note 2

    Smartphone of the Year

    Samsung Galaxy S III

    Runners Up Apple iPhone 5, LG Google Nexus 4

    E-Reader of the Year

    Amazon Kindle Paperwhite

    Runners Up Amazon Kindle, Asus Google Nexus 7

    Home Entertainment Product of the Year

    Humax YouView DTR-T1000 IPTV Freeview DVR

    Runners Up Sony KD-84X9005 84in ultra-HD TV, LG 55LM960V 55in Smart TV

    Tech Retailer of the Year

    Amazon

    Runners Up Ebuyer, John Lewis

    Media Service Provider of the Year

    Netflix

    Runners Up Freeview HD, Sky

    Mobile Service Provider of the Year

    Three

    Runners Up EE 4G, O2

    Game of the Year

    Call of Duty: Black Ops 2

    Runners Up Borderlands 2, Dishonored

    Antique Codeshow Hall of Fame Award

    Lemmings

    Runners Up Half-life, Carmageddon

    How did the voting go? In most cases, the winner in each category was clear, garnering two or three times as many votes as its nearest rival. There were exceptions: in the Media Service Provider of the Year vote, Netflix was ahead of Freeview HD by a relatively small margin, not much between the top three e-readers, but only a handful of points separated the major Mobile Service Providers. Likewise, Half-Life scored almost as many votes as Lemmings in the Antique Code Show Hall of Fame voting, but the small blue suicide squads just clinched the award. Maybe next year, Half-life fans?

    And now for Product of the Year. We got some interesting, possibly sanity questioning suggestions, most notably "the Olympics opening ceremony", though there is a certain logic to it. Less so "fish fingers" and "Jaffa Cakes" – both tasty items but not what we were really after. El Reg‘s Editor was particularly tickled by the suggestion "Lewis Page Bullshit Generator v2" – as was the girlfriend of the (chap?) who voted for "my partner’s rampant rabbit".

    There were lots of votes for various Apple items and an assortment of Samsung-branded kit appeared on the list, but after totting up the numbers and adding in extra ones for folk who mis-spelled the names, we can announced that the Reg Hardware Product of the Year 2012 is the:

    Google Nexus 7

    Honorable Runner Up Raspberry Pi

    The votes for the Rusty Dodo Award comprised pretty much the same products that appeared in the Product of the Year list – though we notice the latter did not include Windows 8, which did make the list of products you think are a bit duff. Again, pretty much every recent Samsung tech toy garnered at least one vote, but again by totting up all the suggestions and variations on a theme, the Rusty Dodo Award 2012 goes to:

    Apple
  • Whoever compiled this infographic had the audience in mind; with its visually stimulating and sharp arrangement it is more than easy on the eyes.

    It’s incredibly true for most of us that our carpets are not as clean as we’d like. 63% is a pretty high figure for the amount of people not satisfied with the cleanliness of their carpet. But, with all the grime that comes in on our shoes from outside, it is extremely difficult to keep it nice and spotless. [via]

    RD-infographic_final

  • Saturday Night Live parodies the Verismo, Starbucks’ at-home brewing system.

  • The photo on the right is the traditional picture of me, taking a picture of me, taking a picture …2013-01-03 19.57.45

    The broadcast on the TV is my Samsung Galaxy SIII with Jelly Bean on Verizon which now supports the All-Share Cast Dongle (or Hub) shown in this Video. 

    So for $90 you can pick up one of these and using WiFi run your phone on the big screen.  Now if only I could work the P-I-P feature on the TV I might have something.

  • No one likes to be pre-defined! Even before meeting an IT person, people assume they "get" them.  Shows like The IT Crowd lead to misconceptions about information technology.

    There are many jobs IT workers specialize in. Of course no one person can do all of these things well, but often they are expected to be a Security Expert, Systems Administrator, Webmaster, Programmer and even Help desk. Too much to be effective.

    Here are a few examples of what we thought customers or co-workers think of us and sometimes what we think of them.  All in good humor.  http://www.orsyp.com/blog/610-sucks-being-it-guy/

     

    sucks-it-guy