Brian White

- xtcmxon Flickr
- DIY Disasters!

- articnomad on Flickr
- 16 Unusual Uses for Microwaves

- shawnzlea on Flickr
- Daily DIY: The Original Dryer Ball
MP3 file sound normalizing done easy
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 24th 2008 5:00PM
- Filed under audio and video
Living in the year 2008 probably means you have quite a bit of your music collection in digital form instead of a huge rack of CDs taking up wall space. If that's the case, you might have noticed that the volume level between all those digital MP3 files can be unnerving when you're trying to listen to music when you throw a party or even when jogging with that small player on your arm.Although Apple iTunes features automatic noise leveling, some of us prefer to use a non-Apple solution to really make our entire collection of MPs music sound all decent at the same volume -- without constantly fiddling with volume controls. If you've purchased CDs to rip those MP3 files from, and you've downloaded other music from the web, and you've collected MP3 files from friends, you probably have wildly fluctuating volume levels on all those music files.
A tool I recently used -- and can't recommend enough -- is the freely available MP3Gain. The smart little program will shuffle through all your music files (hopefully, they are all in MP3 format) and will set them all to a specific volume level that you set. In other words, it will "normalize" your MP3 collection. The software is self explanatory once you download it and use it. You'll be glad you did -- I sure was.
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The $10 super wireless internet antenna
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 24th 2008 3:00PM
- Filed under computers and internet, geek it yourself
Sometimes, many of us need a wireless internet connection that works far, far away. Or, we're sitting on the cusp of a wireless internet signal in the far reaches of our home or apartment and just need that last bit of signal. Before you head out to buy one of those pricey Pringles cans, check this out - -the $10 WiFi antenna you can make yourself.
Items needed: some 35mm foam (like the kind desktop and laptop PCs usually come with), some solid-core copper wire, a small brass plate, and multiple BNC connectors. Following the directions in the above video, the amount of gain you'll get for that wireless internet connection to your PC should easily outpace the gain from any OEM antenna you're using.
Feel like sucking from that huge WiFi firehose across the block from where you are? This project will most likely allow that. Careful aiming is all that will be required once you build this strange-looking but very functional WiFi antenna.
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Make a four-layer drink
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 24th 2008 1:00PM
- Filed under food, entertaining
This is a cool trick to keep handy the next time you entertain a bunch of pre-teens or you really want to spruce up your next adult party. Now, keep in mind that your guests may ingest a huge amount of sugar by drinking these things. Calories be damned though, as these are too cool to just sit on the bar or kitchen counter.
You'll need a decent amount of sugar, four glasses of your choice, several colors of food coloring, a tablespoon measuring device, and a small funnel for pouring the different colors on top of each other without mixing them. Mixing these different-colors-in-a-single-glass drinks really won't take very long once you assemble the right items just listed.
After watching the video, try this yourself and see what results you get. You can even have four different "flavors" in each glass you prepare due to the varying sugar levels in the "color bands" along with adding some possible flavoring in with some of the colors (vanilla, anyone?).
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Camcorder viewfinder turned into night vision camera
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 23rd 2008 3:00PM
- Filed under electronics
If you've used camcorders as far back as 1997 (a decade ago), you're remember the small black and white (or, gasp, color!) viewfinders many consumer-level camcorders featured back then. These small viewfinders are a far second to huge LCD screens on current camcorders, but if you're just itching to use that old, clunky camcorder for something, here's your chance.
All you'll need is an older camcorder viewfinder, about a dozen infrared LEDs, a 9-volt battery, some resistors and assorted electronics items, a black box to house all this stuff (sans the actual viewfinder) and there you have it -- a full-featured night vision device with video output capability should you wish to create a video recording to that pocket-size camcorder lurking on your person.
This should really come in handy next Halloween when you visit that darkened haunted house since you'll be able to see those creepy, scary ghoul-tastic figures and actors way before you get scared. While that may take the fun out of it, I'm sure you'll find many neat uses for this cheaper-than-cheap night vision setup. Even if you have to pick up a used VHS camcorder on eBay for a Jackson or two, it'll be worth it.
[Via Engadget]
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Make your own Nintendo Wii gun
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 22nd 2008 5:00PM
- Filed under geek it yourself
Although the Nintendo Wii Zapper accessory has been for sale for quite some time now, sometimes spending the estimated $20 or so for a piece of molded plastic is just not doable to many of us. Maybe it's out of principle or funds being used for higher priorities, but if you haven't bought a zapper, here's a solution for you.This quite inventive DIY'er made a Wii "holster" out of standard plastic acrylate sheets using a design he made in Adobe Illustrator. Plastic acrylate is the material you often seen used for those see-through boxes on the shelves of many retailers (not blister packs, though).
If you have a Wii game that requires the Wiimote to be held in a specific way and you haven't bought a Zapper to hold it, this is probably your solution. This won't hold the nunchuk that you may need as well (as in, The Legend of Zelda), but it does allow for the nunchuk to be connected. If you want the template to cut out your own Zapper apparatus, see this (PDF download). You'll need some small elastic bands and, of course, a sheet or two of plastic acrylate.
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Create scrumptious beef florentine pinwheels
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 22nd 2008 3:00PM
- Filed under food, entertaining
Most of us have had the opportunity to throw some kind of shindig -- a New Year's Eve party, a birthday party, or just...a party. On an equal footing, I'd surmise that a trip to the local grocery store deli made for easy preparation of finger foods and the like for those parties.
On occasion, though, it's nice to venture out in the food world and create something yourself. Since finger foods are party mainstay, why not fix something between that category and an actual meal serving? As in, beef florentine pinwheels. These things look yummy.
You'll be amazed at how easy creating these things from scratch really is. If you're wanting to leave a lasting food impression on that next round of guests, try these on for show and see what compliments you receive. Requirements: beef (eye of round) , your choice of cheese and your choice of vegetable leaf (spinach, perhaps?). Add some zesty seasonings after cooking and watch those mouths water.
[Via Daily DIY]
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Bluetooth headset capability for your Sony PSP/PS2
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 22nd 2008 1:00PM
- Filed under geek it yourself
With all the portable gadgets on the market that play high-resolution games, it's unnerving to many fans that out-of-the-box Bluetooth voice capability doesn't come standard on many of them. Even on products with Bluetooth onboard, its functionality can be limited. By now, you probably already have your soldering iron out, so let's proceed.Wirelessly chatting with multi-player games on that aging PlayStation 2 and using Bluetooth voice capability on the Sony PSP is possible with this rather ingenious but somewhat convoluted modification. It will not only require a USB interface to your PS2 or PSP, but then an audio connection from that USB interface to the Bluetooth box you'll use from that disassembled Cardo Bluetooth dongle.
Needed: Sony PSP (of course), Bluetooth adapter for non-Bluetooth phones (the Cardo unit is used in this example), some electronics and soldering expertise (and steady hands), and the USB box from that PS2 you have sitting around (if not, you'll need to go buy this). If you're ready for this one, look here and engage the project carefully. The end result will be some more wires (argh!), but none attached to anything hooked on your ear at the very end.
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Create a semi-pro lighting system from scratch
- by Brian White (RSS feed) on Jan 21st 2008 6:00PM
- Filed under photography, lighting
A short trip to your local Wal-Mart and The Home Depot could turn your back bedroom or attic into a professionally-lit photography studio. That is, if you have camera equipment to take pretty pictures once you have several lighting equipment environments at your disposal.Start with some outside tripod-style floodlights and add some foil-covered windshield heat protectors and standard light bulbs and you have the makings of a makeshift and workable lighting studio. Total cost? About $75. Results? Well, they will probably produce 90% of the quality (if done right) for less than a fifth of the price of professional lighting equipment. That ought to do well for us budding amateur photographers, right?
Consult the entire breakdown here to get a rundown on assembly of these items into your very own photography lighting arrangement: some hot-lights (a few tripods required), some light diffusers and portable reflectors and some camera flash diffusers as well. For professional-looking photo results with little monetary investment, you can't beat this.
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Do Life! DIY Life highlights the best in "do-it-yourself" projects.
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