SDGator
SD Gator
SDGator

You can either coast in the short term, which will inevitably be bad in the long term. Or you can put your resume out there and see if you can get any offers. Personally, I've always seen a boost in career growth every time I've changed jobs. It shouldn't be a scary thing.

The stuff with Sodium Lauryl Sulfate makes my grass look great. Highly recommended.

Just because it won't kill you doesn't mean that you should sit on it every day and eat your dinner off of it.

Except...don't do this. A lot of times, the preservative used for the wood in pallets is toxic. So, splinters from them....not so good for you.

I just got an Airport Extreme a few months ago, and I'm still having to reboot it every couple days. As far as I can tell, its not any better than the cheap piece of crap it replaced.

I wouldn't try to plan on a whole lot...leave it loose and flexible. And if you want to be cheap and not look cheap, I would find a decent B&B in a historic city or small town with a decent amount of things to do, but not one of the big name ones like Paris, or whatever. Anyway, find a small romantic B&B and stay

I normally do around 40-45 hours per week, but the month or so before we tapeout a chip is pure hell...80+ hours, sometimes only sleeping 2-3 hours at a time for a few weeks while running gate-level simulations. Wake up when the alarm goes off, check the results, make some fixes, launch the next set of compile/sim,

Its not because she's Lindsey Vonn, its because she was linked to Tim Tebow at some point.

It can stream to a NAS or server on your home network. And then you can have the phone's app use port forwarding to talk to the server. All the Pi needs to do is compress the video and stream it to the server.

Since its not hardwired to the house's electrical, building codes don't apply.

Why can't you do this with a Raspberry Pi, a usb webcam and a $12 usb wifi? It seems like you could do this for a lot cheaper than $800.

I rooted my Nexus 4, but don't plan on flashing any ROM's. At least not until they start falling behind in updates, which shouldn't happen for years yet.

That is seriously cool. I wish my beat up old commuter car had enough life left in it to make attempting something like this worth it.

I used the Toolkit a month or so ago and it worked. The only issue I had with it was that the backup/restore didn't work so I had to start over again as far as setting everything up, but that wasn't such a big deal since it was so new. The root itself worked with no problems.

You still need to be a decent to really good wookworker to get it all to line up so that when you fit the different box units together there aren't any gaps or anything. Any non-square angles on any side or corner will be painfully obvious when you try to fit the different tetris pieces together.

Sure....but you still have to some woodworking chops to even have a tablesaw and dado setup or a router and router table, etc.

Once you said "dovetail" it moved from DIY to pretty much having to be a woodworking expert to have any hope of doing this project and not have it coming out looking like crap.

We've been doing this for over a decade. Its evolved over time, but at this point our family of 6 (Me, my wife and 4 kids) have 6 different bank accounts spread across 3 different online banks:

I'd kind of like the know the answer to this as well.

I'm sure there's a raspberry pi project for this. The first thing that comes to mind is to use a crockpot, a thermocouple and a power relay. The pi can monitor the temp of the water and cycle the power to the crockpot to maintain the temp within a certain range. I'm sure others have better ideas, though.