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03 May 20:04

Double Sided Jerker Desk

by IH guest

Double sided IKEA JERKER desk

IKEA Items Used:
2 Jerker desks
2 Jerker swivel shelves

I’ve had the revered Jerker desk for ages now and had an idea to create a double desk as my wife had lost her work space when we had a child. When I saw an ad on Kijiji for a cheap partial Jerker desk I jumped on it. As my wife is short(5’4″) and I’m tall(6’2″) this configuration worked perfectly for us. I was able to install the second desktop below the original desktop and create a double decker work space.

I installed the cross support bars from the 2 different desks back-to-back which enabled me to wedge my monitors in between them. This worked out great as I gained a ton a space by not having to put them on the shelf or on the swivel shelves. It also gave some privacy between the 2 spaces, so when we’re both working we’re not staring at each other. And as an added bonus it’s a handy spot to stick magnets.

I have 2 Jerker swing arm shelves, one you can see in the picture, the other is installed underneath to get my subwoofer off the ground. For stability I installed the second set of legs the opposite direction. I purchased some 3″ bolts to then hold them all together.

Double sided IKEA JERKER desk

~ James Harris

The post Double Sided Jerker Desk appeared first on IKEA Hackers.

23 Sep 19:12

9% Of Americans Are Bad People, Think It’s OK To Use Phone At Movies

by Chris Morran

If you’re reading this in your office or on the train, take a second to look around you. About 1-in-10 of the people you see are horrible human beings who think it’s okay to use their phones during a movie. And if you’re reading this at the movie theater, there’s a good chance you’re one of these people.

This is according to a survey about appropriate cellphone use from The Street, which found that 9% of Americans are perfectly fine with texting, Tweeting, or gabbing away in a movie theater while the movie is playing.

You might argue that this is a small number of people, but let’s consider the math. Last weekend’s top box-office earner was The Maze Runner, which took in around $32 million. With the national average for movie tickets hovering near the $8 mark, that means approximately 4 million people paid to see just that one movie over the weekend.

And if 9% of these moviegoers were indeed okay with staring at their phone screens instead of the movie they paid to see, that means that around 360,000 Americans — around the entire population of Tampa — were either bothering the rest of us with their glowing telecommunication devices or would have been willing to do so if they needed to Snapchat with a pal.

Nearly three times that many people (26%) say it’s acceptable to continue using your phone at the theater while the previews are showing. They might have an arguable point, especially since most of us have already seen the trailers we want to see thanks to the Internet. But still, it’s a bit rude.

Only slight more (28%) said that using the phone while at dinner with others is acceptable. To us, whether or not this is a no-no probably depends on the casualness of the meal. If I’m at a nice restaurant, the phone stays in my pocket and I’d expect others to do the same, but if the Consumerist crew is chowing down on riblets at Applebee’s (do they even sell those anymore?), it doesn’t seem as rude for someone to occasionally check their messages.

This is where we find out if y’all agree with us on the phones-at-the-movies thing:

Take Our Poll
05 Aug 15:02

How to Look at a Painting

by Justin Taylor

From a helpful post by Fred Sanders:

Even more awkward is the moment when you encounter a painting that grips you. For some reason it stands out from the crowd of images you’ve already seen and makes a powerful connection. You like it. It moves you. You’ve seen something new and interesting here. But after about 90 seconds, you have to admit that you don’t really know what to do next.

Other people are standing in front of paintings for five or ten minutes at a stretch, just loooooooking. What are they spending so much time looking at? You really can’t imagine what it is you’re supposed to be doing with your eyes: Blinking? Looking at all four of the corners? Should you hold your thumb up to it? Should you tell yourself a little story about the picture, or pretend you’re a character in it? Count the toes on the people in it to see if the artist messed up? Do I put my hands in my pockets or behind my back while I’m looking? What are the rules? Just what is it that you could be doing if you want to extend this art experience and get more out of a painting that you already like?

A similar question often occurs to me at classical music concerts when I inevitably lose my ability to concentrate on the music and find myself being tossed around on a sea of notes. “Listen more gooder,” I tell my musically illiterate self, but for the life of me, all I can hear is “notes go up, notes go down; notes go up, notes go down.” Over the years, I’ve asked friends and wives (okay, one wife) for helpful hints that can keep me oriented during a long concert.

He continues:

For museum trips, I have tapped into my training as a visual artist and come up with the following eight tips for how to get more insight into a painting. Try these out next time you’re standing in front of a painting wondering how to make the most of it.

The first three tips help you see the things about the painting that are, paradoxically, too obvious for you to notice. To bring these things to your attention, you need to temporarily turn off some of your mind’s habitual tendency to recognize and label what it sees. You didn’t notice it happening, but by the time you’re standing there thinking about an image, your unconscious mind had already run the image through all sorts of perceptual grids and decided to help you ignore a great deal of the information. Your first three steps, therefore, are backward steps, giving your eyes a chance to reclaim some of that information from your necessary habits of rapidly simplifying all visual experience.

Here are the first three:

1. Squint at it.

2. Flip it over.

3. Find the negative space.

Then here are the next three, which “move from recapturing easily ignored information to analyzing what you’re seeing.”

4. Define the moment.

5. Re-Construct it.

6. Let the artist guide your eyes.

Then the final two, which “re-engage your understanding at the level of representation, narration, and interpretation. Notice that the next two steps encourage you to label things, identify them, describe them, and analyze them in light of other knowledge you have. These are great things to do, but frankly they’re the two things you were most likely to do anyway. They’ll mean a lot more after the first six.”

7. Say what you see.

8. Use background knowledge.

You can read the whole thing here.

13 Jun 17:05

Dummy batteries let you use an AC adapter

by Mike Szczys

dummy-batteries-work-as-AC-adapter

We find it frustrating when battery operated consumer electronics don’t include a way to connect an external power supply. We try not to purchase disposable alkaline cells if we can avoid it, and this dummy battery AC adapter hack will aid in our mission.

The battery compartment shown above is for a motorized baby swing. It accepts C sized batteries (who has those just lying around?) and lacks a barrel jack to connect a wall wart adapter. [Jason Smith] mentions you can get around this by connecting your positive and ground wires directly to the conductor springs. But using a dummy battery makes it a bit easier to remove the adapter if you do want to use battery power.

Each of the orange dummy is a wooden dowel with a screw at each end. The screws are connected with a piece of jumper wire, shorting the two terminals. This completes the circuit in the battery compartment and allows him to power everything from the adapter cell at the bottom. The adapter uses an LM317 adjustable voltage linear regulator. He used fixed resistor values to dial in his target voltage. The equipment should be rather forgiving as battery voltage starts higher than the printed value and drops as the cells are used up.

This technique has been around for a long time. One of our favorites was a hack that converted an Apple Magic Trackpad to USB power.


Filed under: green hacks
05 Jun 18:54

Wall-mounted charging station plus earphone/cable storage

by Jules Yap

Materials: Forhoja set of 3 boxes, electric drill with centre bit, wood glue, a few small nails, strip of 4x1 cm wood, extension lead

Description: We have in our household: 2 e-readers, 1 iPad, 1 smaller tablet computer, 1 iPhone, 2 other cell phones and a camera. All of which need to be charged ALL THE TIME. Result: We were constantly looking for charging cables, free wall sockets and the devices themselves.

So I built this charging station which can also be used to stores extra charging cables, earbuds and cell phones. I wanted a wall-mounted station so as not to clutter up the last few precious bits of free table and shelf surface.

I got the Forhoja boxes - it's a set of one big and two smaller boxes; the big one comes with a tray-like lid. The entire thing is just wide and deep enough to comfortably hold the iPad, at least to Kindles and two cell phones at the same time.


First I attached the little pieces of wood into the big box (instead of into the lid as per instructions) to prevent the lid from sliding about.

Using wood glue, I glued the smaller boxes on the sides of the big box. Originally I hadn’t planned to use the small boxes at all, but they make an excellent place to keep earbuds (which disappear all the time as well). I glued 4 strips of wood (10 x 4 x 1cm) to the back to provide a little space between box and wall and put a few small nails in for extra sturdiness.

I drilled a few 22mm ventilation holes into the lid and the bottom of the big box to prevent the charging plugs and extensions lead from overheating. (Note: don’t forget to put a piece of scrap wood under the box when drilling ventilation holes! You can also put sticky tape on the underside so the wood won’t splinter outwards when the drill breaks through.) I also drilled holes into the back for wall mounting with two screws and washers.

When I screwed the box to the wall I placed the power cable along the back of the box so it runs down the middle between the strips of wood. I had to use a manual screwdriver because the electric screwdriver wouldn’t fit â€" hard work! The cables inside the box are gathered together with a bit of plastic-coated wire so they won’t go all over the place when the lid is lifted off. The lid goes on to the box deep-side up, so the devices can be propped against the wall and won’t slip over the edge.

I'€™m pretty pleased with the whole thing; I only wish I had painted it a bright colour before screwing it to the wall - maybe I'€™ll do that at a later date when I can face having to screw it on again with the tiny manual screwdriver.

~ Nina Hyland, Munich, Germany
05 Jun 16:02

Google offers “one-click” deployment of Android app infrastructure

by Jon Brodkin

Google has released a new tool for app developers that makes it easier to build and deploy the backend infrastructure for Android applications. Called Mobile Backend Starter, the "one-click deployable" cloud service reduces code-writing requirements for developers who need to set up cloud storage, messaging, push notifications, continuous server queries, and authentication.

The backend service stores data on the Google App Engine platform-as-a-service cloud, comes with a client library and sample Android app, and integrates with Google Cloud Messaging (GCM) for Android and Google Authentication.

Google described Mobile Backend Starter's features yesterday on the Android Developers Blog:

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

03 Jun 14:08

Build this Easy, DIY Desk Lamp from Recycled Blank or Burned CDs

by Alan Henry
Meaninglessvanity

foo bar baz

Remember when burning CDs was a thing, and everyone had stacks and stacks of blank or burned CDs stored on spindles? Well, if you still have some of those spindles and no need for the CDs anymore, this easy DIY project turns them into a fun desk or hanging lamp, perfect for your workspace or home office.

The project comes to us from the folks at Hack a Day's new Life.HackaDay page, and the video above does a great job of showing you how to build both types of lamps, the desk style and the hanging style. All you need in both cases is an under-counter LED strip-light, a ton of used CDs, and either some sturdy wire or a nice long rope to make it all work.

The whole process only takes a couple of minutes, and you won't even need any special tools. It's a fast and simple project, the end product doesn't look horrible, and a great way to put those spindles of blank or burned CDs you have lying around to good use. Hit the link below for more detail and photos of the finished product, all lit up so you can see what it would look like on your desk.

2 Minute Recycled CD Lamp. No Tools Required. | Life.HackaDay

16 May 17:25

How Exercise Affects Your Body (and How to Pick the Right Workout)

by Thorin Klosowski

We all know that exercise is good for you, but when you understand why, it makes getting off the couch and into the gym a lot easier. Here’s an explanation of what happens when you work out, and how it can help you deal with the pains and the gains you'll run into down the line.

The body is a complex machine. While we like to think that when we work out we'll immediately feel and look better, it's not always that simple. A lot happens in your body when you first start working out, and the longer you work out the less things change. To get a grasp on what's going on, I spoke with Brian Parr from the Department of Exercise and Sports Science at the University of South Carolina Aiken, and Dr. Carly Stewart, Medical Expert at Money Crashers Personal Finance. Here's what you can expect, what's happening, and how you can use that knowledge to improve your workout routine.

What Happens to Your Body When You First Start Exercising

The first thing you notice when you start working out is that you're out of breath and your pulse is high. This is always a bit disconcerting, but it's perfectly normal. When you first start working out, your body responds by raising your heart rate and causing you to breathe heavy.

While those first few weeks are tough, exercise gets a lot easier as you go along, and it's because your body starts adapting to your workout. Of course, everything in your body is connected, so while you might only feel a difference in your breathing or heart rate at first, Parr points out that it's tied to your muscles as well:

The way you get the oxygen to the muscle fibers is by breathing oxygen into your lungs and then your heart pumps the oxygenated blood into your muscle. So, today you jump on the treadmill for the first time and you run three miles. Your heart rate is pretty high, your breathing is pretty heavy, and you feel pretty crappy. But if you do that every day for three or four weeks you'll notice that at the same speed your breathing won't be that hard. The reason for this is because your muscle has changed and it's using oxygen a lot better which lowers your heart rate.

Those muscle changes are important, and it's not exactly as simple as you might think. Depending on the type of exercise you're doing your muscles can change in different ways:

For example, in your legs you have two different kinds of muscle: you have fast twitch muscles and slow twitch muscles. The slow twitch muscle has muscle fibers that are better suited for long-duration endurance exercise. The fast twitch fibers are better for short, high-intensity bursts. For example, a distance runner would have a lot of slow twitch muscle fibers. Whereas a sprinter would have more fast twitch muscle fibers.

Let's say we all start at the same baseline where we have half slow twitch muscle fibers and half fast twitch muscle fibers. When you start an exercise program that's about endurance, like jogging, your muscle changes so it has more slow twitch muscles and less fast twitch muscles. This means your muscle can generate force for a longer period of time without fatiguing.

Why Your Muscles Feel Sore

The awful truth of exercise is that while it can make you feel better over time, you're going to feel pretty bad at beginning. The reason, as Parr notes, is that exercise actually damages your muscles:

Someone who has been a couch potato for a while and starts working out will notice that they're sore. What's happening is they're doing microscopic damage to their muscles each time they work out. It sounds bad, but it's actually good. The muscle responds by repairing itself and that makes the muscle stronger than it was before.

It's not the old adage of "no pain, no gain," though. You need to be careful when you're first starting because an injury will likely cause you to break your habit. Thankfully, we know what you should expect to feel when you first start:

So you're sore, and you're weak. That's because the muscle damage causes inflammation and pain. That's a critical part of the muscle adapting and getting stronger. That soreness usually lasts for 24-48 hours. It's called delayed onset muscle soreness. People should feel it, but it shouldn't make them never go back.

Dr. Stewart also points out that what you need to watch out for is "severe pain:"

Minor to moderate pain or soreness is considered normal. Severe pain, however, is considered abnormal, and may be caused by overexertion or poor breathing techniques.

Both Stewart and Parr note that you'll experience a little pain, but it's a necessary step. If it gets to a point where you can't do the exercise again, you need to back off and lower the intensity a bit until your muscles catch up. Take days off in-between exercises, or work different groups of muscles. If you do push yourself too hard, take some time to recover and treat yourself right.

Why Exercise Makes You Feel Better

We always hear that exercise makes you feel better in all sorts of ways. From the brain to the lungs, you benefit from a bit of exercise every day. That doesn't really mean anything to you until you actually start exercising though. In addition to everything above, Parr notes a few other changes you'll feel right away that make life a bit easier:

The other thing that happens is your heart gets bigger and stronger. Those are the things that people notice. You're getting these changes in the muscle that actually make exercise feel easier. In addition to your heart rate slowing down and your heart getting bigger and stronger, your blood vessels become more elastic. That's really good. That means your blood pressure can be lower.

Additionally, you're also burning calories and fat, which contributes to weight loss. Your body typically burns calories from carbohydrates for energy first, and then moves onto burning fat as a source of energy. When you burn more calories than you take in, you'll tap into fat for energy and lose weight. If you don't use calories for energy, your body starts to store them as fat cells for an energy reserve.

On top of easier breathing, a lower pulse, lower blood pressure, and everything else, your brain function also improves. Dr Stewart explains why:

Exercise improves oxygen flow to the brain. It also helps the body release hormones that assist in brain cell growth. Additionally, it helps the brain with both learning and memory capabilities.

Dr. Stewart adds that you'll feel these improvements pretty quickly, even if you don't see a change in your body:

Generally speaking, you can expect to feel healthier and stronger after two to three weeks of exercise (along with a proper diet). However, you may not see any significant changes in muscle growth or weight loss (depending upon your goals) until after the first few months.

Essentially, when you start exercising, you feel better because your brain and body can do more. You're not winded walking up stairs. Your heart rate and blood pressure goes down, which decreases your risk for a number of diseases and gives you more energy. Your brain benefits from the added oxygen to help you perform basic tasks easier.

Use Science to Pick the Right Workout

So what can you do with this information? Depending on your goals, certain workouts are better than others. Since your muscles and body react differently to different workouts, it's important to come up with your goal first, and then chose the workout.

If You Want to Just Maintain a Healthy Lifestyle

If all you want to maintain a healthy lifestyle, your best bet is to work out all your muscles in a few different ways. Parr notes that for most people, the usual recommendation of 30 minutes of moderate intensity workouts a day—including walking, jogging, swimming, or biking—is a good starting point for most people.

We’ve featured a bunch of low impact exercises, and the Lifehacker Workout is excellent for keeping yourself in shape without working yourself too hard.

That said, if you don't have a lot of time, exercises like the seven-minute full workout or the 20-minute workout make it a bit easier to fit a workout into your schedule. You won't see big fitness gains, but your overall health will remain consistent. Once your body adapts to what you're doing, it doesn't continue to build on that muscle. Parr suggests that for some of us, this is fine:

One of the things we've learned is that health benefits can come from a lot less than what you need to see the strength and endurance benefits. Someone who goes from nothing to doing about 30 minutes of exercise a day will see a big improvement in their health and maintain that. Obviously it gets better if they add more time to that. The benefits sort of plateau. It's benefits like better control of blood sugar, lower blood pressure, and lower blood cholesterol, so those are good things to have plateau.

Once you get going, Dr. Stewart has a few suggestions for balancing your diet with your new workout routine so you can maintain that health:

The best way to support a healthy exercise regimen is to moderately increase carbohydrate intake, in addition to eating foods high in healthy fats. Foods high in [good] carbs that support a workout program are whole grains, dairy products, and fruits and vegetables. Foods high in healthy fats include avocados, fish, peanut butter, and olive oil.

Essentially, if you can consistently keep up the 30 or so minutes a day of exercise then you're on the right track to maintaining a healthy lifestyle. You're not going to see big endurance or muscle gains, but you'll hit the targets needed to improve your health.

If You Want to Lose Weight

Losing weight requires a different approach because you want to work the slow twitch fibers in your muscle more that the fast twitch. Parr explains:

When you exercise for a longer duration, you're going to use the slow twitch fibers that are really good at burning fat. If you went and did a couple hundred meter sprints for your workout, it only works the fast muscle fibers, and they use primarily carbohydrates and don't burn that much fat at all.


For example, when you get on an elliptical or treadmill you can push the "fat burning" button, it will be longer and lower intensity because that favors the muscles that are going to burn more fat. So if you do a jog instead of a sprint, you're burning more fat.

That said, it's not all cut and dried. While lower intensity workouts are better at helping you lose weight, you still need to mix it up a little:

It also depends on how many calories you burn. So you could walk really slowly, but that's burning just fat and you're not burning that many calories. So there's a balance between whether you burn more fat in the muscle and how many total calories you're burning. Somewhere in the moderate intensity range is probably right. That said, doing high-intensity interval training will burn more fat because it's so intense that you're burning enough calories to get to the fat.

So, the answer to what workout you should do to burn fat really depends on what you can handle. A high-intensity interval workout will burn the fat after it burns the calories, but it's a lot harder to get into because it's such an intense workout. For many, starting with moderate intensity exercise will ease that process. Moderate intensity has a different meaning for everyone depending on your starting point, but it can range from a brisk walk to swimming. Mayo Clinic suggests that moderate exercise means: your breathing quickens a little, you develop a light sweat after about 10 minutes of exercise, and you can carry on a conversation but can't sing.

Of course, when you're losing weight, you also need to moderate your diet for it to stick because you don't want to take in more calories than you're burning. If you need a little help with motivation, we've shown you how to track your weight loss.

If You Want to Increase Your Strength or Endurance

Strength and endurance training are where things get a bit harder to track. As we noted above, the more you work out, the more your body adapts. That means you need to keep pushing it if you want to see improvements in your strength or endurance. Since muscles grow when you push them too hard it eventually gets difficult to do that:

Once your muscles start to adapt, what you'll need for anything to happen is "overload." The first time you lift weights that's a lot of overload because you're used to doing nothing. Then over time it gets easier. That's when people increase their weight. They do that to generate the overload to continue the adaptation. That progression is true for lifting weights, or endurance performance, or anything else.

We've talked before about getting over plateaus. It's a combination of overloading your muscles, and managing your diet. For weight training, this just means increasing your weights so your muscles continue to adapt. For endurance training, it means upping your mileage or intensity. As Parr notes, "if you do a little you're going to get stronger, if you do a little more, you'll get stronger still."


When all is said and done, exercise is about finding a good medium. When you know what kind of results you want, and what your reasons are behind exercising, it's a lot easier to actually pick a workout you'll stick to.

Photos by Sebastian Kaulitzki (Shutterstock), joesuspense, Official U.S. Navy Imagery, Richard Masoner, Gabriel Amadeus, Jim Bahn, Terry Robinson, Official Navy Page.