estromberg
Cyburbian
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RTFM is never bad advice.
RTFM is never bad advice.
I was flipping through the manual to the oven (this one has a ton more features than what we had before: convection settings, built-in air fryer, in-oven broiler instead of way down at the bottom, etc.) so I was mainly interested to read up on those but the manual also gives tips on which rack to use for just about everything you could want to bake or roast and what types of baking sheets they recommend. I'm going to use this as an excuse to make a couple batches of cookies this weekend using shiny sheets instead of the dark ones I normally use and also try to cook multiple sheets at the same time with the convection setting and see how everything turns out. I made cookies a couple weeks ago for the first day of school so hopefully those are fresh enough in everybody's memories to serve as the control group.![]()
So one of the things I did while we were remodeling our kitchen was to set up a digital calendar by the door. It is a 32" TV connected to a raspberry pi. It loops a shared photo album for a background, the calendar is a shared calendar, and then it has some other widgets that display weather, our thermostat settings, etc. I used a website called Dakboard to set it as a concept and planned to build a more custom one using MagicMirror. After about a year, Dakboard is working well enough that I will likely just stick with it. It costs me $30 a year for the web hosting. It is one of my wife's favorite parts of the new kitchen and it is SUPER useful.
We both use iPhones, so the shared photo album is hosted in iCloud and we can both tag pictures into it, the shared calendar is also an iCloud calendar, so we can both put events into it. Our kids are 8 & 10 and we are constantly running here and there for practices and school stuff.
This photo is from when it was originally set up. I have fixed all the holes in the wall and painted the walls 3 times (2 color changes). I still need to put an outlet in the wall behind it. The house's central vac unit is in the garage behind this wall and it really needs a better location for its outlet as well, so I will run a new circuit for the vacuum and put an outlet on both sides of the wall and additionally put a vac port in the wall closer to the floor, since the wall we removed as part of the kitchen remodel had the vac port in it, so we don't have central vac on the main floor. The priority for this just got moved up as our Shark vacuum just died.
All in all, this was a great project that was pretty easy to do and since I already had an unused rpi, I have about $100 into it for the tv and wall mount.
Dakboard: https://dakboard.com/site
Magic Mirror: https://magicmirror.builders/
View attachment 60849
There is a magic mirror forum that details peoples builds. Some really well done set ups. Incorporating touch and all kinds of stuff, the MagicMirror package is WAY more customizable, but requires some coding.That is pretty awesome! If I were more handy... and more tech savvy... and actually used a calendar I'd totally put something like that up in our house.
We keep our (paper) calendar on a wall in our kitchen and if I were so inclined, I'd add some sort of widget/app into the electronic calendar that would also show recipes that we've saved to it. Ours would be in a perfect spot for that.
Neat project. I wish I would have bought a few Raspberry Pis when you could have gotten them.So one of the things I did while we were remodeling our kitchen was to set up a digital calendar by the door. It is a 32" TV connected to a raspberry pi. It loops a shared photo album for a background, the calendar is a shared calendar, and then it has some other widgets that display weather, our thermostat settings, etc. I used a website called Dakboard to set it as a concept and planned to build a more custom one using MagicMirror. After about a year, Dakboard is working well enough that I will likely just stick with it. It costs me $30 a year for the web hosting. It is one of my wife's favorite parts of the new kitchen and it is SUPER useful.
We both use iPhones, so the shared photo album is hosted in iCloud and we can both tag pictures into it, the shared calendar is also an iCloud calendar, so we can both put events into it. Our kids are 8 & 10 and we are constantly running here and there for practices and school stuff.
This photo is from when it was originally set up. I have fixed all the holes in the wall and painted the walls 3 times (2 color changes). I still need to put an outlet in the wall behind it. The house's central vac unit is in the garage behind this wall and it really needs a better location for its outlet as well, so I will run a new circuit for the vacuum and put an outlet on both sides of the wall and additionally put a vac port in the wall closer to the floor, since the wall we removed as part of the kitchen remodel had the vac port in it, so we don't have central vac on the main floor. The priority for this just got moved up as our Shark vacuum just died.
All in all, this was a great project that was pretty easy to do and since I already had an unused rpi, I have about $100 into it for the tv and wall mount.
Dakboard: https://dakboard.com/site
Magic Mirror: https://magicmirror.builders/
View attachment 60849
Yeah, that's why I used an older one I had laying around. However, they are available again and the prices have come back down. They were nuts for a while there due to the chip shortages.Neat project. I wish I would have bought a few Raspberry Pis when you could have gotten them.
I hadn't looked lately. I was looking for one 6 months ago to do some temperature monitoring in my house and the 1GB pis were in excess of $100 if you could find one. I ended up using a thin client.Yeah, that's why I used an older one I had laying around. However, they are available again and the prices have come back down. They were nuts for a while there due to the chip shortages.
We've been talking about purchasing something similar from amazon, but it has lots of limitations. I'd love to do something custom, but I'd probably never finish it.So one of the things I did while we were remodeling our kitchen was to set up a digital calendar by the door. It is a 32" TV connected to a raspberry pi. It loops a shared photo album for a background, the calendar is a shared calendar, and then it has some other widgets that display weather, our thermostat settings, etc. I used a website called Dakboard to set it as a concept and planned to build a more custom one using MagicMirror. After about a year, Dakboard is working well enough that I will likely just stick with it. It costs me $30 a year for the web hosting. It is one of my wife's favorite parts of the new kitchen and it is SUPER useful.
We both use iPhones, so the shared photo album is hosted in iCloud and we can both tag pictures into it, the shared calendar is also an iCloud calendar, so we can both put events into it. Our kids are 8 & 10 and we are constantly running here and there for practices and school stuff.
This photo is from when it was originally set up. I have fixed all the holes in the wall and painted the walls 3 times (2 color changes). I still need to put an outlet in the wall behind it. The house's central vac unit is in the garage behind this wall and it really needs a better location for its outlet as well, so I will run a new circuit for the vacuum and put an outlet on both sides of the wall and additionally put a vac port in the wall closer to the floor, since the wall we removed as part of the kitchen remodel had the vac port in it, so we don't have central vac on the main floor. The priority for this just got moved up as our Shark vacuum just died.
All in all, this was a great project that was pretty easy to do and since I already had an unused rpi, I have about $100 into it for the tv and wall mount.
Dakboard: https://dakboard.com/site
Magic Mirror: https://magicmirror.builders/
View attachment 60849
I was flipping through the manual to the oven (this one has a ton more features than what we had before: convection settings, built-in air fryer, in-oven broiler instead of way down at the bottom, etc.) so I was mainly interested to read up on those but the manual also gives tips on which rack to use for just about everything you could want to bake or roast and what types of baking sheets they recommend. I'm going to use this as an excuse to make a couple batches of cookies this weekend using shiny sheets instead of the dark ones I normally use and also try to cook multiple sheets at the same time with the convection setting and see how everything turns out. I made cookies a couple weeks ago for the first day of school so hopefully those are fresh enough in everybody's memories to serve as the control group.![]()
I'm happy to report back that after a few batches of cookies last week and this weekend, my wife and daughters and I could find no discernable difference in the cookies made on shiny baking sheets vs the ones made on the dark sheets. However, we all agree that using the convection setting on the oven is definitely the way to go when baking cookies as they were much chewier and more evenly cooked without getting over done on the bottoms. I also liked the added bonus of being able to put multiple baking sheets in at once while using convection.
The silence of the new dishwasher continues to amaze me as well.
It is remarkable how much nicer these appliances are compared to the ones we replaced which were probably from the first half of the Clinton administration!
That amazed me as well when we got ours sometime back. I couldn't hear it over the ambient noise in my house, which is a good thing. I would have to look at the lights to see that it was running. The noise and the myth that they use a large amount of water was what kept my wife from using ours on a regular basis. I tried to convince her that it used less water than hand washing; so while I was installing it, I ran it with the drain going to a five gallon bucket. It used 4.5 gallons as advertised; so now she uses it all the time.The silence of the new dishwasher continues to amaze me as well.
My current dishwasher is 2004 model, but somehow looks older. Some cycles sound like a waterfall and some sound like a carwash. none of them are what you would call quiet.That amazed me as well when we got ours sometime back. I couldn't hear it over the ambient noise in my house, which is a good thing. I would have to look at the lights to see that it was running. The noise and the myth that they use a large amount of water was what kept my wife from using ours on a regular basis. I tried to convince her that it used less water than hand washing; so while I was installing it, I ran it with the drain going to a five gallon bucket. It used 4.5 gallons as advertised; so now she uses it all the time.
My one issue with LG is that their entertainment system products don't integrate with things from other manufacturers (i.e. their TVs won't link to a Sony surround sound system, etc.). #firstworldproblemsWe bought new appliances as part of our kitchen remodel. All LG stuff from Home Depot.
I don't know if I do nice enough work for NHL coaches neighborhoods...@estromberg
Looks pretty great. Let me know next time you're in Detroit and I'll send you my address so you can get a little more practice in on another tile backsplash!
Looks great! I recommend one of these for caulking:So I put up the backsplash this weekend. Only took a year and an afternoon. Will grout it this week. Turned out really nice.
View attachment 60968
New toilet installed today! One of those fancy ones that sits a couple inches higher than standard. Bonus: it works! Unlike the one it replaced.
Nah, they're overrated. You know how much money your family can save using an outhouse?A working toilet is a smart investment in many different ways.
I like the chair height toilets; however, my short wife does not like them as her feet don't hit the ground. Toilets seem to be one item that everyone, at least around here skimps on. I found that buying a middle end toilet makes the install easier and they generally flush better.New toilet installed today! One of those fancy ones that sits a couple inches higher than standard. Bonus: it works! Unlike the one it replaced.
At my first full-time gig, there were 4 homes in that jurisdiction with functioning outhouses. I was surprised when I discovered that because it was the late 90's and I thought everyone had indoor plumbing. After a few months in that jurisdiction, I was surprised it was just 4.Nah, they're overrated. You know how much money your family can save using an outhouse?
A working toilet is a smart investment in many different ways.
Yeah you're literally flushing money down the toilet. You should see my water bill!Nah, they're overrated. You know how much money your family can save using an outhouse?
Shitty investment; total flushNah, they're overrated. You know how much money your family can save using an outhouse?
1955 house likely has cast iron DWV and maybe galvanized steel supply. Those supply lines build up rust on the inside that reduces diameter a lot.Within the last month we've had two separate leaks in the same bathroom over our dining room. It looks like my pipes have decided one by one that 80 years was enough. We're going to meet with an architect next week to figure out how we want to rearrange some walls while we start to re-plumb parts of the house.
I made the mistake of showing my wife the corrosion and deposits in the water supply line to the shower that I cut out. I think she's going to be drinking bottled water for a while.
We are trying to get a full kitchen tear-out and remodel done this winter. We have a contractor we like but initial estimates on cabinets from a local custom company were wayyy out of our price range.
My wife wants to take a trip down to Ikea in the next couple of weeks to look at cabinet options. Those of you who have used Ikea, what should I know? How should I prepare for an in-person trip to the store to make sure it's productive and not just overwhelming?
Careful around chipped/cracked ceramics in bathrooms! One of our first responders said (from experience) "If you have a cracked toilet, get rid of it- it's an artery in somebody's leg just waiting to get sliced open."Chipped (big) on a toilet base where the bowl sits on top. Clean water was leaking, so I have that going for me, which is nice. Small blessing in disguise. This is the second shower we've had in that bathroom so the original tile doesn't match up to the current shower pan footprint. I need to replace 4-5 tiles, which I have, but need the toilet removed to complete the work.
When my sister bought a house years ago, it had a lot of shoddily-done improvements she had to undo. In one case, there was LIVE ELECTRICAL inside the shower . . . the outlet had been covered up by shower tiles, but, with no GFI, that was a disaster waiting to happen if there had been a leak or accident. She had it fixed immediately. Not sure how it even got signed off on like that.When my child moved out to their first apartment last summer, it opened the primary bedroom for me. I wasn't in much of a hurry, so I eventually got everything painted/repainted, bought a new mattress (heaven!) and moved in. The en-suite bath however, was in need of a makeover. I replaced the toilet with a new, chair height elongated model, and replaced the vanity with a new one (a story in and of itself). I also decided to pull up the cheap linoleum flooring (you could see the original hex-shaped tile imprint right through the linoleum). That's when I found out why the former owner had put down the linoleum - about a dozen floor tiles were very obviously missing under the front of the vanity. I had hoped to be able to find some matching tile, but had no luck. Then I hoped to be able to harvest enough tile from under the vanity to reuse where the missing tiles were. No luck: there weren't enough whole tiles to do the job.
So, out came the tile and the mud base - a way bigger job than I wanted. This weekend I got the cement-board flooring down, successfully working around the waste pipe for the toilet and a floor vent for heating/cooling. Dry-fit is good, now need to thin-set it this week. Bought new marble tile, which should be in next weekend. Need to tile, seal, and grout, then replace the toilet and vanity.
When I bought the house, the appraiser's report said it was a good house but needed a little refreshing. That has turned into my hobby.