Author: jaywll
Late Night Links – Sunday August 23rd, 2015
Itâs Sunday night. You all know the drill by now.
- Googleâs Next Version of Android is Called âMarshmallowâ
Probably not all that surprising. Iâm awaiting the new Nexus devices that will launch with it. - âTeddy for a Toonieâ Campaign Comes Close to a Million
- This Drone Can Steal Data While Hovering Above Your Office
- How Googeâs Networking Infrastructure Has Evolved Over the Last 10 Years
Interesting read. There have actually been a few really interesting articles this week. More on that later… - Watching What Happens to your Checked Luggage at the Airport is Fascinating
- Most Impressive Beer Pong Dunk Youâve Ever Seen
- Of Course BlackBerryâs Upcoming Android Phone is Awkward
- Weather of the Day: South Caroline Was Treated to a Rare and Beautiful Fire Rainbow
This is kinda cool. - Figure Out How Much Rent You Can Afford with the 40x Rule
I just ran our likely mortgage payments through past this math (weâre house hunting right now) and weâre good. - Guy Saves Canadian Tire Money for 15 Years and Buys…
- SmartThings Support is Coming to Amazon Echo
- IFTTTâs Maker Channel Connects Your Electronics Projects to Nearly Everything
This is going to be useful to me for sure. - Donât Be Apple
I completely agree with this, although I wouldnât have been able to articulate it quite so well I suspect. - The Ashley Madison Hack Should Scare You, Too
Another interesting read! - Hands-On With Fordâs Sync 3
- Life with the Dash Button: Good Design for Amazon, Bad for Everyone Else
And yet more interesting reading! Although thereâs also this in the news this week to consider.
And weâre all done! That was a lot to get through (apparently itâs been an exciting week on my reading liust), so I suggest everyone take the week off and Iâll see you next Sunday.
Late Night Links – Sunday August 16th, 2015
Itâs late night links time again, folks!
- The Best Food You Can Forage For in Your Backyard
This oneâs for @SnoopysBF - Taking the 2015 Audi TTâs Virtual Cockpit for a Spin
- Teslaâs Robotic Metal Snake Charger is âFor Realzâ
- If You Love Someone…
- Researchers Can Take Complete Control of Android Phones
I there anything researchers canât take complete control of these days? - The English Subtitles in the Chinese Version of Harry Potter are Hilarious
- Typewriters Suck. This Web App Proves It
- They Call it Their Armour for a Reason
Usually these people are from Florida. - Microsoft Built a Robotic Air Hockey Table to Show Off Windows 10
I want one. - Meet Alphabet, Googleâs New Corporate Boss as Sundar Pichai Takes Over the Search Company
- Hackers Control Connected Cars Using Text Messages
See what I was saying earlier? - Get Rid of Windows 10â˛s Default Apps with PowerShell
- Open Windows Explorer At âThis PCâ Instead of Quick Access
I am all about the Windows 10 tips right now, because I bought a new computer this week.
And weâre done! Until next time then.
Late Night Links – Monday August 3rd, 2015
Itâs a holiday weekend here so tradition dictates I be a day late with late night links, and who am I to mess with tradition like that.
- When Selling Virtual Products Abroad, Donât Put Prices on AutoPilot
Interesting read. - The Truth About Bottled Water Expiration Dates (and How Water Goes Bad)
This is interesting too! Letâs see if we can keep the trend going! - Israeli Researchers Compromise Isolated Networks With Dumbphones
Nailed it. - Car Trouble Sidelines Brampton Batmanâs Batmobile
- Innuendo
- Amazon Snaps Up Former âTop Gearâ Trio for New Motoring Show
I donât know what this means. Do I need to sign up for Amazon Prime? We will see. - Participants Needed!
- Google Translate vs. La Bamba
Love it. Also kind of amazing. - XKCD #1558: Vet
- Describe Your Father
- A Look Back at Windows Through the Ages
Windows 10 is out (I am preparing to upgrade at least some of our computers right now). In honour of that, this. - Rebroadcast Internet Radio on FM With a Raspberry Pi
This could be useful…
And thatâs it for another week folks! Until next time, then.
Late Night Links – Sunday July 26th, 2015
Itâs late night links time!
- Hack Makes Playing âDoomâ on a Computer Inside âDoomâ a Reality
- Jumping a Go-Cart Through Fire Goes Way Better Than Expected
Some language. - Google Launches Drive Plugin for Microsoft Office
If youâre a Google Drive user this might be useful. - XBMCâs Kodi Media Player Officially Hits the Play Store
- Itâs Your Fault Email is Broken
- Next-Gen Moto X Leaks Hint at a Big Screen and a Front Flash
Iâm considering the Moto X as my next phone, although Iâm a little dismayed to hear itâs going to be bigger. The big reason I was going to get it was that itâs a flagship phone thatâs not ridiculously large. Weâll see. - Hackers Remote Kill a Jeep on the Highway – With Me In It
This is well worth a read/watch. - Couples Describe Each Other to a Police Sketch Artist
This is awesome. - Are We There Yet?
- Do You Have Photos of Your Husband?
I feel like this is what Flo would be like.
And weâre all done!
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLig82CVtEo?feature=oembed&enablejsapi=1&origin=http://safe.txmblr.com&wmode=opaque&w=500&h=281]
Charlie Brown received his most recent BarkBox today, and he loves it when he gets mail.
I can hear him in the living room playing with the pink squeaky thing even now.
Raspberry Pi Whole Home Audio â The Conclusion?
Welcome to what is possibly the concluding post in my Raspberry Whole Home
Audio Project series of posts⌠or possibly not.
At the start of this journey I had a plan to install mopidy on one of my Raspberry Pis and use pulse
audio to stream the output to the others. Along the way I ran into some challenges
stemming from me buying the cheapest peripherals I could (and subsequently needing
to upgrade the WiFi adapters and power cables I first bought to better ones),
and my vision evolved as things progressed.
Instead of using mopidy, I switched to installing Kodi on each of the Pis thanks to the OpenElec linux distribution thatâs available for
several types of hardware, the Pi included.

Kodi, as a full-blown media centre system, might seem like a
bit of an odd choice for a headless device (i.e. something with no attached
display), but itâs the right choice for me for a couple of reasons.
- I already have it installed on a couple of PCs
in the house, attached to the TVs in the living room and the bedroom - I already have a remote
control app for it on my phone - There are plugins for a bunch of stuff, such as this one for my favourite music streaming service. Well written
plugins integrate perfectly with the system, and the remote control app. - It has built-in support for acting as an airplay
receiver
For me, these things combine to provide me with the best of
both worlds. If I just want to play music from my library or from an internet
streaming service on one set of speakers, then I fire up the remote app and
target the particular device I want to output from.
If I want to play the same thing on several (or all) the
devices at the same time, then I fire up TuneBlade
on my laptop and any sounds that would usually come out of its speakers get
redirected to all the airplay receivers.

When it works, itâs glorious. Having the same music playing
in sync on all the speakers in the apartment is awesome.
The problem is that it doesnât always work. TuneBlade
includes a setting that lets you set how much of a buffer you want. If you set
it too high the devices wonât synchronize because it will take a slightly
different amount of time to fill the buffer on each of them. I have it set to
zero, which works amazingly well most of the time but leaves me especially
prone to blips in network connectivity and bandwidth. When these occur, things
get out of sync (which sounds terrible, because each set of speakers is not all
that far away from its neighbours), and it canât seem to automatically recover â
I have to manually disconnect and reconnect the affected player to get it back
in sync with its peers.
The bottom line then is that my setup is good, but not
perfect. Itâs no Sonos.
The search for a perfect system will likely continue, but
for the time being Iâm pretty content. I spent less than $100, and I have a
setup that would have cost me $5,000 from them.