A wall-hanging plant holder makes growing plants in your cramped apartment a realistic endeavour, but there’s a catch. As is, the plant wall retails for a steep $250—which is why this one’s labelled as a weekend project. From the little schematic included on the image from the web site (above), a fearless DIYer could tackle this one for a fraction of the asking price. Whatever you choose, this wall-hanging plant holder could be perfect for indoor or outdoor use, and is reminiscent of the previously mentioned upside-down tomato planter.
Windows only: You’ve followed our beginner and intermediate guides to BitTorrent, and you know how to protect your privacy when downloading, but ever since you started on this wild BitTorrent journey, you’ve wanted to find your way to the BitTorrent promised land—a private tracker. The problem is, they’re not easy to get into (trust me, I’ve tried). Freeware application Open Registrations Checker monitors some of the most popular private trackers for open registrations, alerting you whenever a tracker you’re watching opens its registrations. It’s not perfect, but it may give you just the heads up you need to get your foot in the door. Open Registrations Checker is freeware, Windows only, requires .NET 2.0. Open Registrations Checker [via TorrentFreak]
The Capturx is a digital pen that takes notes on real paper and transfers them to your PC with surprising accuracy. I saw a few of these types of pens in action a few years ago and wasn’t impressed, but from the looks of things they’re getting on track. Check out the video demo to see for yourself. The pen itself will set you back a hefty $350, but if you’re a pen-and-paper type who wants to do less manual transfer of your jottings to digital documents, the price of admission might be worth it. If you have more experience with this specific tool or a similar one, let’s hear about it in the comments. Capturx [via Digital Inspiration]
Webapp Muxtape lets you upload MP3′s into a streaming playlist for anyone on the internet to hear. Register for a free Muxtape account, and start uploading MP3′s (which you have permission to share), and send your Muxtape URL (youraccount.muxtape.com) to others, who can play your tunes directly from the page. Muxtape’s interface is bare-bones—no album art and sparse song metadata—and there’s no obvious way for listeners to download the tunes you uploaded. Check out Wired’s field guide to existing Muxtape playlists for finding good listening there. Muxtape
US-centric: Send detailed directions for getting around the city from your browser directly to your cell phone with web site HopStop. This webapp has been around for a while (we even posted about it a few years back), but it continues to add more areas to its coverage of the urban landscape. Offering options like subway-only in conjunction with preferences like “More street walking/fewer transfers,” HopStop covers how to get from a-to-b whether you’re on foot, train, or bus. If you’re an experienced user (it’s not available in Los Angeles, so I’m not), let’s hear how it’s worked for you in the comments.
The New York Times reports that while exercising willpower in one area of your life will reduce it in others, practicing willpower improves your capacity for keeping yourself in check overall. The brain has a limited capacity for self-regulation, so exerting willpower in one area often leads to backsliding in others. The good news, however, is that practice increases willpower capacity, so that in the long run, buying less now may improve our ability to achieve future goals—like losing those 10 pounds we gained when we weren’t out shopping.
This means that you should pursue one or two goals at a time, and let the other stuff go. Then, when you achieve them, you can move onto the next accomplishment. Tighten Your Belt, Strengthen Your Mind [NYT via Anne Truitt Zelenka]
Linux only: Tag and organise documents of nearly any kind and generate complete bibliographies with Referencer, a free utility for Linux systems. PDF files, office documents, saved web pages, and whatever else you have laying around can be tagged and organised, and you can enter the metadata needed for a bibliography report by hand, or have Referencer jump onto arXiv, PubMed, or CrossRe to see if any titles match up with what you’re looking at. For those with a lot of nested folders’ worth of documents or anyone harnessing Tux’s power for academic pursuits, Referencer can be a great tool and freak-out-preventer. Referencer is a free download, available as source and pre-compiled for many Linux distributions. Referencer [via Linux.com]
We all know that networking can be vitally important, especially for freelancers and those with a bit of salesmanship to their jobs, but gigantic conferences like SXSW Interactive or O’Reilly Emerging Technology can seem like imposing behemoths, and even smaller gatherings can be frustrating if your crowd-working skills aren’t up to snuff—which certainly holds true for your morning editor. There’s always another chance to book a room and pin on a name tag coming up, though, so I turn to our more networking-savvy readers and ask: How do you set goals or keep focused on getting something worthwhile out of your time at conferences and seminars? What kind of must-have goods do you bring? Do you plan to meet certain people ahead of time, or are big gatherings a chance to play it by ear? Let’s hear your advice, war stories, and suggestions in the comments.
You might think your consumer-model Canon digital camera can’t pull off the kind of fancy shots and tricks that make you stop and look on Flickr—until you unlock your camera’s potential with the Canon Hacker’s Development Kit. The completely reversible firmware upgrade, available for models running the DIGIC II or DIGIC III platforms, speeds up fast shutter modes (from 1/1,600th of a second to 1/60,000th!), allows for time-lapse photography and other scripted shots, unlimited interval shooting, better HDR pics, and much, much more. Wired’s How-To Wiki has a handy guide and introduction to the CHDK, available at the link below. I lack a Canon to try out the CHDK, so let your fellow readers know what you think if you’ve taken this step already. Supercharge Your Camera with Open-Source CHDK Firmware [Wired How-To Wiki]