All cool things come in small packages!

Digi Connect ME + PSU
Digi Connect ME + PSU

This is already quite aged product, but as I’ve used it before on various devices and stumbled across a killer deal at ebay for 10 units,  so I couldn’t resist it. Now I’m already designing a multiple new solutions to use these in. The module in question is a small ARM7 based ethernet device by Digi International – and they also have an upgraded version of this, based on ARM9. I like these a lot, it has proven to be very solid design and the supplied Net+OS very stable and quite easy to understand.
And what to do with it? For example, ethernet-enabled lightning control and movement sensing unit. Easily timed and controlled remotely. Powering can be done with POE, so it’s all standard equipment and cabling needed to use it. More on this when I’ll have time to write some more code for it.
Here’s also a pic from my test setup for outdoor led-lightning. Would be nice if it was a bit warmer in tone, and picture again makes it seem colder than it is actually. Plan is to add ~6-8 of these units in a similar fashion to light up the front yard, so it would prove enough light to see at night time but not be too bright.
Outdoor LED strip
Outdoor LED strip

The day they broke imdb

I’m a regular user of imdb, when I notice an interesting actor or when I ponder if I should watch some film or not, I usually dig it up from IMDB. Now this actual incident is not very recent, but it has bugged me more than anything in a little while. Now in my opinion movies should, by default, be listed in their original title – and it has been like this for ages. During this autumn someone has had a brilliant idea to bring up the translated titles by default from imdb.
Let’s give an example, I was looking for some actor and his particular listing of movies looks like this:

IMDB Broken
Correct or no?

This poses many problems. The biggest problem is that someone assumes all connections from Finland should want titles in Finnish! Next thing is, that if you buy a film ”Paavo Pesusieni” (or whatever translated animation / cartoon), there’s most likely a Finnish voice in place of this (even though, dvd’s propably always have the original soundtrack) and therefore this is error in listing. And it looks ugly too! Nevertheless, I found this very annoying, so annoying that I’ll write about it. What makes it worse, is that this usually brings up translations I’ve never heard of before! I mean, they could’ve put the site to listen for user-agents preference on language instead of some geo-ip policy, it’s not so hard?
Then again, I clearly wasn’t only one loosing hair over this and there is a solution to this problem, you can use http://akas.imdb.com/ and get the titles as they used to be. Which is my primary movie-source now 🙂

Finnish rye bread [Ruisleipä ja miten se tehdään]

If you don’t know what this is, it’s a traditional dark bread here in Finland (or perhaps in all scandinavia…), made solely out of rye flour and water (and salt). No milk, no added yeast – leavening occurs through natural fermentation process. Don’t know for sure if it should be called rye bread or leaven bread, so let’s try both.
Because there was very little information present on this particular art of baking – I’ll share my experiment with this traditional bread, which I like to  eat alot. I’ve never tried to do it before, as I’ve had illusion that it’s too much of a work and needs unseen university degree in magic to get it going on a modern kitchen (as I didn’t have the old traditional wooden basin, or hundreds of years old sourdough from my ancestors…) For some reason (perhaps others have been as sceptic as I was) there seems to be very little information on how the sourdough should be made from scratch. All the instructions I’ve seen rely on the fact that you’ll have saved some dough from your last patch of bread…
Sourdough:
So I couldn’t find out any exact information on how this should be done, there is lots of mixed opinions [FUD] around the internet on this. I read few posts from different internet forums, digged some information on traditional cooking book and counted 1+1 = 3. This is how the experiment turned out.

  • I took a clean (washed it with boiling water) glass pint with ~2dl of boiled and cooled water.
  • Crushed one finncrisp into the water (this is the magic ingredient, I don’t think it’s necessary at all, but idea of adding it was in the traditional cooking book. I’ll have try this out without the finncrisp in the future and update this if needed.)
  • Added few tablespoons of rye flour and roughly one tablespoon of  milk.  (And for a sake of trying it out I did another identical pint without the milk to see if it would make any difference.)

Sourdough should be quite thin liquid, I added flour very cautiously. Whipped it also well as fermentation needs the air.
I left both pints in a warmish place and covered them with cloth. Whipped them over once a day, after first 24 hours, nothing had happened, but on a second day, I could see some bubbles on both pints and also they smelt a tad sour. Whipped them again, added a bit of flour and left them to ferment further. Third day made the difference. The one with milk had a lesser amount of bubbles and quite nice smell. Another was almost foamy and smelt sharper. I decided the one containing that tad of milk, would be ready and sourdough for my coming up bread. I forgot to took image of this, so no pictures of this.
The sourdough goes dough (or paste:)
And on we go after three days of eager waiting. I took roughly one litre of water (a tad above room temperature). Added the sourdough to it and about 0,5l of rye-flour, mixing and whipping it well, again coming fermentation process needs air, so this is mandatory.  [And in case you had done this before already, now you just take the bit of paste you saved from last time, mix it with the water, and voila. You have sourdough. Add flour and continue.]
After this phase I had quite thin ”rye-porridge” which I left to a warmish place to ferment for a roughly 16 hours.
Sourdough worked as it should and I now had a half a bowl of bubbling porridge. Smell it, it should be nice, fresh and sour-ish. Depending on how well fermented (longer you keep it, the tougher the taste) bread you like, you can keep it in bowl for several days, just remember to add some flour once a day so the process lives on. And also remember to whip it a little while adding flour.

Bubbling porridge
This is how it looked

I decided that one day was enough for my taste (and for this test), so at this point (16hrs after mixing sourdough, water and flours) I added roughly 1kg of rye-flour and turned it into very thick brown dough. I read an recommendation that one should mix it with wooden stick or stow and add flour until the stow almost cracks in half. I think this was very correct statement and also on a sidenote: don’t put your hands in there if not necessary… It will be sticky and very messy.
Ready dough
Theee dough

Put a cloth on top of the dough it and let it be leavened for a few hours, it should roughly double in size. At least mine did 😉
Leavened dough
Leavened dough

Last phase is to turn the dough in to the bread. I made the ”traditional” thin disc-shaped bread out of it.   Remember to save some dough for the next time so you don’t have to do the sourdough from the start again! Readily shaped discs are further leavened for couple of hours in warmish place and under a cloth. I baked the bread in middle section of oven and with 250 degrees (C) temperature – for about 30min. After you take them out of the oven, let them cool under a cloth and I strongly recommend that you cut them while they’re still a tad warm. Failure to follow this last instruction will propably mean that you’ll need a chainsaw to cut the bread :]
Ready bread fresh out of the stove
Ready bread fresh out of the stove

And then eat it! It’s just damn good, taste will beat anything you can buy from stores!
Lastly; I take no responsibility on whatever you’ll manage to create following my notes on this experiment. It is your own responsibility to know what you’re doing 🙂
I may add Finnish version of this later on.