Friday, May 18, 2012

How To Use Calibre To Correctly Order Your Ebook Series

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Trying to remember, based on the titles alone, what order a series of books goes in can be quite frustrating. Read on as we show you how to annotate and sort your book titles as they’re transferred to your ebook reader for frustration-free reading.

Here’s a common situation: you’ve transferred a series of books to your ebook reader and, once on the reader, there is no easy way to tell the books apart. Does The Mysterious Ranch come before The Mysterious Mid-Century Modern? You could go through the enormous hassle of renaming every series book you have to include the series and series number in the title, but there’s no need to do that. Thanks to a very handy function in the popular ebook management application Calibre, all it takes is a few minutes of tweaking to enjoy automatically renamed and properly numbered books on your ebook reader.

What Do I Need?

For this tutorial you’ll only need your ebook reader and free tools. Here’s what we’re using:

Calibre (a free and open-source ebook manager).A Kindle (this trick works with Nooks and other ebook readers, too).An ebook series.

If you’ve never used Calibre before, we’d recommend checking out our guide to organizing your ebook collection with Calibre to familiarize yourself with the application.

Getting Started

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The most important thing is that you have the book series in Calibre. For the purposes of this tutorial we created a set of ebook files by a fabricated authorâ€"our apologies to those readers who are dying to know what happens in The Mysterious Mid-Century Modern.

The second most important thing is that you’ve correctly labeled the series in Calibre using the Series meta-data tag. If you don’t have it done already, we promise this will be the most labor intensive (and thankfully one-time) part of the tutorial.

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An easy way to quickly tag all the books in a series is to highlight the books, right click on the highlighted group, and select Edit metadata individually. In the Edit Metadata menu you can enter the Series name and Number at the top of the screen. If you need help figuring out the order of the books in the series you’re editing, we highly recommend you visit the helpful website FictFactâ€"there you can browse by author name and book series.

You’ve got your books? You’ve tagged them with the correct Series and number? Now it’s time to tie it all together.

Setting Up a Calibre Plugboard2012-05-15_145403

Calibre has an awesome feature known as a Plugboard. The plugboard exists exclusively to allow you to, on-the-fly, edit ebook metadata during the send-to-device and save-to-disk operations. Thanks to the magic of the plugboard you don’t have to do annoying and time consuming things like hand edit book titles in order to insert the series name/number or otherwise resolve formatting and ordering issues on various ebook devices.

Currently our series, MysteryHouse, contains 6 books:

The Mysterious HouseThe Mysterious PalaceThe Mysterious MansionThe Mysterious BungalowThe Mysterious Mid-Century Modern

If we were to simply transfer them to our Kindle, there would be no indication which book came first or last in the series. A simple plugboard can solve that problem by, as the books are copied to the Kindle, editing the title/metadata so that we can, at a glance, see which book is which.

To create your plugboard, click on Preferences â€"> Metadata plugboards (located in the Import/Export section). You’ll be presented with a blank plugboard, like so:

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The first order of business is to select the format and device. While you could run it wide-open with “any format” and “any device” selected, it’s wiser to set up specific plugboards for specific devices. We’re going to be setting one up for a Kindle 3 (now known as the Kindle Keyboard). For the Format, we’ll select MOBI and for the Device we’ll select Kindle2 (the Kindle 2 and Kindle 3 use the same metadata formatting).

Under the Source template you insert the the naming string you’d like to use for the books. Although you can make your own by reading this Calibre manual entry on the subject, we’ll save you the trouble and share a few basic ones here. Our examples are arranged with the string first and the example output second.

{series}{series_index:0>2s| #| -  }{title}

MysteryHouse #01 – The Mysterious House

{series}{series_index:0>2s| – | – }{title}

MysteryHouse â€" 01 â€" The Mysterious House

{series:|| }{series_index:0>2s|[|] }{title}

MysteryHouse [01] The Mysterious House

Once you’ve selected the naming string you’d like to use, paste the code into the Source template slot and then select “Title” in the Destination field. We’re using the second one in the list for this tutorial. Click Save plugboard. The plugboard will appear in the Existing plugboards box like so:

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If you need to tweak the plugboard in the future, simply select it and click it and the variables for that plugboard will automatically load into the menu for editing.

Now that we have the plugboard set up, it’s time to test it out. Click Apply in the upper left hand corner to exit the plugboard menu and apply your work. Close the preferences screen and return to the main Calibre menu.

Make sure your device is plugged into your computer and then highlight the books in the series you wish to send to your device. Right click and select Send to deviceâ€"pick the storage option on the device you normally use, in our case “main memory”.

Dismount your device and power it up. If everything went as planned you should see the book series neatly named and organized like so:

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Success! No more wondering whether the The Mysterious Palace precedes The Mysterious Mansion! Any time you add more devices to your stable of gizmos, you can hope back into the plugboard menu and create a new plugboard script for the device. You’ll never be left trying to remember what order your books go in again.

Have a sweet Calibre or ebook reader trick to share? Let’s hear about it in the comments.Don't show again X

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How To Use Calibre To Correctly Order Your Ebook Series

Decision Time – Only 5 Minutes Left to Finish the Game [Video]

The guys are really close to capturing the enemy flag when a serious problem arises. Do they go with the crazy suicidal plan their leader proposes or an alternate plan? What was the real reason their leader offered up such a crazy plan?

Decision Time – 6 HOUR SHORT [via Geeks are Sexy]

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Decision Time â€" Only 5 Minutes Left to Finish the Game [Video]

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Water Soaked Laptop? Not a Problem! [Humorous Images]

There is a right way and a wrong way to deal with a water soaked laptop…and an oven is definitely not the right way…

Reddit Thread with Additional Details& Original Size Pics [via Fail Desk]

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Water Soaked Laptop? Not a Problem! [Humorous Images]

Geek Trivia: The Oldest Planetarium In The World Is Located Where?


Answer: A Dutch Living Room

In the Dutch town of Franeker, there is a small and unassuming home that houses a planetarium on the ceiling of its living room. The intricate and mechanically driven model of our solar system is over 230 years old and, as such, is the oldest functioning planetarium in existence.

How, exactly, did a small home in the Netherlands become a planetarium? To answer that question, we have to dig into the history of one brilliant but amateur Dutch astronomer by the name of Eise Eisinga. The son of a wool worker, Eisinga wasn’t allowed to go to school but was, instead, compelled to study his father’s craft. Despite this, he educated himself and published his first work on astronomy at the age of 17. In his later life he even served as a professor at the Franeker Academy.

Eisinga began work on his planetarium in summer of 1774. Earlier that year Reverend Eelco Alta published a book claiming that the the impending alignment of the moons of Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Jupiter were going to cause a cosmic imbalance of sorts that would push the Earth off its orbit and send it on a fiery journey into the Sun. This prediction caused an inordinate amount of panic in the public and Eisinga, as a service to the public, began work on an intricate model of the solar system in order to show that the prediction and its foretold outcome were false.

The entire project took 7 years (far more than the 6 months Eisinga had original predicted) and featured a complex system of wooden rings fitted with thousands of hand-forged nails to serve as cog-teeth. Despite its age the apparatus still tracks the placement of planets in our solar system with precision–a testament to both the quality of the construction and the knowledge of the builder.


Geek Trivia: The Oldest Planetarium In The World Is Located Where?

Student Builds Real-Life Portal Turret [Video]

What’s the perfect final project for an Advanced Mechatronics class? A functioning and armed Portal turrent, of course.

Courtesy of Pennstate student and YouTube user kss5095, a fully functional sentry turret. He writes:

This is the final project for my Advanced Mechatronics class at Penn State University. The robot is the skeleton of a turret from the game Portal that uses an IP webcam to track a target and fire nerf bullets at them. This is the current state of the robot as of 5/9/12, but I am currently molding a shell for the frame to make it look like the Portal turret, along with improving my code to make the tracking faster. All programming is done with MATLAB and Arduino. Enjoy!

We’re patiently awaiting the future version that comes with dual paintball guns and a massive ammo hopper.

Real Tracking and Shooting Portal Turret [YouTube]

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Student Builds Real-Life Portal Turret [Video]

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Researchers Prove Tin Foil Hats Boost Receptivity To Government Signals

You know the old bit about putting tin-foil on your head to keep the government signals out of your brain? It turns out cladding your head in tin-foil has the opposite effect.

Researchers at MIT, using a network analyzer, tested the impact of tin foil helmets on receptivity of radio-frequency signals. They highlight the method and results in the study abstract:

Among a fringe community of paranoids, aluminum helmets serve as the protective measure of choice against invasive radio signals. We investigate the efficacy of three aluminum helmet designs on a sample group of four individuals. Using a $250,000 network analyser, we find that although on average all helmets attenuate invasive radio frequencies in either directions (either emanating from an outside source, or emanating from the cranium of the subject), certain frequencies are in fact greatly amplified. These amplified frequencies coincide with radio bands reserved for government use according to the Federal Communication Commission (FCC). Statistical evidence suggests the use of helmets may in fact enhance the government’s invasive abilities. We speculate that the government may in fact have started the helmet craze for this reason.

While their conclusion is a bit tongue-in-cheek, the irony of foil helmets increasing reception of government-reserved radio frequencies is certainly not lost on us.

On the Effectiveness of Aluminum Foil Helmets: An Empirical Study

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Researchers Prove Tin Foil Hats Boost Receptivity To Government Signals

Find the Current Local Time in Other Parts of the World at a Glance with ‘Every Time Zone’

Do you need to quickly find out what the local time is in another part of the world compared to your current location? Then ‘Every Time Zone’ is the perfect site to visit!

Just compare your location (shown in green) to the one you are looking for (shown in blue) to check the current time or use the grey areas for non-current times.

Every Time Zone Homepage [via Neatorama]

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Find the Current Local Time in Other Parts of the World at a Glance with ‘Every Time Zone’