lmemsm

joined 2 years ago
[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

I can relate to being a picky eater and not liking the taste of things. I go through hundreds of cookbooks and it's difficult to find recipes I like. Forgetting an ingredient is normal. I'll often forget baking soda at the end of the recipe and the result will be flat. You may want to double check the recipe after you've done anything to make sure everything's there. I've also been having trouble lately making sure all the ingredients I took out are put away in the refrigerator and often find something that went bad when it was accidentally left out. What I like about cooking is that most flops are still edible and at their worst, if you don't like it, someone else might.

You mentioned you like fruits and vegetables. You may want to go to the local farmer's market or vegetable stand and see if there are some more unusual fruits and vegetables to try. I've been experimenting with making squash as a side dish. If you can get the squash open, it's fairly easy to make. Asparagus is another quick option. I've been using a microwave steamer. It's great for reheating vegetables or certain leftovers. If you want to avoid the plastic varieties, I just found a silicone based one by Cuisinart. Also, if you're making pancakes, waffles might be another option to try. Crepes are another possibility and you can also use them as egg roll wrappers or in lasagna or manicotti dishes to replace store bought versions. Pasta is fairly easy to cook. I've been boiling lentil or lentil/rice pastas a lot lately. A nori roll with rice and/or vegetable filling is another easy option. I've also been experimenting with collard greens as a wrapper lately. Another nice cooking tool I've found is a rotary slicer. It's useful for grating foods or making baked french fries. I have a Vitamix, but I'll frequently just use an inexpensive coffee/nut grinder to grind flax, seeds or grains. The Vitamix is good for making ices from frozen fruits and making seed/nut or fruit butters though. I've even used it in place of a stand mixer when I make a crepe batter.

If you want to enrich what you're making, there are ways to sneak healthy things into a recipe without altering the taste. Most recipes that include sugar have too much and you can lower it gradually without missing it. There are tricks like the Cornell triple rich formula. Substitute part of the flour in the recipe for healthier ingredients like that formula or just add a spoon of healthy ingredients like flax, etc. Add more vegetables to dishes. If you're having a pizza, add a lot of vegetable toppings. I like to use unbuffered vitamin C powder as an acid that works with baking soda. Heat might destroy a lot of the C, but you're still getting some that you might not otherwise get. It depends on your goals but you can usually alter recipes you like in small ways to make them more nutritious.

I really like Nicolette Dumke's books. She uses very basic ingredients and explains how you can substitute ingredients for ones that you're more comfortable with. You can find some of her recipe books on archive.org or possibly at your local library.

I use HTML for my formatting and wkhtmltopdf to create documents instead of latex. Some people prefer markup for document formatting. Plain text has a lot of benefits and is very portable. It's useful for notes, todo lists and there's no reason one can't store recipes that way.

I read tons of recipes books and I feel lucky if I find even one I like. However, I do find something useful that actually tastes good once in a while. So, I feel like it's worth the effort to keep searching for new ideas. Good luck in your own search. If you come across any useful recipes along the way, I hope you'll share them.

 

Wanted to wish everyone a happy Software Freedom Day. Hope you'll check out the list of online SFD events and recordings from some of the events.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's why we specifically mentioned Fediverse and FOSS alternatives to get the word out about Software Freedom Day here: https://wiki.softwarefreedomday.org/SFDMarketingSites The DFF board discussed this topic and wants to continue to reach out to people who don't know about FOSS and the Fediverse. So, we are trying to meet them where they are and let them know about the benefits of using FOSS. Also, one of the groups did a talk on switching from X to Mastodon: https://mobilizon.fr/events/1ab64af3-b99e-473d-87da-7ad07497ab41 If you have suggestions for the web site, please join the SFD discussion mailing list and add your input. The new DFF board will be redesigning the entire site for next year, but did not have time to do so for the 20th edition of Software Freedom Day. Their main goal was making sure that we still had a Software Freedom Day this year after the old board stepped down.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

I would love to find a cohousing project in my area. Have not found any good ones. Most of them seem like money making schemes. We had a group (not specifically ND) try to create a cohousing project locally. They went bankrupt and the developer bought out the property and made a profit selling regular homes. Most of the housing situations I've investigated geared to autistic people were very expensive. If there was a decent option in my area or anyone wanted to help put together a group to do this, I'd definitely want to get involved.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

I'm also a programmer by profession. Haven't been as lucky as you with finding friends through programming even though I've probably been to every computer related Meetup or group in my area. Speaking of computer science, anyone doing anything for Software Freedom Day in September? I've tried the past few years to hold an event for it online and no one showed. Would love to do something for it, but it's really not much fun doing it alone.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by lmemsm@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml
 

Are you interested in attending or helping to organize a Software Freedom Day event? Software Freedom Day educates people about and promotes the benefits of Free, Libre and Open Source Software and Creative Commons multimedia. The Digital Freedom Foundation is currently planning this year's 20th anniversary in September. Please see the Software Freedom Day web site for details. You can join in the discussion on the Software Freedom Day mailing list or the SoftwareFreedomDay matrix channel. Volunteers are needed. Please spread the word about this event. Thank you.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

I liked the Interlac alphabet Easter egg in the Legion of Super-Heroes TV series DVD. I also really like the cat game in certain versions of Android. Accidentally stumbled across it when looking through the Android code.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

Workrave is usually mentioned most often as a break timer. I know prevrsi has short and long breaks, but you'd need Wine to run it on Linux. The other break timer software I've located so far are xwrits, stretchly ( https://github.com/hovancik/stretchly ) and breaktimer ( https://github.com/tom-james-watson/breaktimer-app ). Always looking for other interesting options.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

This is one of my favorite RSS readers.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Wasn't thrilled with CMake when I was unable to build it without having to have a working copy of CMake already installed to build it with. It's also now so complicated to build, it won't build on older versions of some compilers. Directories it searches for libraries and includes are always wrong on my systems and I'm always having to override that information. Personally, I really like CDetect and use that in place of CMake and GNU autoconf/configure any time I can.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

I've been doing some experiments with sixel: https://lmemsm.dreamwidth.org/24382.html

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

I've tried pdftotext and a few others. So far, my favorite is the pdftxt program I've mentioned.

3
sixel (en.wikipedia.org)
 

Would be curious to know if anyone's had any experience using sixel. I've only seen a few framebuffer based Linux distributions. Wondering if sixel could be used in a similar way to avoid X Windows or Wayland. I saw a port of libsdl that outputs in sixel. Also started experimenting with mlterm which displays sixel. Would be curious to hear of others experiences working with sixel or other graphics formats that could potentially display well in console mode.

3
pdftxt (litcave.rudi.ir)
 

Thought I'd mention pdftxt. It translates pdf files to text using libmupdf. Haven't found anything more lightweight to do the same job. Would be curious if others have. There are some other interesting framebuffer and command line programs at the same site too.

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Wondering if imagemagick or graphicsmagick would be useful. They can be used as libraries instead of just programs. libmupdf has some interesting graphics routines. As to boundary detection, might need to look at machine learning libraries for that. Some C machine learning libraries that deal with image detection include ccv ( https://github.com/liuliu/ccv ), yolo ( https://pjreddie.com/darknet/ ) and vlfeat ( https://www.vlfeat.org/ ).

[–] lmemsm@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

I've been searching for and collecting a list of machine learning source code in C/C++. One project I came across was this one: https://github.com/GHamrouni/Recommender

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