Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn summer. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn summer. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 8 tháng 5, 2013

Projects to get your yard ready for summer

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With the summer months just around the corner, many homeowners are firing up the grill for the first time and dreaming of lazy days in the backyard. In order to get the most out of your yard this summer, you might consider sprucing it up to wow the neighbors and impress your friends and family. Here are a couple of backyard renovation projects that will make your yard the envy of the block.

Outdoor Kitchen

An increasingly popular addition to the backyard, an outdoor kitchen can spare you multiple trips indoors while you’re trying to cook up a feast. By bringing your kitchen amenities outdoors, you can make the patio, and the barbecue, the focal point of festivities during the summer.

Start by upgrading that rickety old card table that you use for grill-side meat storage with something more permanent. An outdoor counter will give you all the space you need to whip up a batch of your famous barbecue sauce or dice up enough grill-able greens to keep the vegetarians happy. When building an outdoor counter, you want to select materials that are weatherproof, durable and easy to clean. Avoid untreated wood, which can warp and rot, as well as porous stone, which will attract grime over time.

Next you’ll want a place to keep your drinks and food chilled. Most bar fridges are not rated for outdoor use, so if you want one that will be able to weather the elements, make sure it’s built to be used outside, like the Vinotemp outdoor fridge. If you plan to keep your fridge stocked all summer long, you’ll also want to look for one with a security lock in order to keep neighborhood animals like raccoons from pilfering your beer and soda supply.

A backyard countertop and fridge are nice, but you don’t have to stop there. For an extra touch of luxury, you can install an outdoor sink, making food prep and cleanup a snap. And by wiring your new counter with electrical outlets, you’ll ensure that your margarita maker and stereo stay powered through your summer parties.

Backyard Lighting

A great way to make your backyard parties more inviting is to replace harsh floodlights with softer lighting options.

A great way to make your backyard parties more inviting is to replace harsh floodlights with softer lighting options. Low-voltage lighting, the type that often line pathways and pools, are a great way to give your yard a warm glow without overpowering the night’s sky above. And because most of these lights simply plug in to an outdoor outlet, or are powered by solar cells, they won’t require an electrician to install, making them a great DIY option.

While low-voltage ground-level lights can help set the mood for your moonlit party, they won’t shed much light on your dining table or help you at the grill. To ensure that you’re not stumbling in the dark, add a few sets of string lights to the mix. An affordable and easy-to-install lighting option, string lights can make your backyard feel more like an outdoor bistro.

As an alternative to string lights, an umbrella light transforms your patio umbrella into a light source, illuminating your outdoor dining table when you need it, but staying out of the way when you don’t.

Nowhere is good lighting more important than at the grill. You don’t want to risk poisoning your guests because you couldn’t tell if the chicken was cooked to perfection or still raw in the middle. To make sure you’ve got enough light to keep cooking past sundown, grab yourself a barbecue lamp. Featuring both a powerful clamp and a magnet, the lamp can clamp or stick to any surface, while its bendable, snaking neck can reach across the grill.


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Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 5, 2013

New Datsun to be unveiled this summer

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Datsun will return to the automotive world in July, but only a part of it.

Autocar India reports that the first vehicle from the reborn car company will be unveiled in New Delhi on July 15th.

The five-door hatchback is to be powered by a 1.2-liter four-cylinder engine and be designed with a focus on comfort, fuel economy and affordability.

The brand is being revived by Nissan to do battle in the low-priced end of the market.

To that end, the vehicle is expected to be priced as low as $5,500 when it goes on sale next year.

Unfortunately for American fans of the original incarnation of Datsun, which changed its name to Nissan three decades ago, they’ll have to take a trip to the Eastern Hemisphere for a test drive.

The new car will be sold only in India, Russia and Indonesia initially, as it is being targeted primarily at emerging markets.

They can, however, take some solace in the fact that Nissan currently sells the cheapest car in the United States, the Versa, which has a base price of $12,780.

Of course, compared to the new Datsun, that doesn’t seem like nearly as good of a bargain as it used to.


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Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 3, 2013

Windows 8 update coming this summer

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    March 26, 2013: A screenshot of the website for Build 2013, a Microsoft developer conference where the Windows giant is likely to unveil the latest version of its operating system.FoxNews.com / Microsoft

A new tablet computer and Windows 8.1: The marriage of the summer?

Like a blushing fiancé eager to step up to the altar, Microsoft picked a date and sent out invitations Tuesday for the Build 2013 conference, where the software giant is likely to announce early availability of an update to the Windows 8 operating system.

The company first unveiled the tablet-centric Windows 8 OS at a Build conference on Sept. 11, 2011. At the upcoming event, scheduled for June 26-28 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, the company will discuss the future of the software, said one Microsoft veep.

“At Build, we’ll share updates and talk about what’s next for Windows,” wrote Steve Guggenheimer, Microsoft's corporate vice president and chief evangelist, in a blog post announcing the event. Guggenhiemer did not go into detail about what the next version of the software will do or how it will address criticism that the software is too touch-focused and sometimes counterintuitive.

But In a separate blog post, another Microsoft executive mentioned one word that offers clues and is sure to tantalize technology fans: blue.

“Product leaders across Microsoft are working together on plans to advance our devices and services, a set of plans referred to internally as Blue,wrote Frank X. Shaw, corporate vice president of corporate communications.

“Chances of products being named thusly are slim to none,” he added with a wink.

Over the weekend, a leaked version of “Windows Blue” was widely described on tech websites, sporting a number of features that may address that criticism. It includes features like the resizable tiles already present in Windows Phone 8, as well as features that will make it more usable on touch tablets, such as the ability to customize the Start Screen without having to use the Desktop Control Panel.

Mary Jo Foley, who covers Microsoft technology for ZDNet, detailed some additional changes.

“There's also a new snap view which allows two windows to be snapped side-by-side so that each takes up half the size of the display, as well as an option to have four apps displayed simultaneously. (If that four-app view ends up making it into Blue, I'll be very happy, as I really miss real windowing in Windows 8.)”

The company is supposedly aiming to release the software this summer, Foley wrote.

We'll see if the engagement holds. In the meantime, don’t buy that wedding gift just yet.


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Aggressive Florida mosquito set to spoil summer, scientist says

If you live in Florida, a large, aggressive mosquito with a painful bite may soon be coming to a place near you.

One scientist at the University of Florida is predicting that another wave of Psorophora ciliate, sometimes called gallinippers, could be coming along with the summer’s rains.

The species is around a half an inch long with a black and white color pattern, the University of Florida News reports.

“The bite really hurts, I can attest to that,” said Phil Kaufman, an entomologist at the school.

Flooding from Tropical Storm Debbie unleashed huge numbers of the mosquitos throughout Florida last June, according to the University of Florida News.

Click for more from the University of Florida News.


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