Friday, August 23, 2013

drag2share: This Interactive Chart Shows Which Foods Pair Best, Based on Science

source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/vip/~3/JWwi87egZ5Y/this-interactive-chart-shows-which-foods-pair-best-bas-1182989721

This Interactive Chart Shows Which Foods Pair Best, Based on Science

If you've ever wondered why orange-flavored coffee exists or why chefs combine strange pairs like chocolate and blue cheese, this fun flavor map is for you. With it you can see how many foods and drinks have shared flavor compounds.

Scientific American explains:

Science-minded chefs have gone so far as to suggest that seemingly incongruous ingredients—chocolate and blue cheese, for example—will taste great together as long as they have enough flavor compounds in common. Scientists recently put this hypothesis to the test by creating a flavor map, a variant of which we have reproduced here. Lines connect foods that have components in common; thick lines mean many components are shared. By comparing the flavor network with various recipe databases, the researchers conclude that chefs do tend to pair ingredients with shared flavor compounds—but only in Western cuisine. Dishes from a database of recipes from East Asia tend to combine ingredients with few overlapping flavors.

To read the chart, click on the food dot. The bigger the dot, the more popular the food is (according to a global database of 56,498 recipes). Lines that connect two dots show they have at least one flavor compound in common; the thicker the line, the more flavor compounds they share. Red lines connect foods in different categories.

It's similar to previously mentioned Foodpairing, but another way of discovering flavor connections.

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Usemon Monitors System Performance From the Notification Shade

Source: http://lifehacker.com/usemon-monitors-system-performance-from-the-notificatio-1181523575

Usemon Monitors System Performance From the Notification Shade

Android: In Windows, seeing how fast your CPU is cranking is just a keyboard shortcut away. Android isn't as convenient. Unless you use Usemon.

The app puts an at-a-glance system monitor directly in the notification shade of your device. Just swipe down and get graphs for CPU, RAM, network, and disk usage. You can adjust which stats are shown in the shade (or disable them entirely) from the settings. Or you can deck out your shade with our previous round up of notification shade apps.

Usemon (Usage monitor) | Google Play Store via WonderHowTo

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We Can Now Print Ultrafast Graphene Chips for Flexible Electronics

Source: http://gizmodo.com/we-can-now-print-ultrafast-graphene-chips-for-flexible-1185292486

We Can Now Print Ultrafast Graphene Chips for Flexible Electronics

Futurists are always talking about how flexible electronics will change our lives in amazing ways, but we've yet to see anything mind-blowing come to market. A team of scientists from the University of Texas in Austin, however, think they've found the key to changing that: ultrafast graphene transistors printed on flexible plastic.

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drag2share: How Flavors Are Linked, Visualized

source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/vip/~3/QCynt3TYcRE/how-flavors-are-linked-visualized-1187426149

How Flavors Are Linked, Visualized

If you've ever wondered why certain foods taste great together—tomato and basil or, hell, peanut butter and jelly—then wonder no longer. This amazing visualization from Scientific American shows how flavors are linked, and explains why certain combinations work so well.

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Galaxy Tab 3 gets rebranded as 'Homeboy' for launch on LG's Korean mobile network

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/23/lg-homeboy/

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Considering that Korea's warring giants don't get along too well, it's amusing to see LG offering a Samsung-made tablet on LG U+, the latter's domestic cellular network. The "Homeboy" is a re-branded Galaxy Tab 3 that plugs into U+'s services, including TV channels, music, video, e-book and educational software stores, oh, and it'll double as a GPS while on the go. Leave the unit at home, however, and it'll also guard the property, texting you if it senses an unwanted intruder -- and is, according to the company's Kang Hyun-ku, the first step in LG's new connected home platform. That said, given that it's nearly a nailed-on certainty that we're going to see LG's return to the tablet game in short order, we don't expect the amusingly-titled slate to remain the favorite son in a couple of months.

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Via: Android Beat

Source: Korea Herald

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