November 26, 2014

10 recipe apps to help you cook up memorable meals

Our food writer chooses her favourite apps to help you in the kitchen, from boiling the perfect egg to creating a culinary masterpiece

 

Felicity Cloake

They said the kitchen was the last bastion of the book; that water-phobic, grease-shy computers would never penetrate its steamy walls. Well, they were wrong; last year a survey by the recipe website allrecipes.com found that 44% of respondents claimed digital media was their cooking resource of choice – and I have to admit, I'm among them.

I do still love my enormous cookbook collection; tablets don't tend to take so kindly to being splattered with tomato sauce, but they do have certain advantages. For a start, the cleverest apps take on the boring bits of cooking: doing the maths to scale up that lasagne for four to feed a party of six, for example, and then making a shopping list.

Many of them will even sync across devices, so the list on your tablet will also pop up on your smartphone in the supermarket.

Best of all is the interactivity; puzzled by exactly how fine finely diced carrots are, or indeed the quickest way to produce them?

Click on the related knife-skills video for a tutorial from an expert. Just remember to wash your hands first.

1) Saveur magazine IOS Android free

saveur magazine app

Or, in fact food magazines in general: our very own British – and delicious – Olive, Jamie and BBC Good Food all have their own apps, but the real treat for me is flicking through my favourite glossy American food titles without having to pay for transatlantic postage. Sweet potato pie, here I come.

2) How to Cook Everything Essentials IOS free

how to cook app

Mark Bittman, a James Beard award-winning former New York Times food columnist, provides 2,000 recipes for everything from a basic tomato sauce to octopus with tomatoes and red wine, plus cross-referenced advice on equipment and techniques. Unlike some American apps, this is happily fully metric.

3) Great British chefs IOS Windows free

great british chefs app

One of my favourite websites comes in a variety of stylish mobile forms (including a great cooking with kids version) and includes recipes from some of the country's finest chefs, beautifully photographed. It also includes a handy shopping list function so you don't forget the fleur de sel or the tonka beans.

4) Paprika IOS £2.99 Android £3.05

paprika app

Replace that sheaf of recipes fluttering forlornly from the fridge magnet with this clever electronic manager, which collates all that inspiration in one place. Features include built-in timers, a screen lock so it doesn't switch off in the middle of something and seamless cloud sync across devices.

5) Myfitnesspal IOS Android free

myfitness pal app

An invaluable free resource for anyone who overdid it at Christmas; with over three million foods in their database (some entries are more reliable than others), it's a handy way to keep track of the calories. Though I wish I didn't know that 1tsp olive oil contains 40 of the damn things.

  1. Jamie's Recipes IOS free

jamie oliver app

Jamie's embraced the digital revolution with characteristic enthusiasm; his free app gives you 10 recipes and six videos every month, while subscribers can download collections like money-saving meals. Great interactive photos and tips – though slightly unnerving to have Jamie piping up from nowhere.

7) The perfect egg timer IOS 69p Android £1.29

Egg timer app

Even food writers aren't always on the ball at breakfast time. This unashamedly simple app, which also comes in a steak version, takes into account temperature, altitude and egg diameter to guarantee you your perfect egg, every time. Genius.

8) Modernist cuisine at home IOS £54.99

modernist cuisine app

OK, so this gorgeous paean to cutting-edge cuisine doesn't come cheap, but bear in mind the book's a cool £100, and this has 260 more fiendishly precise recipes and 359 more stunning photos, plus videos, recipe scaling and a shopping list function, and suddenly it seems like quite good value really.

9) The Good Fish Guide IOS Android free

good fish guide app

If you can never remember whether eating sea bream will see you eternally damned to environmental hell, then this Marine Conservation Society app should salve your conscience considerably. Almost every fish you're likely to come across in this country is classified as either an eat, or an avoid. No excuses.

10) Riverford veg recipes IOS free

Veg app

Those who started the year vowing to eat more greens will find this excellent app from the organic vegbox scheme a godsend. It includes nearly 800 recipes, plus storage and preparation tips and a surprisingly fun fruit (veg?) machine-style search tool children will love.

 

November 25, 2014

The 12 Best Children’s Educational iPad Apps Released

reading-raven

TeachThought and Teachers With Apps are happy to release our list of 12 best children’s educational apps released in 2012!

Every app featured in this review has been released in 2012, updates excluded. We wish this list had 12 categories so we could cover all of the wonderful new educational additions to the app store. Since that is not feasible we are limiting this list to learning games only. We will post a list of the 12 Best Book Apps of 2012 soon, as well as a list of the top 12 Educational App Developers. Stay-tuned!

The 12 Best Children’s Educational iPad Apps Released In 2012

1. State Bingo and Road Trip US, just hit the app store last week! It is totally educational, exceptionally engaging and aesthetically pleasing. It also completely encompasses Common Core Standards and differentiated modes of play. This app has so much to offer, learning-wise, and is so much FUN!  The zoom in- zoom out map is an exciting way to learn all types of map skills and the act of immediately applying that knowledge to a given question brings this app into the category of deeper learning.

2. Spinlight Studio released their newest app, Geography Drive USA, and we love it!!  No more boring maps and memorizing facts. Students will be delighted to learn about geography in a whole new, fun, exciting way. The visitor’s center has each of the individual states and facts galore. Each state has three different questions to answer. To gain more fuel and money, visit the all-state pass for more questions that are read to the player.  There is more than one chance to try a state, with a wonderful variety of harder and easier questions. Questions cover current as well as historical events.

3. Ansel & Clair: Paul Revere’s Ride, by Cognitive Kid, was recently released too and we had the pleasure of beta testing this incredibly elaborate app over several months. Cognitive Kid is one of those companies that will go down in history as being one of the first to develop outstanding learning content, where discovery is the model & play is the focus, where students love it as much as the teachers and every school considers it a must have! Let us share some feedback from the students during round one. When kids were asked to respond why they thought it was a good way to learn, the responses were plain and simple. “Because it teaches important history stuff in a fun to play way.” Or, the let me get right to the point comment, “Made boring history fun.” Kids approached this app eagerly and surprised us by the amount of time spent exploring and discovering each individual scene with complete focus.

4. Eye Paint Animals, by Curious Hat, is one of the most innovative and invigorating apps we’ve seen to date. TWA had the pleasure of speaking with Luca Prasso, one of the co-founders of Curious Hat, and got a better understanding of where this state of the art company has been and where they hope to go.  They strive to design tools for children that encourage discovery play and foster creativity, they succeed spectacularly. Curious Hat has taken the iOS user experience to a whole n’other level.  Luca states, “Our apps are not games, they are discovery tools aimed at energizing kids to play, create, invent, explore and learn in enjoyable ways without the limitations of set parameters.”

5. Native Numbers, by Native Brain, is a wonderful addition to the already saturated math app market! This game is on the money when it comes to providing a deeper understanding of number concepts and imperative math vocabulary, which is needed to build a strong foundation for all mathematics to follow. As Native Brain mentions on their website, kids are capable of so much more if we give them the chance. We need to embrace this philosophy and raise the bar. Starting early is by far the best way to achieve this. Research has shown over and over that children that have a solid and deep exposure to basic number concepts have the ability to learn and understand math skills later.

6. Numerosity: Play with Math!,by ThoughtBox, is based on a cutting edge approach to learning math and TWA found while field-testing, the kids kept wanting to come back for more and more play time. We love their statement, “Let’s show our children that Math and Science can be loved.”  Numerosity may not have coined the term GamefulLearning, but they refer to it often and explain it as a way to engage and empower learners by placing them in the driver seat. TWA couldn’t agree more! The games are a brilliant way for students to learn and Numerosity has done a smashing job of coming up with an app that has the ability to put the child back in the drivers seat.

7. Social Quest,bySmarty Ears, is a keeper! Speech therapists and teachers will have no problem engaging students with this superb app. Students will love their picture being in the House of Heroes. Various items will be earned as the student successfully answers either receptive or expressive questions. This app is very clever in creating a game around a castle. Pick a room in a house by pulling the students picture or avatar to the room, then student will transport to that specific room. The bathroom, for example, covers sharing items in the bathroom, how to explain to parents you want a haircut and what not to touch. Actual photographs make the experience more real and reinforce concepts. Other locations are available such as the movies, a restaurant, in the neighborhood, at the doctor’s office, in the supermarket and at the mall… and up to 4 students can play in different locations at one time. Different situations create great, true to life learning opportunities for all students.

8. iTooch Junior High School, by edupad Inc., is not only a state of the art and completely comprehensive educational app, it is exciting, effective and enormously fun!  iTooch Junior High School has more than 10,000 exercises in ELA (reading, writing vocabulary, grammar) and Math (properties and operations, graphs, algebra, geometry, statistics and probability, and data analysis) and Health – Grade Six. iTooch comes equipped with  an easily accessible built in blackboard for a workspace and students are provided with clear, concise lessons at any point, by just tapping on the iTooch mascot. The app is free to download and titles can be tried out before buying any in-app purchases, which are available for each topic.

9. Tense Builder, by Mobile Education Storeand renowned developer, Kyle Tomson, released this long awaited app and it does not disappoint in any way shape or form! Teaching the tenses is one of the hardest concepts to explain, as it is a very abstract concept. Then there are the English words that do not follow the rule, otherwise known as irregular verbs. It isn’t difficult to comprehend this concept with words like: walk, walking, walked. Now try come, coming, comed… opps, doesn’t quite work. Along comes the terrific Tense Builder and what used to be a tedious task for the teacher is now an app away!

10. Reading Raven, by Early Ascent – This developer has reason to be proud of their first release. Reading Raven has what it takes to get kids on the road to reading and the developers have done it brilliantly by following a proven reading program. Reading Raven is phonics-based, and unlike other learn-to-read apps, even phonics apps, it takes children all the way from learning foundational pre-reading and reading skills to reading sentences and very short stories. We’ve heard this story many a time, Scott White wanted to teach his 5-year-old son to read and wasn’t too impressed with much of what was available for mobile devices. Once again, a new app was born due to a parent’s curiosity and concern about their child’s early learning experiences. The developer suggests this app for ages 3-7 and that appears to be right on.

11. Futaba Classroom Games for Kids, byINKids, introduced a powerful concept for the iPad, engaging multiple players in fast paced games for the classroom or home. These games, which vary in content, can be set to a specific skill or set to randomly display a mix. All by a simple visit to the settings menu. Presently they have a pre-k section with animals, shapes, transportation, and “things.” There is a K-3rd grade math section, geography, and Dolch sight words. Also, they offer First Spanish Words and Japanese for beginners to learn the language. You can easily add your own content and create your own game based on any theme you choose. This is an amazing option for teachers to implement and customize to whatever they are studying. INKids is now asking for teacher and parent input and plans to expand the game selection. There are plans of adding different learning sets, as well. David Wingler, a teacher at Osaka Kunei Girls’ Junior and Senior High in Japan, is responsible for the original idea.

12. Letter School, by Boreaal, got lots of accolades from just about everyone (including us!) for being a spectacular app for implementing and practicing fine motor skills, and for beginning the process of building a strong foundation for reading and math readiness skills. TWA wants to give this app a huge shout-out! Their slogan, Letter School Makes Handwriting Cool, is on their opening page… and, oh yes, this app makes everything cool! The surprise factor and variety that this app has to offer for each and every upper and lower case, as well as numbers, keeps children engaged and active participants for long periods of time. When we field-tested this app, we had to struggle to get our iPads back from the students. They kept insisting, “Just one more, PLEASE!”



  

 

 

November 21, 2014

The Origin of the Baby New Year

Every year it's the same thing. Some diapered little baby is paraded around wearing a sash with the new year written on it. Who hasn't been to a New Year's Party that ended that way, huh? Okay, me neither. But the Baby New Year is still an iconic image that even popped up in a really bad sequel to Rudolph the Red-Nosed Baby. Usually in concert with the Baby New Year there is also a wizened old man with a ZZ Top beard. But this article isn't about that. It's about that naked baby.

 

 

The use of an infant as a symbol of the start of the new cycle that begins with the passage of the year dates back to ancient Greece. The festival of Dionysus, who was the god of wine, song and merriment let us not forget, was a big thing for the Greeks. No doubt the festival of Dionysus often ended long after the womenfolk had been sent to bed and each male reveler had left his male Greek friends behind to unsteadily walk home to the little woman.

Before these parties got down to the good stuff, however, it was the custom of the time to parade a newborn baby around in a basket. The baby was a symbol and a herald for fertility of the crops. (Probably just the crops since Greek style doesn't produce much in the way of offspring.

None so's you want to keep, anyway.) Across that big lake, the Egyptians were also fond of holding a ceremony of rebirth that involved the use of a young baby. In fact, there was a specific ceremonial ritual involving a young man and an older bearded man carrying a baby inside a basket that was discovered on the lid of a sarcophagus that is now on display in a museum.

The symbol of a Baby New Year was ubiquitous throughout the pagan religions so it should come as no surprise that the Catholic Church disallowed it for centuries. Finally, thanks to a fact that Bush seems incapable of grasping---that it is next to impossible to kill an idea that people cleave to with all their might---the Catholic Church gave in and allowed infants to be used in New Year celebrations. Okay, they made one adjustment. The Baby New Year was transformed from a pagan symbol into a symbol of the Baby Christ.

The contemporary image of the Baby New Year comes to us, like the Christmas tree, courtesy of those fun-loving, always-with-the-joke Germans. It was the Germans, you see, who first slapped a diaper on the Baby New Year. The newly diapered Baby New Year first cropped up in German woodcarving illustrations in the 1300s. When the German immigrants poured into Pennsylvania they brought with them the Christmas tree, Groundhog Day and our current image of the Baby New Year.

 


FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15)

FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail FUT15 DATABASE (FIFA15) - screenshot thumbnail
FUT15 players database search engine for FIFA15: multi-criteria advanced search (no network needed)
TOTW players automatic update every weeks (network needed)

Locus - addon GSAK Database

Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail Locus - addon GSAK Database - screenshot thumbnail
Do you know GSAK? GSAK is geocache manager, where you can manage your final waypoints, add notes or waypoints to geocache or import/export geocache from/to GSAK.

This addon provide connection between GSAK database, where geocaches are save, and Locus, great map tool for Android! So you can view all your GSAK geocache in Locus, manage final waypoints, view listing, etc. And everything offline!

It’s simple – install plugin, copy your GSAK database to SD card, setup addon and run Locus. And just import geocaches.

Instructions:
1. Set correct path to GSAK database on your SD card
2. Change filter in settings, if you want
3a. Add this addon on right-side panel and click on it.
3b. Tap on map (hold finger), select last icon in bottom menu – Settings and select Load GSAK geocaches.
4. Done!

Looking for volunteers who would like to help with the translation of this application. Contact me - kuratkoo@gmail.com

Tags: gsak, database, locus, geocaching

November 20, 2014

SCP Database

SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail SCP Database - screenshot thumbnail
Application allow you to access classified text and graphic materials from SCP foundation.
Brief color description:
green - 'safe' class objects
yellow - 'euclid' class objects
red - 'keter' class objects

Application content is based on pages from: http://www.scp-wiki.net/

The Phone Database

The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail The Phone Database - screenshot thumbnail
The Phone Database is a mobile phone resource site with specifications, features, news and comparisons of all the latest mobile phones released or soon to be released at the stores. The app is an optimized version designed for your Android device, you can can quickly browse the newest devices released by the most known manufacturers, browse the most popular phones and tablets, view phones by brand, and also search the thousands of the devices for specifications on each device, view thousands of device preview images, and make virtually unlimited device comparisons. Find specifications for Android, iOS, BB10, Windows Phone, Firefox OS, WebOS devices made by Apple, LG, Samsung, Nokia, BlackBerry, HP, HTC, The Phone Database is a phone specs resource similar to popular sites including gsmarena, phonescoop, phonearena

Features include:
- Detailed specification of phones and tablets
- Beautiful phone and tablet images
- Compare two, 2 devices side by side
- View of latest devices soon to be released in the market
- View the most popular devices from ThePhoneDatabase

Have you ever wanted to quickly get some spec information of a device but couldn't find a resource when you needed it most? For example:
* How does a Samsung Galaxy S3 compare versus the Galaxy S4?
* How much internal storage does the iPhone 5 have?
* Or find the newest phones released by Sony, latest phones announced by HTC
* What are the differences between the Google Nexus 7 and the iPad Mini?
* What SIM card does the Google Nexus 4 take?
* What is the Display Pixels Per Inch (PPI) of the BlackBerry Z10?
* What Operating System does the Facebook First really run?
* Which is smaller the Galaxy S4 Mini or the HTC One Mini?
* Does the Moto X support LTE?

All these and just about anything else on the palm of your hand with both users and manufacturers constantly updating ThePhoneDatabase.com with device specs. And with your feedback we are adding features that you want most, to make it the best phone specs, phablet specs, tablet specs and comparison resource for both the web and your pocket