At Home with Tech

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Here’s a Great Place to Snap a Photo of Manhattan’s Iconic Skyline at Sunset

It’s hard to miss this famous skyline as your Amtrak train nears or leaves the Big Apple. And sunset is a particularly special time. So, it warrants trying to take a photo or two…

The weather conditions have to be right. Plus, there’s only a six-minute stretch when the train is close enough and oriented correctly with its windows directly facing the east side of Manhattan. 

The Best Views of New York City
Then, take out your smartphone. Press it as close to the window as possible to avoid reflections from the inside of the train. (The fact that your phone’s lens effectively lies flat with the phone’s body will protect it from accidental bumps into the glass due to your train’s jerky movements.)

And then start snapping away.

As much as I always want to zoom closer with my iPhone 15 Pro Max’s 2x or 5x lens to better frame the skyscrapers, the wider shots are better. I think you need that foreground in the shot to help tell the visual story. Plus, the train’s motion is less of a problem for your phone’s camera if you’re not zoomed in.

Just Another Bonus for Taking the Train
Yes, it’s an amazing vista to take in, but you should temper your expectations for your photos. Remember, you’re shooting through glass, and the train is moving.

Still, it’s worth a shot.

I go for it whenever I’m on Amtrak’s Northeast Regional or Acela heading back to Connecticut from Washington, D.C. (These photos are from my recent trip.)
In the old days, it would be when I was heading out of New York City back to Boston. (So, I’ve been at this for a while.)

And yes, I do prefer taking the train vs. a plane between these destinations. It’s much more convenient and relaxing. (The door-to-door time comparison is similar after you bake in the extra hours spent at the airport.) But I digress…

Enjoy the Show
Sunset isn’t the only time to try to capture these photos of New York City. (Shooting directly at the sun can really confuse a camera and isn’t especially great for its sensors. But a few brief clicks shouldn’t play too much havoc with the electronics.)

These magic sunset minutes always call out to me as the deep orange light bathes the landscape. 

It’s both unearthly and entirely natural.

And you’ve got one of the best vantage points of this city a photographer could hope for.

Here’s What Happened When I Tried to Create an AI-Generated Podcast about my Blog

I invited Google’s NotebookLM to create “deep dive” podcasts based on a few of my blog posts, and here are the stunningly good results.

The written word, though certainly enduring, has plenty of competition out there. We all consume information in different ways. But quite frankly, photos, videos and podcasts are often more compelling and clickable.

Barrett’s Podcast?
I’ve occasionally thought about creating a companion At Home with Tech podcast, but that takes a fair amount of work to maintain. (It’s enough of a challenge for a busy dad to pump out the written version every week.)

That said, I did create this pilot podcast episode some years back.

How to Create Your Photo Archive in the Cloud: The Podcast

It was great fun to do… but too big of an ongoing lift.

ElevenLabs
Last year, I revisited the idea and considered applying a different solution using A.I. to more quickly generate my podcast. How? 

I first cloned my voice by digitizing it through ElevenLabs’ website. Then, I simply copied and pasted my blog’s text into ElevenLab’s interface to magically create a spoken version with my cloned voice! It was certainly much quicker than doing the voice work myself… not that I can’t do that.

Yes. Text to voice… BAM!

Here’s that pilot:

Should You Clone your Voice to Help Preserve your Legacy?

While certainly simpler and faster, I still didn’t greenlight my own podcast series. (I decided to stick with my core product.)

But I haven’t stopped pondering the challenge… and opportunity.

NotebookLM
A few months back, a friend of mine showed me a nifty Google trick using A.I. to magically create an audio podcast. Google’s tool is NotebookLM. He put it to work and generated an authentic sounding A.I. conversation about my career by simply loading my LinkedIn profile. 

Within minutes, a breezy 10-minute audio podcast appeared on his iPhone with two relaxed A.I. personalities chatting about my awesome life to date.

It was flattering, but also a bit weird to hear ‘people’ talking about me in this way. And beyond marveling at this parlor trick, I felt it wasn’t usable in a broader sense. (I wasn’t going to post this over-the-top publicity anywhere.)

I can Now Create my Podcast in One Click!
But I thought about NotebookLM again recently and navigated over to the URL: notebooklm.google to see how it’s been evolving.  

I realized this virtual research assistant actually has plenty of uses (like summarizing marketing plans, course reading, research notes, meeting transcripts and sales documents). 

And then, I spotted the ‘Audio Overview’ section in the top right of the page.  That’s the place where you generate the A.I. conversation about your topic. And there are any number of ways to feed in what you want the A.I. to absorb and then talk about (websites, PDFs, Google Docs and even simple text).

So, I uploaded a link to my recent blog post, and within a few minutes, my podcast was ready. Click. I listened to the likable pair of podcast hosts effortlessly discussing the detail from my blog. 

My jaw dropped. It all felt like magic. I immediately downloaded the file.
Here it is:

Safe Garden Hose Watering Solutions

Yes, I’ve done a bit of light editing to it using GarageBand. I’ve also trimmed out a few sentences where the A.I. rambled on in a few places. (I reserve that luxury for myself, thank you very much.) Then, I added in some music at the top and back. But that was it. Easy.

Here are a couple more…

My Kitchen’s Unexplained Ping: A Tech Mystery


UPS Battery Replacement: Protecting Your Computer from a Blackout


The Voices Sound So Real
NotebookLM’s A.I. voices are remarkably life-like. The casual banter spoken between this virtual woman-and-man team seems especially friendly and so authentic. 

The result speaks for itself. That said, as incredible as this may appear, some of the ‘summarizing’ occasionally offered additional ‘thinking’ that fell slightly outside of my core perspective. (I suppose a real person could also do that.) 

Still, I think this auto-generated podcast could be a nice companion piece that offers an alternate way to consume the essence of my blog’s content. 

Will You Enjoy Listening to This?
We’ll see if I add in this A.I. podcast as an ongoing feature to my blogging. It’s hard to know if everyone (anyone) wants to regularly listen to two virtual coffee-talk personalities doing a deep-dive exploration of my blog.

But for now, I’ve got to admit… NotebookLM is much more than an amazing parlor trick.

How to Prevent Hose Water Toxins from Contaminating your Garden

Watering a garden near a house

You may be watering your lawn and organic vegetable garden with hoses and watering products that leach harmful chemicals and even lead. Here’s my ongoing story to find a ‘drinking-water-safe’ solution to that problem.

I set up a little vegetable garden some years back by the side of our house with the goal of growing a few vegetables for our family. It was more of a taste test. A few cherry tomatoes, some herbs and perhaps a couple peppers if we were lucky.

When I put together a watering solution from our outside water spigot, I asked myself (and then wrote about) this critical gardening question:

I determined the clear answer was yes. Most garden hoses with brass fittings and sprayers leach lead and other hazardous chemicals into the water. It’s a mostly unregulated industry, and as a result I think many of us are effectively spraying some amount of toxins onto our lawns every day.
(Yes, I know that sounds dramatic.)

Drinking-Water-Safe Hoses from Water Right
I suppose it’s not as big of a problem if you’re simply watering your lawn, but if you’re eating from your garden, that’s another story. (And you should never drink from a common water hose.)

So, my solution was to shop for ‘drinking-water-safe’ water hoses and sprayers. Yes, some companies do go the extra distance and manufacture safer gardening products. And yes, of course, they’re more expensive.

I did my research and landed on a company named Water Right. Their non-toxic-core hoses are made from polyurethane, and the nickel and chrome fittings don’t leach lead.

I bought a few of their hoses and hooked them up. They’ve held up nicely over the years, and I’ve been quite satisfied.

Garden Hose Care
That said, some will remind me that if you leave your garden hoses outside all summer to bake in the sun (guilty), bacteria will grow in the warm, standing water in the hoses. So, please don’t come by and do a water analysis for me. Yes, I know I may be growing a bit of bacteria, but at least my hose water shouldn’t contain lead, phthalates, BPA and other horrible chemicals.

My Expanded Lawn Watering Needs
Fast forward to the present. We’ve just completed a few landscaping enhancements to our backyard. Now, our new shrubbery requires hydration. Please don’t tell anyone, but I’ve never regularly watered our backyard. (I don’t have a hose system back there.) Somehow, the grass has survived across the years. (It’s not perfect.) The fact that our backyard is shaded through much of the afternoon has certainly helped.

So, it was time to buy another garden hose and sprayer to reach back there.

I could have immediately gone to Water Right. But I was also looking for an upgraded and non-toxic solution for my hose sprayer and splitter for our outdoor water spigot.

Unfortunately, Water Right doesn’t offer those products. So, I did a little more research in the name of one-stop shopping.

Hello ELEY Products
I happily found Eley Corporation from Nebraska that proudly manufactures outdoor watering tools which are non-toxic and made with drinking-water-safe material. Their garden hoses are polyurethane, and their brass watering tools are lead free.

ELEY stocked everything I needed.

  • Drinking-water-safe hose
  • Lead-free brass garden hose sprayer
  • Lead-free brass garden hose 2-way splitter

You have to buy directly from their website: eleyhosereels.com.
(There’s no Amazon option.)

So, I took the plunge. Click.

The ELEY box arrived a few days later.

Big and Beefy
ELEY describes their products as ‘commercial-duty.’ They’re not kidding.
Holding ELEY lead-free brass garden hose 2-way splitter with shut off valve on bottomEverything is big, beefy and heavy (except the garden hose…that’s relatively light).

When I first picked up the brass garden hose nozzle (water sprayer), it felt like a weapon in my hand.
Using ELEY lead-free brass garden hose sprayer

The brass garden hose splitter looked more like a replacement part for a tank. Here’s how it compares next to a traditional water spigot splitter you can pick up anywhere.
ELEY lead-free brass garden hose 2-way splitter placed next to a standard hose splitterYou can see I also bought and attached an ELEY shut off valve for the bottom that effectively makes it a 3-way splitter.

ELEY products come with a 10-year warrantee- No-leak/No-break/No-rust.
I can immediately see why.

You Get What You Pay For
So yes, it costs more.

  • You can buy a water spigot splitter at Home Depot:  $15
    ELEY’s tank-grade version: $46
  • Melnor sprayer at Home Depot for your water hose: $7
    ELEY’s garden hose spray nozzle: $68
    (plus an extra spray attachment if you choose)
  • 50’ vinyl garden hose at Home Depot: $40-$50
    ELEY’s 50’ drinking-water-safe polyurethane garden hose: $127
    (For comparison, Water Right’s 50’ 5/8” polyurethan version is $110
    …so similar.)

Yeah, it’s a dramatic difference. Who would choose to pay double to triple the cost (or more) to water their lawn and garden?

Well, I did.

  • In the name of quality. I should not have to buy it all again in a couple years.
  • And in the name of safety. I’m not spraying out micro bits of lead and other contaminants.

Common Sense
My expanded outdoor watering system is in place and ready for spring and summer. Plus, I’ve taken the extra steps to make it a safer one.

All this said, I’m no expert on this topic. I’m simply trying to provide as healthy an environment as I can for my family. Truthfully, I don’t know exactly how much danger the other mainstream gardening products pose, especially if you’re not drinking the water and only watering your lawn.

But I don’t think this simple everyman can be too far off base. These are common sense conclusions. So, I say why not be cautious and spend the few extra bucks in the name of your family’s health?

Plus, you get what you pay for. There’s a durability proposition here. This outdoor water management system won’t start leaking tomorrow. It’s supposed to last at least a decade.

Barrett’s Message to Other Manufacturers
Thank you, ELEY for manufacturing safer watering products for gardens and lawns. Clearly, there are enough people out there like me to keep you in business. (That’s a heartening conclusion to draw.)

And thank you, Water Right. You didn’t get my spend today, but that’s okay (there’s always tomorrow). I’m still happily using your garden hoses after many years. I applaud your same commitment to making garden hoses that are drinking-water-safe.

And a simple message to other manufacturers out there… More of this please!