I finally got a full harvest off of this vine (before birds, etc.) These grapes are pretty sour, if you just pick and eat. And seedy. However, I always thought they might make good jelly or something. So this year, I have lots of grapes to try something.

Basically, the process is:

  1. Pick grapes. Wash under running water and remove bad stuff.
  2. Get one of these and mash/juice: Oxo Food Mill. That's the one we got, anyway. I would say it's ok (better than a potato masher), but not great. I was looking at this Victorio  because it looks like it would be better for decent volume, but other people were turned off by the plastic parts.
  3. Run juice through fine mesh sieve, such as cheesecloth (the closest thing I had handy was a bedsheet).
  4. Follow instructions on the package of pectin to fill jars. I only had 6 cups sugar handy instead of the 7 that the package calls for, so we'll see how it turns out. The instructions say not to reduce the sugar or the jelly will fail to set, but it looks like it's setting to me. The funnel for those jars was super handy and I would recommend it versus a makeshift one.
  5. After filling jars, enjoy stuff left over in pan on toast.

large_2013-08 grapes-01.png large_2013-08 grapes-02.png large_2013-08 grapes-03.png large_2013-08 grapes-04.png large_2013-08 grapes-05.png large_2013-08 grapes-06.png large_2013-08 grapes-07.png large_2013-08 grapes-08.png large_2013-08 grapes-09.JPG

Detecting MouseEnter and MouseLeave in a control that has lots of children controls (.Net)

Seems like I have been through this before. What I want to do is hide and show something, depending on whether the mouse is inside of a certain area. For instance, I have a container of some sort with lots of controls on it. When the mouse is anywhere inside of the container, I want a link to be visible. I can't simply use the MouseEnter/MouseLeave events on the container, because MouseLeave is triggered when the mouse enters a child control and the MouseEventArgs don't say anything about what control is being entered.

Say Goodbye to Windows 8's Start Screen

 

All of the people I've talked to who don't like Windows 8, don't like it because of the new start screen. You know, the tiled "apps" screen. A.K.A. "Metro" screen.

Maybe that sort of thing makes sense on a touchscreen device. Not on a desktop computer or standard laptop.

This free software brings back your start menu, like in Windows 7: ClassicShell. If you set it to start in desktop mode, you can say goodbye to the start screen! Here's how.