Low-Tech answers to high-tech problems

Tue Feb 26, 2008 10:19AM EST

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Sometimes the answer is not to go out and buy another gizmo or gadget. Here are some new uses for everyday things that can help you get out of a jam.

Wet phone?
The toilet, the sink, a puddle, the laundry… it's so easy for your phone to wind up soaked through and through. Everyone has an opinion on how best to dry out a wet cell phone, but the technique I like best is to remove the battery and place the phone in a bowl of uncooked white rice. The rice wicks the water from the phone. (If your phone uses a SIM card, remove it too. At least you'll have your data.)

Drying out a wet phone with a hair dryer is often a first impulse, but heat can damage the phone even more. For more ideas on drying, from using silica gel to halogen lamps, see Wikihow.

Sleep through the alarm clock?

OK, this one will cost you a cheap wineglass. Break the stem and put your phone inside. The glass amplifies the sound. This one (and photo) come courtesy of Lifehacker.

Need a filter for your camera flash?

Cell phones demand that you get up close and personal when you take a photo, and often the flash will wash the color right out of your subject. To diffuse the flash, use a white coffee filter to make an impromptu filter. I tear the bottom off the cone and put the ruffles around my phone like one of those doggie flea collars.

Taming cords

There are plenty of products you can buy to help keep your gadgets' cords together, but the tube at the end of the toilet paper roll gives you the same results. Real Simple ran this photo in a recent issue.

DVDs with scratches
A lengthy discussion at Lifehacker compared techniques for getting through a movie when your DVD is scratched. The consensus called for either furniture polish or car wax. Apparently the wax fills the scratch and you can watch the movie without missing a scene.

Just put a gob of the stuff right on the disk and wipe. The secret involves using a cloth like an eyeglass cleaner (not a napkin or tissue) to wipe the wax in.

Floss your keyboard with sticky tape
This one reminds me of Garrison Keillor's running duct tape saga, but sticky tape is pretty handy when it comes to removing the crumbs that get embedded in your keyboard. (You would never think of eating at the keyboard, would you?) Seriously, hold the tape in your hands and do a flossing-like thing between the keys. Hey, get the lint off your pants while you're at it.

Flash drive trees
Somehow flash drives multiply in our house like amoebas. Now don't laugh, but those inexpensive earring trees have a second life as a flash drive sorter. With your flash drives all hanging from the tree, you can pick the one that coordinates best with your wardrobe each day.

Got a favorite low-tech tip to share?

 

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  • 6 Posted by jammon97 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    Twisty ties can do almost anything you need them to. with tape on the end you can clean your key board. The can be attached to stuff to hang other stuff. e.g. attaching the ties to a coat rack and hanging keys from them. Dont recomend this, but clean your teeth even.

  • 7 Posted by nerv2010 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    Use isopropyl or denatured alcohol and some q-tips and cotton balls to clean up the residue buildup on your keyboard/mouse. It evaporates quickly and won't cause damage....so long as you don't pour it on the keyboard/mouse.

  • 8 Posted by pillage6 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    What cell phones have a flash? If you have stale chips put them in the microwave for 30 seconds or so then let them cool, VOILA they are crispy again.

  • 9 Posted by carbokola on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    My blackberry curve has a flash...but i am not about to tape a coffee filter on to it.

  • 10 Posted by pollywogjelvik on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    I used to work at a video store and we would sometimes clean dvds with rubbing alcohol and cotton balls.

  • 11 Posted by nerv2010 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    Addition to pollywogjelvik's comment: One warning for people cleaning DVD/CDs. Do not use acetone or acetone based nail-polish remover to clean the surface, you will ruin it.

  • 12 Posted by nerv2010 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    To clean your old Mac and to get rid of that yellowing on the white surface use non-acetone based nail polish remover. Do not use acetone!

  • 13 Posted by spanky_monky on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:34PM EDT Report Abuse

    I like to use "Dow Bathroom cleaner" for cleaning out coke spills on electronic components. take some toilet paper and dabb it off after letting is soke for few seconds, repeat untill the color coming off into the paper is white or clear. Make shure the power is unplugged and left unplugged for at least a couple of days after using it. But even so it dries clean and sticky free.

  • 14 Posted by frenchgoer3 on Mon Mar 3, 2008 10:55PM EST Report Abuse

    it looks like a common sense for me, the low end tech was invented earlier, one reason is that they were more robust in traditional way, and less dependent on some circumstance. every day, i use my chopstickers for dining, it works for thousands of years, i am going to switch to other gadgets at all.

  • 15 Posted by madness2hismethod on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:03PM EDT Report Abuse

    Another way to amplify sound on something with a small speaker like a cell phone (or my Sony Mylo) is to cut the bottom off of a 20 oz. plastic soda bottle. When you set the top of the bottle over the speaker, it acts like a megaphone. The closer to the bottom you cut it, the more full-range sound you'll get.

  • 16 Posted by davjar42 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    I wonder if there is a way to learn about all these low- to no-tech solutions without access to the internet. Also it would be great to have those old-timers who are not at all technically savvy be able to post their tried and true methods for getting around life's little bumps. But I digress. Just poking fun at our collective near-dependency to technology. Now go on out and make someone's day.

  • 17 Posted by iu.loston on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    I just read your review on phones. As I am hard of hearing this sounds wonderful. Haven't tried it yet but I will. Thanks.

  • 18 Posted by dashmoove82485 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    I like the the plastic soda bottle amplifier better. At least with the plstic bottle, I am not afraid of cutting my hands like on that of a broken glass.

  • 19 Posted by psgoodale on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    The absolute best way to clean your keyboard is to put it upside down in the dishwasher. I know it sounds strange, but it does not hurt your keyboard. After you do it once you will be amazed. Brand Spankin New! Especially if it has white keys!

  • 21 Posted by jmpenner on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    Post it notes are grea for getting lint out from under your keyboard.

  • 22 Posted by cphilipslaton on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    The simplest cleaning trick for a key board is the ultimate of being low tech. Turn it upside down holding it with both hands at like a 45%%

  • 23 Posted by coloradoridgerun on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    Don't why this works, but it does. For scracthed dvd or cd. MAKE SUR THE TOILET IS CLEAN NO CLEANER LEFT IN IT AND PUT THE CD OR DVD IN THE TOILET AND FLUSH. LET IT FILL UP AND DO IT AGAIN. THEN DRY OFF AND WATCH OR LISTEN. THEY ARE TO BIG TO GO DOWN. TYR IT IT WORKS.

  • 24 Posted by sorryaboutyourloss on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    all the food in jail comes cold, wrapped in saran wrap. the trick to get it hot is to straighten out the edges of the wrap anp melt it to the side of the hot water pot. BAM, instant grilled cheese

  • 25 Posted by xpearldrummer7x on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    Better than peanut butter for your disks is toothpaste just rub sometooth paste all over the bottom of the disk, then go to a (clean) toliet,(i use a rubber glove) holding the disk tightly and flush, it will take the excess toothpaste off without pressure and your disk is clean as can be

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