Schedule

Schedule

Friday, May 24

1369425600 The Social Hour

Saturday, May 25

1369504800 The Tech Guy

Sunday, May 26

1369591200 The Tech Guy
1369605600 This Week in Tech

Monday, May 27

1369674000 Tech News Today
1369688400 Home Theater Geeks
1369693800 Frame Rate

Tuesday, May 28

1369760400 Tech News Today
1369764000 MacBreak Weekly
1369774800 The Giz Wiz
1369778400 Before You Buy
1369785600 All About Android
1369792800 NSFW

Wednesday, May 29

1369841400 FLOSS Weekly
1369846800 Tech News Today
1369850400 Security Now
1369857600 This Week in Google
1369864800 Triangulation
1369875600 Ham Nation

Thursday, May 30

1369933200 Tech News Today
1369936800 Windows Weekly
1369944000 iPad Today
1369951200 Know How...

Friday, May 31

1370019600 Tech News Today
1370023200 This Week in Law
1370030400 The Social Hour

Saturday, June 1

1370109600 The Tech Guy

Sunday, June 2

1370196000 The Tech Guy
1370210400 This Week in Tech

Monday, June 3

1370278800 Tech News Today

Most Recent Episodes

Tech News Today

Google buying Waze? iOS 7 going stark? HTC going Senseless? All that and more.

This Week In Computer Hardware

NVIDIA GTX 780 released, OCZ Vertex 450 256GB SSD reviewed, Xbox One announced, and more.

iPad Today

Mailbox's new iPad app, Map Camera for geotagging your photos, the future of Flickr and Tumblr under Yahoo, Shazam's always listening, & more!

OMGcraft

Learn how to edit Minecraft world files to access hidden, secret features. From customizing a world, to allowing cheats in game - NBT editing is what you'll use.

Know How...

OMGcraft's Chad Johnson is here to show us how to set up a Minecraft server. It's easier than you think!

Windows Weekly

Xbox One revealed, YouTube for Windows Phone battle drags on, Bing gets bolder in Windows Blue, and more.

Ham Nation

Video from Hamvention including an interview with Kenwood Senior Engineering Specialist Toshio Torii, part 7 of building an AM/FM radio kit, and more.

Tech News Today

Guess who's having the best post-PC era ever? Mailbox invades iPad, Xbox will take over your house, and more.

Triangulation

Eric Drexler, engineer best known for popularizing the potential of molecular nanotechnology, is today's guest.

This Week in Google

Google IO aftermath, Yahoo Tumblrs, privacy risks from Glass, and more.

Know How... 30

Mount a TV

January 31 2013

Mounting a television can be a daunting project, but we'll give you the know how.

Pick your mount

Your mount is dependent on your television. Find a mount that would fit your television in size and weight. Your next choice is to decide what kind of mount you want. There are several options including articulating arms that let you pull your TV away from the wall and tilt it at various angles. There are also low-profile mounts like the one we installed. The low-profile mounts don't allow you to tilt your television, but they keep the television very close to the wall to keep everything nice and neat. It's your call.

Mounting your television

The best way to mount your television is to mount it to the studs in your walls. Studs are normally 16-inches apart on load bearing walls. On non-load bearing walls, they can be as far apart as 24 inches.

Use a studfinder to find the studs in your walls. More expensive studfinders will also warn you if there is AC power behind the drywall. That way you'll avoid disaster.

Once you find your studs, mark them. The mount we used was in two pieces - the mounting plate and the mounting brackets. Take the mounting plate and line it up with the studs. Level the plate and mark off where the plate matches the studs. From there, you can drill pilot holes for your lag bolts.

The lag bolts will hold the mounting plate to the wall. These are beefy bolts, so you'll want to make sure you're going into the stud.

Attach the mounting arms to the television. This is relatively straight forward. Four bolts will attach the two brackets to the television. Be careful not to overtighten.

Once the brackets are attached to the TV, attach whatever cables you'd like to your TV. Your HDMI cables, audio, and others since it may be hard to connect your cables once the TV is up on the wall.

Now grab a buddy. This next part is definitely a two-person job. Pick up the television and place it on the plate. Then secure it with either the securing screws (or in our case the securing lever).

And there you have it. A television on a wall. If we can do it, so can you!

Special thanks to Sarah Lane, Jeff Stewart, and Chad Johnson for their help on the show.

Email

Hi Iyaz

Watched the show thought this would be of interest. This is $10.00 software for iPad, really very good. Controlled via bluetooth keyboard or remote.

You can also plug iPad into HDMI monitor(via adapter) of any size and use iPad as controller.

Cheers
Leon

ELITE Prompter - Professional Teleprompter by ikan International Corp.

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