This looks interesting! Not sure yet how I feel about the (missing) password authentication. Instead a mail with a login code is sent (which seems to work for this.. )
I created something similar ~2 decades ago in perl. It would spit out a long list of passwords in text format so you could chose one without the server knowing what you chose.
I was there recently and visited Sarajevo and actualy faced this as a real world problem: wanted to order bosnian coffee in a restaurant but was kind of unable to express myself.
If you order coffee (kahva/kafa) in Bosnia nowadays, you are likely to get whatever comes out of the machine installed at the bar.
To get the real deal I had to order using one of these expressions:
domaća kafa/kahva (homeland coffee? native coffee?)
naša kafa/kahva (translates to "our coffee")
or
bosanska kafa.
However, traditionally I guess coffee was just called kahva/kafa as it probably was not distingueshed between the verious forms of preparation. And also calling it turkish coffee would seem ok, as the whole area is highly influenced by (ancient) Turkey, not only linguistically.
I have never heard of that lazy version. Here is how probably most Bosnian families would do it:
- Grind coffee beans as fine as you can, much finer than for espresso
- in the meantime, make sure to boil your water and then put it aside.
- heat up the džezva (turk: cezve) slowly for a few seconds (so that water that is poured in
does not cool down too quickly)
- take 9g of coffee powder per cup and put it into your džezva. You can vary the amount to your
likings. I take 18g of coffee for around 360ml of water.
- with the džezva still on the hot plate pour around 1/3 of the water slowly into the džezva.
The water turns into a foamy dark liquid. Gently adjust temperature so that the liquid is slowly
heated. This will make it rise due to the foam on top.
- Let it rise to about 2/3 of the džezva. Remove džezva from the plate, let the coffee set a
little (to about 1/2).
- Pour more water into the coffee, again to 2/3 of the džezva
- put džezva back on plate, heat it up and let the coffee rise to 1/1 of the džezva
- remove from plate, slowly fill with water until the level is back to 1/1 (foamy liquid is
setting again and will allow you to add more water)
Your coffee is ready to serve. Serve in fildžan or small cups.
Fully agree. It seems nobody understands it in the sense of Business Processes/Workflow modelling anymore and it is arbitrary used for "something to do".
This is very close to the netbook product category, such as the Eee PC by Asus or the Lenovo IdeaPad S10 or similar. Slightly larger than that popcorn thingy, but still very portable and could actually fit a larger pocket. I still own my IdeaPad S10 from 2008 and it runs just fine.
I grew up near an orchard containing just over 120 varieties of apples and remember being very impressed that so many varieties exist and yet we end up eating only a few of them. Now reading that someone compiled an apple-o-pedia of more than 16k varieties just blows my mind!