@jatinb to be fair since it is being sold on meh, even if there was an android app, it would likely never be updated again until it quit working when Android 12 came out.
@jatinb supports Android for everything but coffee app.
Motif Mentor | for iOS | Not Available for Android
Perfect Drink | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Bake | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Blend | for iOS | for Android
I almost pulled the trigger, then though about the fact that we’d use this primarily for baking. Poking my phone screen with a baking-gunk covered finger every time I need to tare is a deal breaker.
@Aspirant_Fool looks like the idea is the app leads you through the recipe, put bowl on scale, screen tells you what to add, and when to stop adding, then you add the next ingredient etc, adding to the same bowl, without needing to tare.
If you are going to use it in this way, I can see it being useful, but if you just need to weigh a couple of ingredients, it’s more complicated to use a phone screen.
@Aspirant_Fool@kevinrs Only problem with that idea is that 1 gram is a small amt, so if you over guess how much flour (or whatever) you added you are screwed.
@Aspirant_Fool@kevinrs yeah, I get that. The problem is if you go over on the last of 5 ingredients you now have to go back to the first 4 and hope you don’t f up one of those adjustments
@Woody1 I came here to say almost exactly this. There is literally no practical reason why this scale cannot have a built-in LCD display. Forcing the use of an app is absurd for something like this product.
I have a similar screen-less scale (that works on Android, ha!) which was pretty neat back when I was weighing all of my food to have more accurate nutritional info as I learned proper portion sizes. The correct portion sizes for a lot of foods were absolutely shocking to me when I discovered them this way. Especially when eating out. At restaurants, I could discreetly put the scale under my plate and casually glance at the phone screen (looking just like everybody else at restaurants ) as I scooped the excess mashed potatoes, or what have you, off. Noone was the wiser. Except me. I think I somehow got wiser.
If you’re buying this to use on your iPod and have an ancient one like me, don’t bother with it. The Motif Mentor app won’t install on the iPod. The meh write-up says it works on iOS 8 and up, but the app store page says it requires iOS 11. I had iOS 9 and was unable to download it.
@cengland0 Weight measurements are more accurate than volumetric, particularly for small granular materials like coffee grounds or flour that will naturally settle in their containers.
For fun, buy this scale, do your usual scoop thing, but before you put the coffee in to brew, weigh it. Do that for a few days, record the weights, and gaze, awestruck, at the couple of grams of variation from day to day. Will it really have any impact on the flavor of your coffee? Almost certainly not, but you’ll have ten or fifteen fewer dollars to worry about.
@Aspirant_Fool@cengland0
America’s Test Kitchen’s bakers handbook has weights and volumes listed and makes note of fussier recipes where the ratio of liquid to dry is important.
It might just be me but there’s nothing that I make where the ingredients need to be so precise that it would be a horrible experience if you were off by 0.1 grams.
The volume of water changes depending on temperature so your statement is true if the water is 4 degrees C/39.2 degrees F. That is when water is most dense, and probably at sea level.
@cengland0
Not a horrible experience, but if you don’t know how to make pie crust, weighing your ingredients the first 6 or 7 times you make it so you get a feel for what the right moisture content the finished product is supposed to have is pretty invaluable. Think of it as a replacement for whatever family member taught you how to bake for those not fortunate enough to have that experience.
Ask and you shall receive!! My go-to pancake recipe is as follows (originally got it from Chef Steps)
Mix Dry Ingredients:
200g Pastry Flour
30g Sugar
20g Malt Powder (makes a nice color in the final product)
12g Baking Powder
6g Salt (although I usually go with half that)
375 degree griddle, 4 minutes on the first side, flip, and 3 minutes on the second. I use a 1/4 cup to scoop onto the griddle. They come out perfect every time. You’re welcome.
Sorry Android users, the Motif Mentor app (for coffee) only works with iOS.
Real talk: if this scale had a screen, it would be way pricier and we probably wouldn’t be selling it
…so, if you’re a bit into Rube Goldberg, this gadget appears to be the ideal way to put that old iPhone or Touch collecting dust in the obsolete drawer… back into highly dedicated action. (As long as it runs iOS 8.0 or newer.)
Have a similar one…for cocktails it’s awesome, if you overpour it just adjust the ratios for you…the perfect drink app works on Android and Kindle Fire and iOS
@Steve7654 The apps for baking & cocktails are pretty neat – they guide you through the recipes with each ingredients’ weight with timers where needed. Also corrects for any overages on the fly
@j37hr0 I’m thinking that what I knew as a nickel bag is pretty f’ing small today… less than a gram at the best, less than half a gram on average in Colorado
@zippyus Kitchen scales typically have to compromise between display visibility and overall size - that is, the smaller the scale, the more likely it is that a bowl will overlap the display. I have a decent scale, but I would love to have a remote display.
@chienfou@zippyus A ‘hold’ button is only useful for measuring the weight of a static object. When cooking, you are far more likely to be watching the display as you add an ingredient - a ‘hold’ button is simply useless in such a case.
@rpstrong@zippyus Yeah. I can see that now… I often use mine to weigh fruits etc to make jams so I am doing the opposite. Using the scale to figure the wt of the main ingredient, then adjusting the other wts as needed. I virtually NEVER add ingredients to a bowl that already has stuff in it since that would be a problem if I overshot the needed amount.
@chienfou@zippyus Agree on the overshoot issue. Just about the only thing I’ll add under such circumstances is flour to my bread machine tub, and only then because I can still spoon some back.
I can see the other side, starting out with a somewhat random quantity of ‘stuff’ and then adjusting other ingredients to match - which appears to be their strong point.
@Pufferfishy I don’t get it… would he be asking the Barista to use it for him? Seems like the scale would be for getting the right amount of grounds into his home AeroPress…
@sp3ar I have a scale that goes to 100th’s of a gram and it’s so sensitive that the air conditioner breeze will change the values. You need to cover whatever you’re weighing in something clear so you can see the values and that’s inconvenient.
@cengland0@sp3ar And you’re going to need to control the storage humidity of whatever material you’re weighing, because most human consumable materials tend to be hygroscopic. (Except for maybe water or oil). Then there’s temperature, maybe oxidation…
@mehcuda67 I’m not going to need to control storage humidity because I’m not one of those ingredient snobs who thinks 0.1 gram difference in the pancake mix is going to make any difference in the final product – not that I can tell anyway.
Happy no sale day. I drink mostly plain water. No scale needed. The color of my output reminds me how to adjust each day. Too light(white) means too much beer. Too dark means not enough water. Pale color means just right. Nighty night my fellow drunkards!
While I wouldn’t say the android apps are not official, since they seem to be from the same company, their android support appears to be lacking, to the point that the company website link in the android store goes to a site that they have let the domain expire. The IOS apps seem to have updated their entries to at least point to a valid site.
@ozwiz66 That’s what I said above and I seem to have started a disagreement. I’m not going to start weighing my ingredients when the instructions and/or recipe are usually in volume (ounces, cups, teaspoons, tablespoons).
@cengland0@ozwiz66 No one is asking you to. Amateur and novice bakers and coffee makers probably don’t have a use for this. If you’re not already weighing stuff, or have no interest in doing so, it’s not for you. But there are people who are OCD about this stuff, or are trying to perfect the recipe when baking something delicate, and they would have a use for it.
Ultimately, the whole baking or coffee thing is a ruse - this is clearly for dealers.
@ozwiz66 as someone who vowed never to be that person (a coffee/scale user) i gave it a try and went from 1 in 5 cups taste amazing
to 1 in … about 1. coffee is such a strong
flavor, and sensitive to a good ratio of water to beans, that using a scale is an easy way to pour a more consistently awesome cup.
I’m almost buying it because it doesn’t have its own screen. I’m frustrated with my current digital scale - with screen - because I can’t see the readout when trying to weigh a big bowl of cabbage or the like. Having the readout off to the side would be nice. But : only 6 lbs…
@hamjudo Nothing particularly special on the insides. Looks like the same sort of strain gauge you would get from eBay, or other online vendors. Google HX711 for how to read a strain gauge with an Arduino. A 5 pack of HX711 is $7. I didn’t find a cheap way to buy just one.
Strain gauges are available in capacities from 100 grams up to multiple tonnes. With prices starting below $2 and going up. Expect to spend hundreds of dollars each if you are planning on making your own weigh station for heavy trucks.
my wife and i win blue (and other color) ribbons in the Kentucky State Fair every year with measuring cups…by eye. this is a solution looking for a problem…
Hmm. I already have a digital scale but it only measures whole grams which is a pain in the neck for small amounts of lightweight ingredients like salt and baking powder. It doesn’t sound as though it will work with my ipod, which I would prefer, but it will work with my phone. I’m going to have to think about it. The re-calibrating recipes on the fly does sound pretty cool.
@rpstrong All apps show the weight on the scale without needing to select a recipe. The apps let you select a recipe and allow you to scale it, after which it adjusts every ingredient on the list (same adjustment happens if you add too much of something)
I remember from high school days (early 70s) when a nickel bag was a quarter-z. And I [almost] remember splitting one such bag with a buddy, using a shepherd’s pipe" whose ceramic bowl would comfortably hold it all in one shot. Took us just under an hour to finish.
@rpstrong yeah, that’s my take on it too. See above
I loved in CO. in the early 70’s… with legalized pot now available I’m wishing I had bought a Frito-Lay route back then.
On today’s episode of Not Everything Needs a Fucking App…
@dvermilion He’s weighing an apple. I see what you did there.
@dvermilion exactly I don’t need an app stealing my personal data for a goddamn scale. Facebook and google do that for me already
@dvermilion @jmoor783 …what? wait… was the app written by the DEA?
Lack of official Android support tips the scales against this…
@jatinb to be fair since it is being sold on meh, even if there was an android app, it would likely never be updated again until it quit working when Android 12 came out.
@jatinb supports Android for everything but coffee app.
Motif Mentor | for iOS | Not Available for Android
Perfect Drink | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Bake | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Blend | for iOS | for Android
@jatinb good humor, but the writeup provides links to 2 android apps that work with this scale.
Do you really want me to weigh in on this?
@mehcuda67 Sure, as long as it is not a “mass” production.
@mehcuda67 @Stallion This conversation is too heavy for me.
@mehcuda67 @Stallion I guess I am just dense.
What a waste on the funny picture… timer should have been set for 4:20 not 4:30…
@Zelucifer And the weight set to 28.3 grams
I almost pulled the trigger, then though about the fact that we’d use this primarily for baking. Poking my phone screen with a baking-gunk covered finger every time I need to tare is a deal breaker.
@Aspirant_Fool looks like the idea is the app leads you through the recipe, put bowl on scale, screen tells you what to add, and when to stop adding, then you add the next ingredient etc, adding to the same bowl, without needing to tare.
If you are going to use it in this way, I can see it being useful, but if you just need to weigh a couple of ingredients, it’s more complicated to use a phone screen.
@Aspirant_Fool you don’t have to use your finger.
@Aspirant_Fool @kevinrs Only problem with that idea is that 1 gram is a small amt, so if you over guess how much flour (or whatever) you added you are screwed.
@Aspirant_Fool @chienfou watch the video of the ap in action, it tells you when to stop, and even adjusts the quantities if you go over.
@Aspirant_Fool @kevinrs yeah, I get that. The problem is if you go over on the last of 5 ingredients you now have to go back to the first 4 and hope you don’t f up one of those adjustments
Had me until only iOS…
@jml326 So I have to buy an iPhone to use this thing?
Does this by any chance come with a free iPhone for using the app? (If yes, then I’ll take two.)
If I only had a screen…
From the movie…The Wizard of iOz
How can anyone love coffee so much they need a 0.1 gram scale and iPhone… oh I think I just answered my own question.
Plastic in search of a need that doesn’t exist.
@Woody1 I came here to say almost exactly this. There is literally no practical reason why this scale cannot have a built-in LCD display. Forcing the use of an app is absurd for something like this product.
@PooltoyWolf @Woody1 Smacks of monitoring and marketing. I avoid smart home stuff for the same reason.
I have a similar screen-less scale (that works on Android, ha!) which was pretty neat back when I was weighing all of my food to have more accurate nutritional info as I learned proper portion sizes. The correct portion sizes for a lot of foods were absolutely shocking to me when I discovered them this way. Especially when eating out. At restaurants, I could discreetly put the scale under my plate and casually glance at the phone screen (looking just like everybody else at restaurants ) as I scooped the excess mashed potatoes, or what have you, off. Noone was the wiser. Except me. I think I somehow got wiser.
<insert something drug related here>
@RedOx Celebrity endorsement by Bryan Cranston.
/giphy YW
@chienfou @RedOx
Isn’t that Statham? Bad giphy.
@mtb002 @RedOx could be… I thought it was just some random Joe… face looks a bit round for JS
@chienfou @mtb002 @RedOx it’s definitely Statham.
@mtb002 @RedOx @RiotDemon I’ll take your word for it!
Welcome to the future you didn’t ask for or knew you wanted…
If you’re buying this to use on your iPod and have an ancient one like me, don’t bother with it. The Motif Mentor app won’t install on the iPod. The meh write-up says it works on iOS 8 and up, but the app store page says it requires iOS 11. I had iOS 9 and was unable to download it.
@Rueki Good catch and thanks for sharing.
Before I buy this, l’ll need to weigh my options. But I can’t weigh my options until I buy this. I really hate catch-22s.
Are you supposed to weigh coffee or is it portioned by volume? I use scoop count, not weight.
@cengland0 weighing is de rigueur among the fancypants coffee set.
@cengland0 I go with 60g per liter of water. (Bonus fun, a liter of water weighs a kilogram.)
@cengland0 Weight measurements are more accurate than volumetric, particularly for small granular materials like coffee grounds or flour that will naturally settle in their containers.
For fun, buy this scale, do your usual scoop thing, but before you put the coffee in to brew, weigh it. Do that for a few days, record the weights, and gaze, awestruck, at the couple of grams of variation from day to day. Will it really have any impact on the flavor of your coffee? Almost certainly not, but you’ll have ten or fifteen fewer dollars to worry about.
@Aspirant_Fool Do I need to weigh my k-cups too?
This product is a solution in search of a problem.
@cengland0 @dave
Yea, if you’re an earthling.
@Aspirant_Fool
I’ve never seen a pancake recipe telling you to add 141 grams of flour and 70.9 grams of eggs. You usually see it as 1 cup of flour and 2 eggs.
@Aspirant_Fool @cengland0
America’s Test Kitchen’s bakers handbook has weights and volumes listed and makes note of fussier recipes where the ratio of liquid to dry is important.
@mtb002
It might just be me but there’s nothing that I make where the ingredients need to be so precise that it would be a horrible experience if you were off by 0.1 grams.
@dave
The volume of water changes depending on temperature so your statement is true if the water is 4 degrees C/39.2 degrees F. That is when water is most dense, and probably at sea level.
@cengland0
Not a horrible experience, but if you don’t know how to make pie crust, weighing your ingredients the first 6 or 7 times you make it so you get a feel for what the right moisture content the finished product is supposed to have is pretty invaluable. Think of it as a replacement for whatever family member taught you how to bake for those not fortunate enough to have that experience.
@cengland0 True, though I just looked up how much it changes, and at 40°C (~104°F) it’s 99.25% of its max volume, so 992.5 grams
Source: http://www1.lsbu.ac.uk/water/density_anomalies.html
@cengland0
Ask and you shall receive!! My go-to pancake recipe is as follows (originally got it from Chef Steps)
Mix Dry Ingredients:
200g Pastry Flour
30g Sugar
20g Malt Powder (makes a nice color in the final product)
12g Baking Powder
6g Salt (although I usually go with half that)
Mix Wet Ingredients:
108g Egg (about 2 large eggs)
240g Milk
Combine wet and dry ingredients (don’t over-mix!)
Add 60g melted butter, and lightly mix.
375 degree griddle, 4 minutes on the first side, flip, and 3 minutes on the second. I use a 1/4 cup to scoop onto the griddle. They come out perfect every time. You’re welcome.
…so, if you’re a bit into Rube Goldberg, this gadget appears to be the ideal way to put that old iPhone or Touch collecting dust in the obsolete drawer… back into highly dedicated action. (As long as it runs iOS 8.0 or newer.)
Have a similar one…for cocktails it’s awesome, if you overpour it just adjust the ratios for you…the perfect drink app works on Android and Kindle Fire and iOS
If they had a way to integrate with leafly I would totally get this.
Why would any one want to drag out a phone and use an app just to weigh something? There are $10 scales that you can look at to see the measurement.
@Steve7654 The apps for baking & cocktails are pretty neat – they guide you through the recipes with each ingredients’ weight with timers where needed. Also corrects for any overages on the fly
Does it measure in metric AND freedom units?
From an Amazon review:
Ahh, yes. The old nickel calibration trick. because a sandwich bag weighs 1.5 grams and herb weighs 3.5. Good old high school parking lot math.
@j37hr0 I’m thinking that what I knew as a nickel bag is pretty f’ing small today… less than a gram at the best, less than half a gram on average in Colorado
@j37hr0 CRAP, the link didn’t show up like I thought it would…
i love me a good meh deal, but on what planet do people want a display-less scale?
@zippyus Kitchen scales typically have to compromise between display visibility and overall size - that is, the smaller the scale, the more likely it is that a bowl will overlap the display. I have a decent scale, but I would love to have a remote display.
@rpstrong @zippyus
hence the “hold” button on many scales…
@chienfou @zippyus A ‘hold’ button is only useful for measuring the weight of a static object. When cooking, you are far more likely to be watching the display as you add an ingredient - a ‘hold’ button is simply useless in such a case.
@rpstrong @zippyus Yeah. I can see that now… I often use mine to weigh fruits etc to make jams so I am doing the opposite. Using the scale to figure the wt of the main ingredient, then adjusting the other wts as needed. I virtually NEVER add ingredients to a bowl that already has stuff in it since that would be a problem if I overshot the needed amount.
@chienfou @zippyus Agree on the overshoot issue. Just about the only thing I’ll add under such circumstances is flour to my bread machine tub, and only then because I can still spoon some back.
I can see the other side, starting out with a somewhat random quantity of ‘stuff’ and then adjusting other ingredients to match - which appears to be their strong point.
This one
Is still good enough for me.
I absolutely love the people that think this makes a markedly better cup of coffee than simple practices at consistency.
I look forward to seeing someone with chartreuse argyle socks park his unicycle at my local coffee house and pull one of these out of his murse.
@Pufferfishy I don’t get it… would he be asking the Barista to use it for him? Seems like the scale would be for getting the right amount of grounds into his home AeroPress…
@Pufferfishy Is he taking out the cork or putting it in?
@DennisG2014
/giphy snort
Meh, if it were able to measure more precisely that would be nice.
I’m with you not interested with anything that doesn’t round at least to the .01
@sp3ar I have a scale that goes to 100th’s of a gram and it’s so sensitive that the air conditioner breeze will change the values. You need to cover whatever you’re weighing in something clear so you can see the values and that’s inconvenient.
@Stallion If I am correct, 0.1 gram is less than 1/2,000th of a cup of water? Isn’t that small enough?
@sj1960 0.1 gram water = 0.1cc = 0.000422675 cup = ~1/2400th cup.
Checks out.
@cengland0 @sp3ar And you’re going to need to control the storage humidity of whatever material you’re weighing, because most human consumable materials tend to be hygroscopic. (Except for maybe water or oil). Then there’s temperature, maybe oxidation…
@mehcuda67 I’m not going to need to control storage humidity because I’m not one of those ingredient snobs who thinks 0.1 gram difference in the pancake mix is going to make any difference in the final product – not that I can tell anyway.
The specs above really want to drive home the capacity. precision, and the auto shut-off feature!
@ciabelle Don’t forget about the included USB cable!
@robmehrob True, and the rechargeable battery!
Happy no sale day. I drink mostly plain water. No scale needed. The color of my output reminds me how to adjust each day. Too light(white) means too much beer. Too dark means not enough water. Pale color means just right. Nighty night my fellow drunkards!
While I wouldn’t say the android apps are not official, since they seem to be from the same company, their android support appears to be lacking, to the point that the company website link in the android store goes to a site that they have let the domain expire. The IOS apps seem to have updated their entries to at least point to a valid site.
Never knew anyone who weighs the amount of coffee to brew, isn’t that why they have coffee scoops?
@ozwiz66 That’s what I said above and I seem to have started a disagreement. I’m not going to start weighing my ingredients when the instructions and/or recipe are usually in volume (ounces, cups, teaspoons, tablespoons).
@cengland0 @ozwiz66 No one is asking you to. Amateur and novice bakers and coffee makers probably don’t have a use for this. If you’re not already weighing stuff, or have no interest in doing so, it’s not for you. But there are people who are OCD about this stuff, or are trying to perfect the recipe when baking something delicate, and they would have a use for it.
Ultimately, the whole baking or coffee thing is a ruse - this is clearly for dealers.
@ozwiz66 as someone who vowed never to be that person (a coffee/scale user) i gave it a try and went from 1 in 5 cups taste amazing
to 1 in … about 1. coffee is such a strong
flavor, and sensitive to a good ratio of water to beans, that using a scale is an easy way to pour a more consistently awesome cup.
(yes i have a burr grinder, why do you ask)
((i’ve totally become that person))
KRULL! A SKULL! BRETT HULL! AWESOME!
nice try. i’ll just download the app and weigh it on my phone instead! saved $10!
This is such a bad design that it makes me question almost buying that coffee machine a few days back.
@jayrandom don’t give up the faith!
0.1 gram you say? Expensive you say?
Eleven bucks on Amazon, WITH a screen.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002SC3LLS/
@blaineg Another option: https://www.amazon.com/Etekcity-Multifunction-Stainless-Batteries-Included/dp/B0113UZJE2/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=food+scale&qid=1580904963&sr=8-4#
@blaineg @marknmd Thanks, but one of those is nearest gram (“minimum weight recommendation 3g-5g”), and the other only weighs up to 3 pounds.
@blaineg I’ve used that before, it works for… Baking
I’m almost buying it because it doesn’t have its own screen. I’m frustrated with my current digital scale - with screen - because I can’t see the readout when trying to weigh a big bowl of cabbage or the like. Having the readout off to the side would be nice. But : only 6 lbs…
@shop6d6ky Was going to say this. 1,500 grams of aerogel requires a 1 cubic meter container, so the scale readout would be obscured.
I’m sure this is great for measuring “baking” ingredients.
https://fccid.io/png.php?id=3556044&page=1 what it looks like on the inside. From the FCC certification documentation.
@hamjudo Nothing particularly special on the insides. Looks like the same sort of strain gauge you would get from eBay, or other online vendors. Google HX711 for how to read a strain gauge with an Arduino. A 5 pack of HX711 is $7. I didn’t find a cheap way to buy just one.
Strain gauges are available in capacities from 100 grams up to multiple tonnes. With prices starting below $2 and going up. Expect to spend hundreds of dollars each if you are planning on making your own weigh station for heavy trucks.
@hamjudo Hmmm. Even my ancient bathroom scale had 4 strain gauges. I wonder how consistent this is with off-center loads.
my wife and i win blue (and other color) ribbons in the Kentucky State Fair every year with measuring cups…by eye. this is a solution looking for a problem…
@fastharrydotcom Competition Measuring? What types of material do they use?
When I was a line cook in a previous life I developed a pretty good hand at weighing out portions.
@fastharrydotcom With one of these, they all may have been blue.
I’m sorry, but it’s too perfect for me.
@cfg83 luckily the scale adjusts to your perfection!
Pure laziness on the part of the company/developer not to support android, boo to them! Would have bought otherwise.
@robson it works with Android for 3 out of 4 apps, just not the coffee one:
Perfect Drink | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Bake | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Blend | for iOS | for Android
Motif Mentor | for iOS | Not Available for Android
@robson That’s why the scale landed here.
A .1g scale with 3Kg cap for $10 isn’t bad. All I need it for is weighing so a $5 Android phone as a wireless display… Might be worth it.
@Fen_Star should we tell ‘em?
iPhone only.
@derickmiller @Fen_Star There are 2 links to android apps in the product writeup.
@derickmiller I don’t drink coffee so I don’t care about the coffee app.
This is great for potent potables.
Hmm. I already have a digital scale but it only measures whole grams which is a pain in the neck for small amounts of lightweight ingredients like salt and baking powder. It doesn’t sound as though it will work with my ipod, which I would prefer, but it will work with my phone. I’m going to have to think about it. The re-calibrating recipes on the fly does sound pretty cool.
From the description for the Android Perfect Bake app:
Does this mean that the scale can be used as a basic scale with Android?
@rpstrong Yes, the Perfect Bake app shows the weight on the scale on Android
@rpstrong All apps show the weight on the scale without needing to select a recipe. The apps let you select a recipe and allow you to scale it, after which it adjusts every ingredient on the list (same adjustment happens if you add too much of something)
@dave Thanks, I’m in for one:
/giphy lavish-erratic-gum
I remember from high school days (early 70s) when a nickel bag was a quarter-z. And I [almost] remember splitting one such bag with a buddy, using a shepherd’s pipe" whose ceramic bowl would comfortably hold it all in one shot. Took us just under an hour to finish.
@rpstrong yeah, that’s my take on it too. See above
I loved in CO. in the early 70’s… with legalized pot now available I’m wishing I had bought a Frito-Lay route back then.
Watching my USPS tracking…
Started in Texas… of course…
Then to Indiana… makes sense, I’m in Michigan…
But suddenly off to New Jersey!
GO HOME, USPS, YOU’RE DRUNK
/giphy wobbly crooked path
I have no idea how that fits my giphy description, but I LIKE IT!
/giphy I like it
I can’t find the app on the Itunes store. Does anybody know if it’s still available?
Specs
Compatible Apps
Motif Mentor | for iOS | Not Available for Android
Perfect Drink | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Bake | for iOS | for Android
Perfect Blend | for iOS | for Android
What’s in the Box?
Price Comparison
$29.95 at Amazon
Warranty
2 Year Motif
Estimated Delivery
Monday, July 13th - Thursday, July 16th
This is great if you have a coffee machine that can’t accommodate a large scale being placed under it. Otherwise, buy a normal scale.
(shy-acceptable-cleric) Hell, why not? I’ll just have more apps I hardly ever use
/buy
@Faulkin It worked! Your order number is: wonderful-mucky-name
/image wonderful mucky name
/buy
@DLPanther It worked! Your order number is: salty-dangerously-spice
/image salty dangerously spice
@DLPanther @mediocrebot Mmm, nice nuts MB!
Anyone know where to find the Android App?
@robbyy i havent yet, and the manual says it’s available, the website says not yet. I just sent then an email asking if it is or isn’t.
@Huffie86 @robbyy did you people not see the linked apps up there posted in the description? 1 of them is ios only but 3 others are android.
@robbyy @therealjrn when it was posted yes, after it was delivered no
@Huffie86 @robbyy I don’t know what that means. I’m just another customer like you. The links are still there.
Got my scale today. It goes to 8kg not 3kg which is cool. An app with more scale functions would be nice but it does everything I need it too.