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A Barcode Driven Kitchen and Grocery List?

Crazy Brian asks: "I have envisioned, for some time now, having a 3Com Audrey with a barcode scanner in my kitchen, where I can scan in items as I put them away, then scan them again as I use them. Barcode information would be stored on my MySQL server, and an inventory would be updated. I could then generate a shopping list, or link it to a database of recipes, to find out what I can have for dinner tonight. The closest thing I have found is the ShopWizard from Symbol, which only runs under Windows. Is there anything out there for Linux? I hope it can use the upcdatabase to find unknown barcodes. Is there any group interest in creating something like this, assuming nothing already exists?" Icepick's Trashbin is a simple application built on this concept, but wouldn't knowing exactly what is in your cabinets and having a ready-made grocery list be a useful feature for any kitchen?

4 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. Already exists by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Funny

    The appliance that automagically keeps track of your groceries, makes lists of what's needed from the store, even goes and gets them from the store while you are at work - already exists.

    It's called a wife.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    1. Re:Already exists by caswelmo · · Score: 4, Funny

      While initially excited about my purchase of this product, I have been dissapointed with its overall performance. The initial buy-in was a significant investment, but I had figured that the lack of subscription costs for the life of the unit would make it a worthwhile purchase.

      Unfortunately, after a short period of appropriate use I found my item started to malfunction. The day after the two-week warranty period ended it started to make an increasingly annoying noise. A high-pitched wail of sorts. The noise seems to repeat until a specific function is performed. At times the noise even exceeds the volume of the television.

      In addition the ports on my model are rarely accessible. Even getting the exterior case off is a major achievement. For some reason I have found it easier to plug-in when floral arrangments are visible to the unit. Strange but true.

      In summary, while the lack of subscription costs in a nice bonus, I would suggest that consumers purchase their products on a per-need basis. At least, until resources become scarce, at which time I would suggest grabbing hold of the first product you can and praying she doesn't read Slashdot.

  2. Re:This again? by Tanktalus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I do understand that there are a number of people saying "why bother?" My answer:

    1. This is an "ask" story in a "News for Nerds" site. Um, what could be more nerdy than a roll-your-own barscan kitchen inventory running on Linux? (translation: calm down.)
    2. I would find some use for it if it were able to take hand-written lists and combine them with the barcode list (multiple sources, merged from a palm pilot or something). This means that for non-agribusiness foodstuffs (produce, possibly meat), as we run out/low, we can just write it in the list. But for other items, I need to be able to specify where it is - we have a reasonable supply of most non-perishables in the kitchen, but for larger bulk (whether it's a flat of 20 cans of soup, or it's rolls of paper towels), we store that in the basement. So it'd be nice to say where something is stored so we can easily see where all of our soup is, and how much (total) we have. Maybe I'm just being lazy (hey, that's a virtue in my programming language!). Or just plain geeky.
    Whatever it is - it's fun. I run a linux webserver on my home machine - somewhat overkill. But I use it because it's fun. Same with email, etc. - so please don't crap all over someone else's geekiness. One man's garbage (waste of time) is another man's treasure (fun way to entertain themselves).
  3. Re:The Agribusiness Diet by sakusha · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you're missing my point. Allow me to illustrate, with an old Calvin & Hobbes comic I still have taped to my refrigerator. Calvin's dad is ranting about the frantic pace of modern life, and how we have all sorts of labor-saving machines that are supposed to make life easier, but instead, just make it faster paced, and more stressful. In the final frame, Calvin is holding a package of frozen food, screaming "SIX MINUTES in a microwave? I don't have TIME for this!"
    If I had 15-20 extra minutes to spend every time I go to the store, I'd probably be better off spending it cooking or cleaning the kitchen. If I had a hundred bucks to spend on a bar code printer, I'd probably be better off spending it on better quality food. This whole scenario is a classic example of "goal displacement," the goal of cooking is to provide a healthy diet of tasty food, it's not an inventory management problem or a time management problem. Peoples' diets are getting worse because they're treating cooking like a trip to a gas station, a task that must be taken care of and gotten out of the way. Slow down and smell the coffee (preferably not instant coffee). Food is a pleasurable thing, cooking is fun, not a chore to be turned into another computer algorithm. Some things don't benefit from computerization.