low carb paper?

Wow, these sound appealling… “Carb-counting bagels”:http://diveintomark.org/archives/2003/12/22/bagels … not!

bq. if I were to eat my daily sandwich on a “carb-counting” bagel instead of a regular bagel, and otherwise did not change my daily food consumption in any way, after three months I would lose one pound and kill myself.

Besides, you have to love someone who quotes Sandra Boynton!

posted at 10:35 am on Wednesday, December 24, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on low carb paper?

Photoblogs

I’ve picked up a few photoblogs that I read regularly, presumably because I find them interesting :-).

* “Sensitive Light”:http://www.sensitivelight.com/blog/
* “86.net”:http://www.eightysix.net/
* “extrospection”:http://www.extrospection.com/ – Anders Jacobsen
* “meccapixel”:http://www.meccapixel.com/
* “Satan’s Laundromat”:http://www.satanslaundromat.com/sl/
* “shutterbug”:http://sh1ft.org/shutterbug/
* “[daily dose of imagery]”:http://wvs.topleftpixel.com/

Then there are weblogs that regularly contain photos, like “blatherings”:http://www.electricpenguin.com/blatherings/, “ongoing”:http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/, and Tonya’s excellent “notebook”:http://www.adventurejournalist.com/notebook/. “Kasia”:http://www.unix-girl.com/blog/ doesn’t have a photoblog, but does have a “large collection”:http://www.unix-girl.com/gallery/albums.php of photographs…

Enjoy…

posted at 10:45 pm on Sunday, December 21, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Photoblogs

Anything That Can Go Wrong…

Will, especially when you combine “kites, kiteboards, and puddles”:http://www.sensitivelight.com/blog/archives/000339.html …

posted at 10:33 pm on Sunday, December 21, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Anything That Can Go Wrong…

Business Card Cubes

Inspired by “Ned Batchelder”:http://www.nedbatchelder.com/’s “How to make business card cubes”:http://www.nedbatchelder.com/text/cardcube.html, I present:

cube.jpg

Update 2007-01-30: Ned Batchelder has created “a Tabblo showing the constructions steps”:http://www.tabblo.com/studio/stories/shared/12817/w3a6qh48kegf1td ; check it out.

posted at 5:41 pm on Wednesday, December 17, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Business Card Cubes

Simple Root Cause Analysis

Five Whys

bq. When you are faced with a problem it is useful to stop and ask why five times. It is easy to do but few people do it.

bq. This is a very simple yet very powerful technique. The aim is to ensure that a problem stays solved and never happens again. We do this by identifying and eliminating the root cause of the problem. When the root cause is eliminated the original problem is solved permanently.

This looks like an interesting technique, but I fear that the examples are somewhat contrived? I’ll have to try it out at work, and see if I get any interesting results…

posted at 11:30 pm on Monday, December 01, 2003 in Links | Comments (1)
  1. Jeff K says:

    Don’t you run into the “Why?” mental block with the kids? Curiously, my kids don’t ask about why computers do what they do. They associate different shows & programs with “CDs” and that seems to be enough understanding for them.

    Gone are the days when you could see pixels, had to look at symbols, imagine color or had enough time to defeat the copy protection… :)

Tate is back!

Yay, “Tate’s 2003 Web Advent Calendar”:http://www.advent-calendars.com/2003/index.html is up! It’s a story that appears one page per day leading up to Christmas, starting Tate, the cat who laughs…

Check it out!

posted at 7:46 pm on Monday, December 01, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Tate is back!

Well-Designed Weblogs

So I see an article like “Well-Designed Weblogs”:http://larsholst.info/blog/index.php?p=40 and I think “wow, I wish I could design web pages that look that good!”

And then I think I _could_, if I invested the time required to learn how. But I’m too busy being good at a bunch of other interesting things :-)

posted at 10:24 pm on Sunday, November 30, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Well-Designed Weblogs

Wal-mart in the news

Fast Company | The Wal-Mart You Don’t Know

An interesting (if long) article describing the effects, good and bad, that Walmart is having on the US (and probably Canadian) markets.

Wal-mart is an 800 lb gorilla, and can force its suppliers to do pretty much anything. Wal-mart is using that clout to relentlessly lower prices. There’s nothing wrong with that; Wal-mart is a business, and has a mandate from shareholders. Shoppers like lower prices, and so Wal-mart is doing brisk business. (Remember, Wal-mart is really in the business of selling shelf-space, the same way that TV and magazines really sell eyeballs to advertisers).

As always, there’s a downside. The push for lower-prices is accelerating the movement of manufacturing overseas, closing down American businesses and putting people out of work. Well, except for the management shell; see an earlier “How to Save the World entry”:http://blogs.salon.com/0002007/2003/11/04.html#a504). This also leads to the destruction of most small retail businesses in any area with a Wal-mart. Small businesses cannot compete on price, because Wal-mart gets such huge concessions from suppliers, and/or gobbles up all available supply. For many retail businesses, there are no other effective differentiators; too few people are willing to pay for quality or service these days. This is not because they don’t want quality or service; it’s because they don’t have the cash.

Ironically, the very same people who shop at Wal-mart for its lower prices are the ones losing jobs (or businesses) as a result of the cycle. It becomes a vicious cycle. Which brings us to “Dave Pollard’s comments”:http://blogs.salon.com/0002007/2003/11/18.html#a520 on the same article. He explains it better than I, so go read his entry :-)

posted at 5:21 pm on Tuesday, November 18, 2003 in Links | Comments (1)
  1. Jeff K says:

    I had prepared a long response to this, but Pollard’s comments are so obviously flawed, there is little chance of his “economics” ever being implemented, and besides, Wal-Mart is a fait-accomplis so any arguments about a “cycle” are also flawed. Heck, even my 7 year old knows that. I ask her, “Where is your toy made” and she responds correctly every time. (China).

English Vocabulary

A humourous rant about english vocabulary and the use thereof:

McSweeney’s Internet Tendency: Words and Expressions Commonly Misused by Insipid Brothers-in-law

It doesn’t cover BRING and TAKE; I’ll have to get “Michaéla”:http://blog.cfrq.net/mnrk/ to write that one.

posted at 7:54 pm on Monday, November 17, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on English Vocabulary

Two new weight loss studies

The first, “Atkins-like Diet Shows Promise for Heavy Heart Patients”:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/hsn/20031112/hl_hsn/atkinslikedietshowspromiseforheavyheartpatients

bq. Recent studies show the Atkins approach is effective for short-term weight loss. A key question is whether the diet will achieve results over a longer period of time while avoiding a harmful buildup of artery-clogging fat that could boost patients’ risk for cardiovascular disease.

The second I actually heard first on the radio: “Diets work, *if* you follow them”:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/nm/20031109/sc_nm/health_heart_diet_dc

bq. After two months 22 percent of the dieters had given up. After a year, 35 percent dropped out of Weight Watchers and the Zone diets and 50 percent had quit the Atkins and Ornish plans.

This suggests that the anecdotal evidence is true; Atkins works, but it’s harder to stay on a highly restrictive diet (Atkins == low-carb, Ornish == low-fat) than it is to eat a low-_calorie_ balanced diet. My personal experience matches; I know people who have “failed” at both Weight Watchers and Atkins, but I know more people successful on WW than on the others (and not because I’m a member; I’m not counting the people I know only through WW).

Weight Watchers works for me; I was able to follow their “eat fewer calories” system fairly easily (all I needed was a system to follow), I’m still keeping it off after six months; I have good weeks and bad weeks, but they average out. I don’t think I could manage an Atkins diet; I like bread and honey too much :-)

I think that using Atkins for controlled weight-loss, and then switching to something else, might work for some people, but for others it would be too many different eating rules in a short period of time. People already tend to “bounce” at the end of a weight-loss program, as they go back to their old eating habits.

Actually, that might be an interesting experiment. Does changing the rules at the end of a weight-loss regimen increase the success rate (because it’s easier to follow a new program than to stick with an existing one), or does it reduce the success rate (because introducing another new set of rules is too confusing)?

Anyway, “Chuq’s commentary”:http://www.plaidworks.com/chuqui/blog/000989.html for the second link was bang on, and worth repeating:

* All diets effectively work by dropping your calories below your usage rate. You can play with biophysical issues all you want, but the bottom line is more calories than you use, you gain weight, fewer, you lose weight.
* Any well-designed diet will help you lose weight if you use it.
* No diet will help you lose weight if you don’t.
* Choosing a diet that you can keep to is more important than choosing a diet for any other reason. Atkins might sound good, and might work for your friends, but if you can’t live without carbs, you’ll fail. Ditto in the other direciton with the Ornish diet.
* basically, diets don’t work because people can’t stay on them.

[ both links via “Teal Sunglasses”:http://www.plaidworks.com/chuqui/blog/ ]

posted at 2:05 pm on Saturday, November 15, 2003 in Links | Comments (3)
  1. valencia simpson says:

    i would like to participate in a weight loss study.

  2. Jim says:

    There have been a number of studies that have shown that Atkins definitely causes weight loss – in the short term. But as you’ve said – it is a very difficult diet to sustain. Could you imagine being low/no carb your whole life??

    The other thing is that weight loss doesnt necessarily mean fat loss. A number of Atkins dieters showed drop in lean muscle mass as well as fat loss.

  3. Harald says:

    It’s difficult to lose weight without dropping _some_ muscle mass; that’s just the way it ends up working. Weight Watchers members lose lean muscle mass too.

    On the other hand, regular (non-strenuous, non-body-building) exercise only _adds_ a few pounds of muscle mass, according to the writings I’ve seen, so I can’t see the loss side being significant either.

The Physics Diet

bq. Most dieters are so concerned about second-order effects, such as daily fluctuations in weight and changes in metabolism, that they lose track of the first law of thermodynamics: conservation of energy.

bq. Want to lose a pound of fat? You can work it off by hiking to the top of a 2,500-story building. Or by running 60 miles. Or by spending 7 hours cleaning animal stalls. […]

bq. Exercise is a very difficult way to lose weight. Here’s a rule of thumb: exercise very hard for one hour (swimming, running, or racquetball)– and you’ll lose about one ounce of fat […]

bq. If you run for an hour, you’ll lose that ounce of fat and also a pound or two of water. By the next day, when you’ve replenished the water, you might think, “the weight came right back!” But you’d be wrong—you really did lose an ounce. It is hard to notice, unless you keep running every day for a month or more, and don’t reward yourself after each run with a cookie.

bq. There is a much easier way to lose weight, as we can learn from the first law of thermodynamics. Eat less.

The rest can be found at “The MIT Technology Review : The Physics Diet”:http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_muller111403.asp?p=1

posted at 1:36 pm on Saturday, November 15, 2003 in Links | Comments (2)
  1. Jeff K says:

    The conservation of energy? I’ve never heard anything so ridiculous. Chemical energy is stored in chemical bonds, which are goverened by E=mc^2, or more precisely, the conservation of mass-energy. ..and anyway even that is irrelevent. That’s BAAAAD science. You want to know what the body does with the results of combustion of x calories in an ounce of fat (mass is conserved (- the E=mc^2 part, which can be ignored on the bathroom scale))

    I propose a new title for your diet science: The conservation of crap. If crap is conserved, one is full of sh.. er, I digress.

    Some people believe and hope that fat is converted to muscle. I can only go by my own experience, which is that
    1. Excerise produces more muscle and less fat and a 20 minute regime each day can change the body drammatically in 6 weeks.
    2. I eat the same as thinner people.

    Anyway, I invoke Newton’s first law of motion, according to my calculations, a body in motion stays in motion, so running 60 miles should consume 0 calories.

    Isn’t science great?

  2. Harald says:

    The “physics” side of the article is over-simplification, perhaps; it was intended as humour. But the point of the quoted section is simple: exercise alone isn’t going to lead to weight loss, especially if you’re treating yourself after workouts.

    The vast majority of the food calories you consume get used merely keeping you alive (the so-called basal metabolic rate). The more you weigh, the more energy you need (and yes, fat cells need energy too). This is why many people on weight loss programs “plateau”; they have to reduce the amount they consume as their weight drops. Also, overweight sedentary people can eat as much as skinny active people; the excess body mass consumes more energy than the exercise.

    Ignore all the fancy diets; the weight-loss equation is simple. Consume fewer calories than you expend, and you’ll lose weight. Consume more, you’ll gain weight. Everything else is management.

Short Words to Explain Relativity

Short Words to Explain Relativity

bq. So, have a seat. Put your feet up. This may take some time. Can I get you some tea? Earl Grey? You got it.

The entire article uses words of four letters or less (including names; Mr. Newton gets shortened to “Izzy” :-). It’s harder than it sounds, but the article manages it quite well, in my layman’s opinion…

posted at 6:15 pm on Monday, November 03, 2003 in Links | Comments (1)
  1. Reid says:

    I still like the Hamelian (sp?) version of relativity:
    “Truck go fast, clock go slow”.

    Hamelian involved using words of one syllable, except for the word “sandbag”. Counting was like this: 1 .. 2 .. many .. many .. many .. many .. many .. 8 .. many …..

    I think the ‘8’ was in there because it was Pontus’ lucky number. :-)

    Hmm, I get an error when I preview. Hope this posts okay. I’ll copy it for emergency trackback usage just in case..

Time Lapse

A pair of time-lapse photography movies from “[daily dose of imagery]:http://wvs.topleftpixel.com/; one looking west and the other looking southwest from (near) Bay and Gerrard in downtown Toronto. (They’re probably from the condo towers in College Park, but I can’t tell for sure.)

* “toronto western sky timelapsed”:http://wvs.topleftpixel.com/archives/photos_cityscape/030930_227.shtml
* “CN Tower timelapsed”:http://wvs.topleftpixel.com/archives/photos_cityscape/030924_216.shtml

Cool. Now I want to go make one of the view from my office building, either looking south down York street towards the lake and the island, or looking down into the TD Centre courtyard. I’ll need a webcam or an external power supply for my camera, though…

[ via “GTA bloggers”:http://www.gtabloggers.com/archives/000559.html ]

posted at 11:03 am on Sunday, October 26, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Time Lapse

The Complete Far Side

<drool>

Amazon.com: Books: The Complete Far Side: 1980-1994 (or “Chapters.ca”:http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/item.asp?Catalog=Books&Item=978074072113).

19 pounds. 2 hardcover books, in a box set. 1250 pages. Over 4000 cartoons.

I suppose it would be less appealing if you already had all of the Far Side books. Which I don’t…

posted at 10:12 am on Sunday, October 26, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on The Complete Far Side

Geek Jackets

“SCOTTeVEST”:http://www.scottevest.com/” now has version 3.0 of their jacket/vest. It has 42 pockets (many hidden) to stash all of your gear, including pens, PDAs, earbuds, and so on. The pockets and jacket are designed to allow routing of cables (e.g. headphones) as needed. The ultimate geektech accessory?

posted at 7:07 pm on Friday, October 24, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Geek Jackets

Polaroid Photography

Ok, this is _cool_.

Mark-Steffen Göwecke has taken a series of polaroid pictures separated in space and time (he started in France in 1996). Each photograph contains the previously shot polaroid image.

Fascinating!

posted at 11:31 am on Sunday, October 19, 2003 in Links | Comments (1)
  1. Jeff K says:

    My photos are *already* in the order taken in my explorer window by default. Oddly, even negatives come that way if you toss ’em in a box.

    Alas, after many years of photography as a hobby, I must say the key to being a good photographer is throwing the bad photos out! Long live digital cameras!

Link Dump

I’m going to totally mess up Google here, and do my first link dump. These are all items that have been sitting in my aggregator for a while that I don’t want to lose, but I’m too busy (or brain-dead) to comment on right now.

“Axentra Rumba Server”:http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=4730 – a mini-ITX based home firewall _and_ server.
“Trained Eye Gallery”:http://www.timdavisartimages.com/pages/main.html – macro photographs of … boxcars.
“StarROMs, Inc”:http://www.starroms.com/ – legally download old videogame ROMs.
“America — love it or, um…”:http://www.plaidworks.com/chuqui/blog/000851.html
“Andrew Clover’s JavaScript Browser Parasite Detector”:http://doxdesk.com/parasite/
“Verisign: Documenting the Damage”:http://www.unicom.com/chrome/a/000364.html
“The avocado-green fridge”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2003/09/30.html#a814 – The PC is the avocado-green fridge…
“OpenOffice 1.1 is out”:http://www.openoffice.org/
“The Telescope Game”:http://www.dyson.co.uk/game/play.asp
“Killing Comment Spam Dead”:http://www.jayallen.org/journey/2003/09/killing_comment_spam_dead
“Open Perl IDE”:http://open-perl-ide.sourceforge.net/
“Exit Windows, mostly”:http://usefulinc.com/edd/blog/2003/9/25#03:28 – one linux desktop story
“Settling in with the penguin”:http://www.bradchoate.com/past/001709.php – another linux desktop story
“An End To Driver Hell”:http://loosewire.blogspot.com/archives/2003_09_14_loosewire_archive.html#106395389188687000 – Driver Magician can backup installed drivers from your running windows box.
“More Search Options”:http://loosewire.blogspot.com/archives/2003_09_11_loosewire_archive.html#106333158581759990 – two desktop search tools (80-20 and X1).

*Update:*

“Balancing visual and structural complexity in interaction design”:http://www.guuui.com/issues/04_03.asp – How visual simplicity can harm usability
“Killing Comment Spam for Dummies”:http://www.jayallen.org/journey/2003/09/killing_comment_spam_for_dummies – more on the subject
“Debian Backports”:http://www.backports.org/ – run new software on an older system

Enjoy…

posted at 11:21 am on Saturday, October 04, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Link Dump

Cardinal Directions

Blog, Jvstin Style: Cardinal Directions

Well, I had to do some research with “MapQuest”:http://www.mapquest.com/ and “Google”:http://www.google.com/ to find the answers. Here goes:

_What is the furthest North you have ever been?_

Hönefoss, Norway (slightly NW of Oslo).

_The furthest South?_

Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic.

_The furthest West?_

Tofino, British Columbia, Canada.

_The furthest East?_

Either Munich, DE or Garmisch-Partenkirchen, DE (whichever is farther east; MapQuest has them on a perfect North-South line).

_The highest elevation?_

The summit of “Zugspitze”:http://www.summitpost.com/show/mountain_link.pl/mountain_id/150, SW of Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Germany. 2,962m above sea level.

I don’t think I’m doing _too_ badly, for a homebody :-)

posted at 9:41 pm on Friday, October 03, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Cardinal Directions

EXIF Reader

Normally I’d put this in the sideblog, but I wanted to make sure my reader actually saw it :-).

“Exif Reader”:http://www.takenet.or.jp/~ryuuji/minisoft/exifread/english/ is a software package that “analyzes and displays the shutter speed, flash condition, focal length, and other image information included in the Exif image format which is supported by almost all the latest digital cameras.” Check it out.

If you’re running Linux, you may also want “jhead”:http://www.sentex.net/~mwandel/jhead/index.html, a command-line utility that reads the Exif data out as text…

posted at 9:40 pm on Friday, October 03, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on EXIF Reader

Lego Escher

I always liked Escher art; I still have some old, beat-up prints from my university days around somewhere. So I remember seeing and marvelling at the LEGO version of “Ascending and Descending”:http://www.lipsons.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/escher/ascending.html when it was mentioned in slashdot a while ago.

Well, the boys have been busy; turns out there are four _more_ LEGO Escher creations: “Balcony”:http://www.lipsons.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/escher/balcony.html, “Belvedere”:http://www.lipsons.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/escher/belvedere.html, “Waterfall”:http://www.lipsons.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/escher/waterfall.html, and “Relativity”:http://www.lipsons.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/escher/relativity.html. Excellent!

[ trace: “Blog, Jvstin Style”:http://www.all-roads-lead.net/jvstin/blog/000742.html → “Stet”:http://stet.typepad.com/stet/2003/09/live_from_castr.html → “Electrolite”:http://www.nielsenhayden.com/electrolite/ ]

posted at 9:54 pm on Friday, September 26, 2003 in Links | Comments Off on Lego Escher
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