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Vegetarianism

January 12, 2007 by wroolie Leave a Comment

I’ve been so busy with my current contract and the damned commute that comes along with it that I haven’t posted an entry in nearly a month.

My big resolution this year is to become vegetarian. This was my resolution last year, but it only lasted 7 days. I’m on day 12 now, and doing well.

In the past year, I read too much about the meat industry and the health problems with eating meat that, although I still ate meat, I did so with a guilty conscience.

I’ve always felt that people who choose to be veggie must have strong will power and a little insanity. We are a country of meat-eaters (England and definitely America). I see this much more clearly now that I look at menu boards filled with things I’m not going to eat. That pasta looks good–but they put little chunks of chicken in it. That salad would be perfect if it didn’t have bacon on it. Vegetarians never have it easy.

Still, I could never figure out why someone would want to be vegetarian. I put them on a parr with those crazy people who break into science labs to free all the animals.

Anyone who knows me knows that I love burgers and chicken. As a teenager, I worked in McDonalds for 3 years and frequently ate all three meals there. My dad would refer to me as a carnivore. I was never much interested in vegetables on my plate and would often leave them there. I love meat and have always had fond associations of it. Some people rave about chocolate. I rave about chicken.

But now I’ve read more and seen more. I can’t do it anymore. Specifically, I know of two resources have had big effects on me. One is a book and the other an online video.

A very interesting book that has had a big impact on my way of thinking is The New Why You Don’t Need Meat by Peter Cox. This book explores our history of meat eating and looks at the way our consumption of meat has changed in the last 30 years or so. My big takeaway from this was the realisation that with such a huge growing population, the meat industry has had to resort to barbaric factory methods to give us the product we can now get whenever we want it. Despite the romantic vision that some farmer walks out onto his farm to butcher one of his animals (probably with a heavy heart) so non-farmers can guy it on the shelves, I know that animals are scientifically reared and butchered mostly by machines. I find it ironic that people who oppose cloning could support the meat industry. This book looks at a lot of the tactics used my meat lobbyists whenever a report on the current state of our meat comes out. It is an eye-opening book.

The second thing that had a real impact on me in the last year is a video created by PETA. It’s called Meet your Meat and is narrated by Alec Baldwin. If you can stomach watching this video and still support the meat industry, you’re a bigger man than I am. You can watch the video at www.petatv.com/tvpopup/Prefs.asp?video=meet_your_meat. You can watch it right now.

I’ve never been one for idealistic causes, but I really want to stick with this one. I want to be vegetarian. Not because I want to lose weight. Not because I want to be more healthy. I want to be vegetarian because I think it is right.

I wish you a belated Happy New Year.

Filed Under: The Environment

Nike+ Sensor for the Ipod Nano

October 9, 2006 by wroolie 2 Comments

When I left BNP Paribas, my wonderful colleagues bought me an IPOD Nano. This is something I never would have bought for myself, so it was perfect. I love it and run with it all the time.

This week, I tried out the new Nike+ Ipod sensor this week. This cool little gadget tracks your runs and allows you to listen to music at the same time.

A couple of months ago, Apple and Nike teamed up to produce the Nike+ running music system. This includes the IPOD Nano (which is perfect for running since it uses flash memory instead of a hard drive), a special receiver which attaches to the base of the Ipod and a small sensor which sits in the sole of a special Nike+ shoe.

ImageThe sensor in the shoe is picked up by the receiver in the Ipod and tracks your distance, calories burned, current speed, etc. By touching the centre button of the Ipod while running, you get a male of female voice give you a status report (ie. “Twenty-three minutes. Distance: 2.43 miles. Current Speed: 7:13 minutes per mile.” When you sync up your Ipod with iTunes at the end of your run, your workout details are uploaded to a secure page on the Nike website which tracks your running history, speed, etc. You can also, they say, challenge someone else to a distance race on the other side of the world.

This technology has been around for about a month or so. The sensor kit itself only costs about £20, which is not too steep if you already have the Nano. The real cost is the special Nike+ shoe that is “required” to use the kit. This little gadget ensures you are stuck with Ipod and Nike for the rest of your life.

However, after doing some web research, I found articles detailing how to use the sensor with Non-Nike+ shoes. It involves putting some Velcro on the tongue of your shoe and the the sensor and placing it under your laces. I’ve done that to my Nike (but non-Nike+) shoes. It worked great. The distance reported was very accurate and I found it alarming how slow my running speed was at times. For the base sensor kit, I got all the bells and whistles without the expensive shoes.

If you’ve found this post because you want to know if the velcro method of attaching the sensor works or not, I can attest that it does. It works very well. Now, I’m listening to music or audio books and keeping track of my miles accumulated.

I highly recommend the Nike+ Ipod sensor (but not the shoes).

You can buy the sensor from Apple Store. http://store.apple.com

Filed Under: Miscellaneous Rants

Speech Slows the Speed of Information

October 2, 2006 by wroolie 1 Comment

Is it more advantageous to sit in a training course or read a really big book?

Seth Godin wrote a great article today on the inadequacies of speech as a training tool:

Speech is both linear and unpaceable. You can’t skip around and you can’t speed it up. When the speaker covers something you know, you are bored. When he quickly covers something you don’t understand, you are lost.

It is a fantastic means of inciting something from listeners, but not to stand in front of a group of people and read.

He makes a great point, and I think it has a lot of relevance to the rise of podcasting. Everything is podcasted now. The only things that make podcasts better than blogs is that you can (a) get to know the speaker on a more personal level or (b) listen to it in your car. With all the podcasts out there, how much driving can you possibly do? If I listen to five minutes of a 40-minute podcast, it means I was really interested (but I got other things to do).

I think the assumption that people see a teacher standing in front of a class as more efficient is that it is the only ‘proof’ that the students heard what was saying. Ridiculous, but I suppose some people just don’t read.

I know as a software developer, I can pay thousands of pound for a 5-day course which loosely covers a technology or programming language. Or, I could buy a very good book for £50 which would give me 20 times more information and I could devour it in those same five days.

At interviews, are they more impressed with me taking a course or reading a book? They always go for the course.

Read Seth’s article here.

Filed Under: Miscellaneous Rants

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