Saturday, November 25, 2006

RiverTown Crossings has decided to ban city buses from their property.  From the GR Press article:

"RiverTown General Manager Randy Zimmerman said the move was prompted by 'several violent incidents' he blamed on bus passengers."

As Chris Knape points out,  this is a holiday slap in the face for the poor and handicapped passengers who depend on this transportation.

Feel free to send RiverTown an email to express your opinion.

11/25/2006 2:46:13 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]


 Tuesday, November 14, 2006

These folks want to ban trans fats.  I understand the immediacy of the situation, we are facing an epidemic of obesity and heart disease in America.  But I'm not convinced that we should ban hydrogenated oils.

This is actually a little more complicated than you might think.  The process of creating trans fats causes the removal of Omega 3 from fatty acids.  Susan Allport points out that it could be this lack of Omega 3 that is truly the problem.  She agrees that trans fats are bad -- but the real culprit in her eyes is the lack of Omega 3 relative to Omega 6.  She points out that you could give up trans fats completely and still not be healthy, if you did not get your Omega 3s.

Susan also makes a good point about fish oil:  It is the Omega 3 in fish that makes them such healthy meals for we fish eaters.  Even beef could be high in Omega 3 if those cows were eating the right stuff!

11/14/2006 2:32:49 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]


 Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Studies are now revealing the importance of Omega-3 fatty acids in maintaining brain chemistry and mental health.

"For the clinician in charge of the US study, Joseph Hibbeln, the results of his trial are not a miracle, but simply what you might predict if you understand the biochemistry of the brain and the biophysics of the brain cell membrane. His hypothesis is that modern industrialised diets may be changing the very architecture and functioning of the brain.

We are suffering, he believes, from widespread diseases of deficiency. Just as vitamin C deficiency causes scurvy, deficiency in the essential fats the brain needs and the nutrients needed to metabolise those fats is causing of a host of mental problems from depression to aggression. Not all experts agree, but if he is right, the consequences are as serious as they could be. The pandemic of violence in western societies may be related to what we eat or fail to eat. Junk food may not only be making us sick, but mad and bad too."

10/17/2006 7:58:44 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]


The recent jump in autism cases is reason for concern, especially if these trends continue.  A just released study by Cornell University (Waldman, et al) reveals a significant correlation between autism rates and young children who watched TV frequently.

Previously, vaccines were a leading suspect, but numerous studies have failed to show any definitive link between autism and vaccines. 

Gregg Easterbrook of Slate Magazine points out that further study is needed to clarify the link between autism and television:

"Research has shown that autistic children exhibit abnormal activity in the visual-processing areas of their brains, and these areas are actively developing in the first three years of life. Whether excessive viewing of brightly colored two-dimensional screen images can cause visual-processing abnormalities is unknown. The Cornell study makes no attempt to propose how television might trigger autism; it only seeks to demonstrate a relationship. But Waldman notes that large amounts of money are being spent to search for a cause of autism that is genetic or toxin-based and believes researchers should now turn to scrutinizing a television link."

10/17/2006 1:49:05 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]


 Monday, September 25, 2006

I've added Sudoku to this Website (located in the right column near the bottom).  Also, here are some good tips on how to solve these puzzles without going completely insane.

Hat tip to Dan Woolston on this one.

9/25/2006 2:41:23 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]


Here are the questions that we are planning to ask of our panelists at the GlimaWest Blog Event:

  1. When does blogging make sense for marketing purposes and how does blogging integrate with a marketing campaign?
  2. When using blogging for business purposes, what is the return on investment?  What is the investment?  What is the return?
  3. Does blogging reveal "news" that is not available from traditional for-profit news channels?
  4. What are some of the challenges and rewards of establishing a personal blog for self-promotion and idea expression?
  5. Should companies have a policy specific to blogging like many do for email, intellectual property and other business risks?  And are there technologies for managing offensive blog content just like email tools?
  6. What is the most effective way to find and be kept up to date on blogs that match your personal or professional interests?
  7. When is it better to create a blog from scratch versus using a system or community like blogger.com or typepad.com?
  8. Is blog commentary essential?  How does it enhance the experience for the blogger, commenter, or passive reader?
  9. How is it typically that blog readers identify themselves as sales leads?
  10. Blogging has traditionally been text based.  What about photos or video? What about embedding content from other sites?  What about commentary doing the same?  When do these enhancements make sense?
  11. Is blogging functionality converging with others such as social networking?
  12. Should glimaWest establish a blog?

I love these types of discussions and I can't wait to get started.  Feel free to comment on any ideas or questions that you would like to see discussed, or comment on the questions already listed.

9/25/2006 2:14:03 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]


 Saturday, September 23, 2006

Supposedly Microsoft has started an investigation to determine how these supposedly private internal training videos were leaked to the Internet.

Apparently Ricky Gervais (The Office - British version) and Stephen Merchant (his writing partner) made these videos back in 2003 with funding from MS.  These videos should be required material for all aspiring young IT executives.

9/23/2006 1:22:36 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]


 Friday, September 08, 2006

This free software will let you save any YouTube video to your iTunes/iPod.  Simply paste in the URL of the video and iTube does the rest.  Thank you Mr. Benjamin Strahs!

iTube

Update:  It occurred to me after I posted this that some of you might not be familiar with YouTube.   According to a July 16 announcement, 100 million video clips are viewed daily on YouTube, with an additional 65,000 new videos uploaded per 24 hours. The site has almost 20 million visitors each month, according to Nielsen/NetRatings.  YouTube is an example of how the internet is nibbling away at the fabric of popular media, including traditional forms of video delivery such as television and DVD formats.

9/8/2006 1:49:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]


 Thursday, September 07, 2006

I will be moderating an event about blogs and blogging, hosted by glimaWest.  Our intention is to discuss blogs as a means of promoting business and political messages.  We have asked for participation from several local bloggers, and we are getting some very interesting panelists lined up.  A blogger from the Granholm for Governor campaign blog may be a participant.  Also, bloggers from the Media Mouse and The Local Area Watch blogs have shown interest and may be among the panelists.

I'll post more information here as it becomes available.  My most excellent employer, Blue Sphere, will be sponsoring this event.  We have yet to decide on a venue (it will be somewhere in the Grand Rapids area), but the panel discussion is scheduled to start at 6:30pm on September 28th.

9/7/2006 9:55:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]


 Thursday, August 31, 2006

Stephen Colbert has coined yet another word that will soon become a part of your vocabulary:  Wikiality.  Earlier this year he turned heads with is addition of "Truthiness" to the global lexicon.

In my humble opinion there is a degree of truthiness in Stephen's definition of wikiality.  We are indeed entering a new phase of consensus building via Blogs, Wikis (in particular Wikipedia), and the Web in general.  And it's a democratic process for the most part, although those individuals who are less inclined to participate in this revolution have become somewhat marginalized.

Dinner table arguements can have some sense of finality now that we can consult a medium which allows for consensus and majority views to bubble to the top of the endless chatter.  I would submit that the very fabric of our democracy and cultural decision making processes may be forever changed as these systems mature.

There is something very humbling about exposing your beliefs and values to the criticism and review that is built in to these consensus building systems.  Your ideas are quickly challenged and you are forced to defend them or face the consequences.  And if you lose interest, there is always someone there to fill the void and possibly render your ideas obsolete.  So the end product, or consensus, typcially ends up being dominated by those who are most engaged, persistent, and convincing in their particular area of expertise. Welcome to the age of wikiality.

8/31/2006 6:08:20 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]


 Sunday, August 20, 2006

I hope you enjoy the new user interface, I spent most of the day upgrading to the latest version of DasBlog, which is the open source, free code base this blog application utilizes.  I was also able to import some of my earlier blog entries from yester year.  Many of my older blog entries were just not all that great, so I did not import those.

By the way, this application will allow you, the user, to select a "theme" which will change the look and feel of this Website.  Look for "Pick a Theme" in the lower right -- have fun but don't hurt yourself.

8/20/2006 3:19:42 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]


 Friday, August 11, 2006

This music site is amazing:

http://www.pandora.com/

Based on your favorite song or favorite artist it starts suggesting related music.  You can rate their suggestions and the system adjusts based on your recommendations.  After a few songs it offered up some of the best music I've heard in a long time. 

Cost:  Free and legal.

8/11/2006 2:09:44 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]


 Monday, June 19, 2006

This study conducted by Yale University in 2005 measured environmental sustainability by country.  The United States ended up with a rating below most of the advanced nations, and also below many of the smaller, less fortunate among us.

http://www.yale.edu/esi/ESI2005_Main_Report.pdf

Given the fact that we are capable of just about anything when we put our muscle behind it, the greatest country on earth will no doubt improve on this number in the coming decades.  Go USA!

6/19/2006 12:26:44 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]


 Sunday, May 21, 2006
Kevin Drum over at the Washington Monthly explains how the CEI (Competitive Enterprise Instititute) is launching a new add campaign claiming that the billions of tons of CO2 we are emitting is actually good for you.

I am therefore submitting the following viral marketing strategy for the CEI to consider:

Got CO2?
       GOT CO2?

5/21/2006 4:25:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]


 Tuesday, May 16, 2006
RED
This article is from the (RED) edition of The Independent, guest-edited for 16 May 2006 by Bono. Half the revenue from the edition will be donated to the Global Fund to Fight Aids.

Bono, Guest Editor: I am a witness. What can I do?

Published: 16 May 2006

May I say without guile, I am as sick of messianic rock stars as the next man, woman and child. I am also tired of average work being given extra weight because it's attached to something with real gravitas, like the Aids emergency. So I truly try to tread carefully as I walk over the dreams of dignity under my feet in our work for the terrible beauty that is the continent of Africa. I'm used to the custard pies. I've even learnt to like the taste of them. But before you are tempted to let fly with your understandable invective, allow me to contextualise. Not for the sake of my vanity, but for the sake of people who are depending on you - the reader - to respond to the precariousness of their lives.

Picture this: a village where the disappearance of a whole generation has left children to bring up children (the Lord of the Flies syndrome).

I'm a witness to this. What can I do?

Or this: my new friend Prudence, who even if she had access to anti-retroviral therapies would not have shared them with her now dead sister or best friend Janny, because her fellow activists were more important to keep alive.

Why? Because picture this: most activists and trained nurses cannot afford the drugs available to us in any corner chemist.

I am a witness to this. I have watched these brave and beautiful souls who are fighting a forest fire of a pandemic with watering cans, knowing they will not see the light of a day when their work will be honoured. I have been a witness to their conversations around canteen tables, deciding who will live or die, because they do not have enough pills to go round. I've seen Zackie Achmat refuse his medications until he won his action against the South African government, forcing their hand on universal access. What a witness he was. And so I testify.

These firefighters deserve fire engines with sirens and low-flying aircraft with bellies full of of rain. At the very least, they deserve their situation to merit the classification of an emergency. Code Red, like Hurricane Katrina or the tsunami in south Asia, which swept away a hundred and fifty thousand lives. These were natural catastrophes. Africa loses a hundred and fifty thousand men, women, and children every month to Aids, a wholly avoidable disaster, a preventable, treatable disease.

(click here to read the rest)

5/16/2006 8:16:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]