Skiing the Canadian Rockies

Posted By on March 28, 2006

Sunshine Village Ski Lifts
Jeff, a good friend of mine had the gall to send back a few photos while skiing in Canadian Rockies today … then follow up with a phone call asking if he should dine on steak or seafood tonight. I recommend steak and hope you choke on it!
🙂
Not only am I stuck in rainy Ohio this week while he is up in Canada skiing and living the high life (literally … see continental divide photo below), my wife just so happened to phone me only moments while lounging on Delray Beach in Florida. Ouch, two jabs in one day — I’m doing something wrong?

Skiing the Continental Divide
Jeff took the photo above this morning from the Continental Divide, unfortunately the small sizes don’t do the photos justice. He is looking south from Sunshine Village in Alberta Canada. Sunshine Village is a popular ski resort situated 1½ hour west of Calgary in the Canadian Rockies; 15 minutes from Banff. The weather this time of year is warming slightly at the lower elevations, especially during the day, but still can be quite cold at the mountain peaks.
Skiing Sunshine Village
Have a good time bud … if I were more of a snow boarder or skier I’d really be jealous.

Smelly Cell Phones — I kid you not

Posted By on March 27, 2006

Samsung's Perfume PhoneThis patent/technology story was too much for me to pass on. It is amazing what strange things people will work to patent and most likely promote pretty well. In this particular Samsung patent application, the cell phone is equipped with a perfume sprayer that release an odor at the appropriate time. I’ll not go into detail, but here’s a blog link that details the patent application. Is it me or is this just odd?
🙂

Rugby: Is it being played wrong?

Posted By on March 26, 2006

I’ve waited a week to post my concerns about the sport of rugby which is growing quickly in the United States. (far more popular in other countries) My son is a sophomore and this is his first year on the team which is comprised of students from a couple different local high schools. Rugby is a physical game requiring an array of skills from endurance, physical ‘beastliness’ and as well as practice and conditioning — which may not be sufficient. After the first two matches, the three teams involved has had, ‘in my opinion’ too many severe injuries: 4 broken legs, a broken arm, 17 stitch cut along with the usual bruises, sprains, strains, small cuts and bloodied noses. All of this in two matches mind you, so I’m not the only parent showing concern.

I decided to talk to internet friends and search statistics on Rugby. It was sort of a fishing expedition into what is normal and abnormal, yet I still couldn’t find numbers to quantify participation and injuries like I wanted. In talking to college age intermural rugby players, the first thing I found out was that there was an immediate concern from all I talked to with the number of broken bones in our first two matches. A 3rd year medical student who played rugby 3 of his undergrad years indicated that concern for his health when he was finally accepted into med school was a reason to sit out his senior year — he had too much to risk. Others had played throughout their college years and couldn’t recall anyone with a broken leg or having to call the rescue squad. Interestingly last week, the rescue squad came 3 times — the final time they sent the ladder firetruck since the rescue squads were still returning from the prior calls.

In the same vein, the players that I talked to overseas indicated a very similar story. One English ‘chap’ had played a six years without seeing this kind of carnage. He was quick to point out that the game is physical, but that sportmanship, coaching and attentive referees usually maintain game control and they should stop illegal play and dangerous hits. He pointed out that the physical conditioning of our teams might not be as tailored to rugby as it needs to be.

The biggest concern for players of rugby are for injuries to the head, particularly for those not wearing head protection. Statistics state 25% of serious rugby injuries are to the head (1). (only two out of 60 players had head protection last week) According to the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Indiana University Medical Center, “rugby players should be encouraged to use the limited protective gear that is allowed: wraps, tape, joint sleeves, scrum caps, and facial grease to prevent lacerations. Mouthguards are strongly recommended at any level of play and should be mandated.” Another concern is that of proper coach preparation that stresses the conditioning of players. “Coaches should be experienced and attend clinics or complete video courses on medical emergencies and safe techniques of the game. Injury frequency and severity can be decreased by adequate preseason training and conditioning, proper tackling and falling techniques, strengthening of neck muscles, and allowing only experienced, fit athletes to play in the front row.”

The concern is enough that The United States Rugby Football Foundation on January 9, 2006 granted $14,000 to study safety in high school rugby. An immediate concern to me as a parent is that the Rugby Foundation’s earlier finding was that “5% of the injuries sustained in matches were attributed directly to action that was ruled illegal activity/foul play by a referee or disciplinary committee. While referees are responsible for penalizing foul play on the field, a commitment should be made by coaches, parents, and athletes to eliminate this avoidable injury risk from the game.”

After the number and severity of injuries in the first two games, I was particularly attentive to both teams this week. Frankly, from a spectators perspective, I was not able to see anything that looked unsportsmanlike in this weekend’s match. Both teams played hard although not necessarily well. (we lost but the match was without major injury) Nevertheless, I’ve made my parenting rounds and noted concerns from other parents as well since two of the broken legs were on our team. One player continues to be on pain medicine and is still in the hospital a week after his snapped leg.

There was a time I enjoyed watching my son compete in sports … win or lose … it was fun. Now I find myself more concerned that there will be another serious injury. Thankfully so far for Taylor, he generally just comes home caked in mud (and blood, most from his own nose) and complaining only that he is sore, bruised or was stepped on with those metal cleats (2)! (also I’m going to start covering my car seats in plastic.)

Rugby Cleat

On a side note, in the US, American style football has put an extraordinary focus on safety and improving the gear in protecting players. As a comparison I would be curious as to what kind of thought is giving to high school and college rugby safety by those administrators who oversee safety of student athletes?

Wavecrest Labs and ‘electric wheels’

Posted By on March 25, 2006

Wavecrest Roadster
I’ve been wanted to comment on one of the leading electric motor companies in the US — WaveCrest Laboratories in Rochester Hills, Michigan. Wavecrest is primarily known in the hybrid technology area by producing a high performance electric wheel. I’m not sure if anyone else as called it that, but the their brushless, high output motors are actually located directly at the wheels of a vehicle, be it a car or bike. (see TidalForce high performance bicycles) Locating the electric motor right where its power is used enhances dynamic performance and control of vehicles. They provide a high level of both positive and negative torque at the wheel, on demand. According to WaveCrest, their motors exhibit the highest torque density in the industry, which will eventually enable many user benefits including increased interior volume of vehicles.

The motors are low-speed, high torque and respond quickly to all computer controlled systems like anti-lock braking, traction control and vehicle stability systems. The WaveCrest motors have built in regenerative braking systems that reduces brake wear and extends range in electric operation mode by returned stopping and slowing power back to the power source. Used in combination with a power generation system, there is no need for a ICE in provided direct power to a vehicle as a Wavecrest motor in each wheel can provide 100% of the power needed.

The first place we are most likely to see the Wavecrest motors being used extensively are in bicycle police officers and military troops. The additional power and use of electric motors for rough offroad terrain made them an easy sell. Even I would like a TidalForce bike.
🙂

Pat Goss talks about Wavecrest Hybrids on Motorweek

Two topics: Totally different

Posted By on March 23, 2006

Two points to make today … first the fun tech gadget stuff: I continue to find my Slingbox one of the coolest devices … gadgets … that I own. I’m able to view local Cincinnati (and cable) TV stations when I’m out of town traveling or even at a wifi coffee shop or a PCMCIA EV-DO card. Its great for a quick check on the local news or weather, or just watching a segment or two of a channel not available in my hotel room.

SlingboxIt is an outstanding product that works as advertised … one that received my vote for Engadget of the year in 2005. I suspect Microsoft will soon have there product ready for primetime too and know there are also a few software products doing the same thing. (see ORB Networks)

One weakness of Sling is that there is no ‘record’ feature. I wouldn’t think it should be that difficult considering everything is ported to a computer anyway? Nevertheless, it is not available yet … but the next best thing was to tinker with existing screen and audio capture software in an attempt to beat the system. It works, but required a few extra steps and some re-encoding minutes just for a short clip. (Rumor has it that in April the Windows Mobile cellphones and PDAs will have a mobile SlingPlayer?)

The recorded The O’Reilly Factor clip summaries a problem becoming more prevalent in our country, that of judges out of step with the society they are elected to serve. Oh I know that ‘we elect them and ‘ expecting them to deliver ‘justice,’ but there have been a notable few judges that are guilty of malpractice.

Judge John Connor is on the path of Vermont’s Judge Cashman, and is in Bill O’Reilly’s sight at the moment … rightly so IMHO. His sentencing of an admitted multi-offense child molester to ‘house-arrest’ is outrageous unless I’m really missing some facts. I find myself hoping Andrew Selva is delivered some ‘frontier justice’ if only to act as a deterent for other child molesters. Its unbelieveable that a Judge could possibly see how ‘house arrest’ is acceptable?

Many believe Bill Oreilly is on the right crusade and frankly I don’t understand why more journalists aren’t right there with him. Some politicians are suggesting impeachment proceeding should be quickly enacted, especially when judges seem to have a high disregard for the safety of our children from child preditors. Gov. Taft and Attorney Jim Petro agree and see removing Judge Connor as a way to prevent more pedophiles as well as drunk drivers from quickly returning the street as a risk to society. BTW … Judge Connor, who himself admits to be a recovering alcoholic and has been convicted of driving under the influence also recently released a repeated drunk driver from prison, who ended up killing two people in another … you guessed it … drunk driving incident.

A few Ohio papers see this differently and one that has become the whipping post, The Dayton Daily News. It has been most vocal in response to the initial Oreilly Factor program that reported on Judge Conner and the editor decided to point out the fact that Oreilly’s own sorted legal affair was dismissed rather quietly. Now what that has to do with Judge Connor’s weak sentencing … I don’t know, but it brought Oreilly’s lawyers down on the Dayton Daily News. Oreilly expects an apology and his producer was stated as saying that Oreilly would use his ‘Bully Pulpit’ to come down on the Dayton Daily News. There wasn’t much of an apology from the paper that I noticed … just another opinion piece attempting to clarify their point. Jeff Bruce’s editorial is that Judge John Connor was elected and “the courts system knows how to deal with complaints about lenient sentences in criminal cases. Judges who abuse their discretion are reversed by an appeals court. Judges who are corrupt or neglect their office are suspended or removed by the Supreme Court.”

So instead of seeing their (journalist’s) role as a watch dog over elected officials, they feel it should be handled within the courts, and from their lack of outrage … quietly. I would think the media would see obligation to bring judges like Connor to our attention as they regularly do it with politicians. Where is the concern about those little boys or the next little boy or girl … where is their justice? I’ve not looked up the statistics on child molesters and rapist but the first thought that comes to my mind is “repeat offender.” Do you think house arrest cure Mr. Selva, prevent him from raping and molesting again? Is the deterent that Judge Connor is sentencing Mr. Selva to going to protect our children? Stupid question … huh.

Here’s a link to the Dayton Daily News Editorial in discussion. They have receive nearly a 1000 complains over their position for attacking Bill Oreilly rather than Judge Connor. I think it is safe to say that more Ohioians see the judge’s weak sentencing as the problem and not Bill Oreilly’s pointing it out. Instead of seeking justice for the little boys who were molested by Andrew Selva, (charged with 20 counts of rape) the Dayton Daily News chose to get into a cat fight with Bill Oreilly … and here’s the most recent reasoning from the editor:

Statement from Jeff Bruce

“They say only two things happen when you wrestle a pig: You get muddy and the pig enjoys it. So it’s tempting to just let this pass, but, really, what Bill O’Reilly has said on his Web site is so outrageous and such a distortion that I can’t.

“No crime is more heinous than child molestation, so it is understandable that people would be inflamed by the notion that a pederast evaded the punishment he is due. But when Mr. O’Reilly asks the question on his Web site, “What newspaper in the United States of America is most friendly to child rapists,” he’s egging his readers on without giving them all the facts.

“As readers of the Dayton Daily News know, this newspaper is not soft on child molesters. Just the opposite.

“Here’s what’s really happening: Mr. O’Reilly is upset with the newspaper because in an editorial we referred to his own recent legal history in which he was accused of sexual harassment. His producer threatened that unless we published an apology they would resort to their “bully pulpit.” That’s what they’ve done. This isn’t about being “soft” on child molesters. It’s about Bill O’Reilly getting even.

“We never defended Judge Connor’s decision to sentence a child molester to a year of house arrest and five years probation. What we said is that if the judge deserves to be removed from office then due process should be followed — the same sort of due process that Bill O’Reilly relied upon when he was sued and, ultimately, settled out of court.

“The editorial also noted that the prosecutor in the case, while disappointed with the judge’s sentence, was afraid his evidence was so weak that he might have lost the case entirely if it had gone to trial. He agreed to settle the case.

“In America we have a system of checks and balances that includes the independence of the judiciary. There are rules in place to remove bad judges. Our editorial simply said we should follow those rules, not allow ourselves to rush to judgment because of a television commentator’s opinions.

“That’s not an endorsement of Judge Connor or his decision. The fact that a child molester got off so lightly is disgusting. If I would fault our editorial for anything it is that we could have said that and said it firmly.

“But that’s not why O’Reilly asked his readers to write the newspaper. His producer, in a conversation with me, acknowledged the logic of our editorial’s argument. But they felt dragging O’Reilly’s own legal problems into the article was gratuitous. While I expected O’Reilly to take a shot at us, I was shocked that he would suggest that this newspaper “has sympathy for child rapists.” That is a deliberate distortion of what we said and what we stand for, and nothing could be further from the truth.

“So you know, on the same page that we published our editorial, we also printed a package of opposing views, including those from O’Reilly himself. We made every effort to be fair and balanced in our presentation of this issue. It is a pity that sense of fairness was not reciprocated.”

Teenagers, Cell Phones and Smoking

Posted By on March 22, 2006

Finally a big positive out of the ‘phone text messaging’ craze. Most everyone exposed to teenagers around the world have seen them with their heads down clicking their cell phones … knowing they were communicating with another like soul somewhere in the ‘cellphone-isphere.’ A study pick up and published by the British Medical Journal indicates a correlation between a sharp rise in mobile phone ownership among teenagers and a decline in teen smoking. According to an article (Sydney Morning Herald) this downward trend has even “pre-dated a major government anti-smoking campaign.”

My conjecture is that teens often pick up the smoking habit to fulfill a social function and to keep their hands busy. Cellphones seem to do both: they can communicate while fidgeting with the keys and working their fingers. A teenage girl states, “When you are sitting by yourself, say on the bus … just get your phone out and play a game or something.” Another angle might be the demand for their limited supply of dollars, when it comes to clothes, phones, entertainment … perhaps tobacco is losing out? In Japan where cell phone ownership is nearly 100%, the health officials seem to corroborate this theory as they have noticed teen smoking rates plummet. “There was a high chance phone bills were being weighed up against the money they spent on cigarettes,” said Kenji Hayashi, the head of research at the Health, Labour and Welfare Ministry.

So before you gripe about kids and cellphones, consider they might be healthier long term solution to smoking. (click for a best selling book by Michael Mannion: “How to Help Your Teenager Stop Smoking“)

VW GTI commercials – Speedy Gonzales moons the cats

Posted By on March 21, 2006

Speedy GonzalezVolkswagen is one of those companies that seems to get a tad ‘edgy’ in it advertising campaigns. From the “Vee-Dub” and “German Engineering, ya-man” ads mentioned a couple weeks ago, to the latest Hispanic targeting ads featuring the cartoon mouse ‘Speedy Gonzalez.’ I posted a comment a week or so ago on the CinciTDI group list, but only today have I had an opportunity to see any actual commercials designed to target Hispanics with Volkswagen’s new GTI Golf. One of them, that I’ll include below, has our little Speedy Gonzalez mouse ‘mooning’ a bunch of cats. If that’s not bold enough, then check out the hub-bub some Spanish translation is having with the some VW GTI billboards in Miami, New York and Los Angeles. (they have removed the billboards due to complaints)

It seems, according to the Houston Chronicle that certain words didn’t translate from English to Spanish as VW advertising executives had planned. “The ad for the new GTI 2006 had a photo of the sports car accompanied by the words “Turbo-Cojones.” Cojones, which means testicles in Spanish, has become a casually used term for boldness or guts in English but has never lost its more vulgar connotations in its native language.”

For a little more detail, check out the posts on Carbuyersnotebook and Autoblog.

NPR’s CarTalk and Biodiesel

Posted By on March 20, 2006

CarTalk and guest - Tom, Ray and JayTom and Ray Magliozzi host a radio program (and newspaper column) called CarTalk and it has been an entertainment mainstay for National Public Radio listeners for many years. Last month they inflamed a few biodiesel nuts (including myself) by making an incorrect comment regarding biodiesel by assuming it was the same thing as virgin or waste ‘unprocessed’ vegetable oil. (listen to the original ‘BOGUS’ comments: MP3 audio clip)

Needless to say a few of us made comments on their forum and by email, eventually receiving a comment first in email from their producer, second on their forum (attached below), and third on their radio program this past weekend. (listen to an even shorter MP3 correction) Nice work to all who pushed for a correction!

We gave out some incorrect info about biodiesel a few weeks ago on the show.

During a call with Ben from Oregon, we were asked about using biodiesel or vegetable oil in a diesel engine. We said they would both require an engine modification. We were wrong. And we’d like to thank the 600 biodiesel Nazis who wrote to us (14 times each) to scold and correct us. Thanks for having our backs, guys!

While using vegetable oil in a diesel engine WOULD require a prior modification, biodiesel fuel requires NO engine modification, and can be dumped directly into the diesel engine of your choice.

What, exactly, IS biodiesel fuel, anyway? It’s fuel that’s made from fat or plant oils, which have been processed through something called, “transesterification,” and removes the glycerin that cruds up your fuel lines. In case you were wondering.

So, biodiesel = no modification required. KFC cooking vats = modification required.

Got it?

We’ve posted updated information right here on our web site, in our eco area.

You can also read a plethora of posts on the topic, right in here in the (Boy, did those morons blow it!) Second Opinion bulletin board.

Sorry for the confusion and thanks to everyone who wrote to correct us.

Yours in fueling facts,

Tom and Ray

Audi R10 TDI: diesel #1 at Sebring

Posted By on March 19, 2006

Audi R10 TDI
Not only does diesel reign supreme in efficiency when hauling loads down American highways and rails, but now looks to be able to dominate on American racetracks as well. (see “Backstretch Motorsports“)

The #02 Audi’s R10 TDI diesel ‘torqued’ to a top finish and a new track record yesterday at Sebring in Florida after the #01 Audi had to be retired after about 4 hours due to overheating. Tom Kristenssen, Allan NcNish and Rinaldo Capello won the Mobil 1 Twelve hour American LeMans style race by three laps besting teams from Intersport Racing, Aston Martin Racing, Corvette Racing and Penske Racing even after starting the race from 34th position.

This is reportedly the first time an oil-burner has claimed victory in a major American auto race. (see previous post on the Audi R10)

Engadget’s Treo 650 Birthday Cake

Posted By on March 18, 2006

Treo 650 Cake
I’m an Engadget fan and a Treo cell phone admirer, but when Kirk Sutherland submitted his entry for his working Birthday Cake Treo 650 there was little competition. Nice job Kirk!

This past month the ‘gadget’ reporting website Engadget decided to give away presents for their 2nd birthday. Toward the end of the daily giveaways, they decided on a grand prize for the best ‘gadget’ oriented birthday cake. There were several terrific entries, but Kirk’s “took the cake,” don’t you agree?

Engadget’s Winning Birthday Cake

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog