1/18/2006

CES: Journey to the Wild Divine

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

I talked about the Journey to the Wild Divine software almost a year ago:

Back then, it was just some software at an expensive price, but I was able to try it out at CES. The Intel booth had a couple of computers running this software, so I was able to spend a few minutes with it.

Biometric SensorsThis software includes sensors that attach to your fingers. You control the environment in the “game” with the biometric sensors. You also interact with the software using your mouse. There is an introduction with the “gardener” of the area that introduces the concepts to you and tells you what you’re supposed to do at each level. She spoke very calmly and I found her voice to be as soothing as the new age music playing in the background.

The Gardener

The first level consisted of a pinwheel that was supposed to rotate when I took a deep breath. It would move, I would get excited about it moving and it would stop. The only way I could consistently make it move was if I talked to Mike about it. I guess I’m calmest when talking. How very apt.

Make the Pinwheel Turn

The noisy Las Vegas Convention Center is the worst place on the planet to test meditation software. The few people who were willing to try the Journey to the Wild Divine were as equally unable to make the pinwheel move as I was.

Ironically, I really liked the “game.” The music in the background had a New Age feel and was relaxing. The “gardener” had a calm voice and was very clear about the objectives of the level. I don’t know if it’s worth the hefty price tag ($159.95). It depends on how much you are unable to relax on your own. For me, struggling with normal meditation felt about the same as struggling with the biofeedback. Since meditation is free, I’d have to choose that one.

Additionally, if you would like to listen to the music that is featured on the game, they sell the Wild Divine Soundtrack. You could purchase that and meditate with it for only fifteen bucks.

Click here for the Journey to the Wild Divine website:

CES: NavMan

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

NavMan

NavMan FitnessGPS systems were featured heavily at CES, but only a few of the booths focused on the sports aspects of the tool. Most of the GPS systems focused on the automotive features, but NavMan had a whole section about fitness.

This unit is called the NavMan R300. It measures your speed distance and pace. It would work while running or on your bicycle. Unfortunately, there was no one at the booth to answer our questions about the product, so I have no idea about its performance in “urban canyons” and in heavy tree foliage.NavMan Close Up

It appears to be a little bulky on your arm, but no more so than an iPod Mini. Of course, it doesn’t play music, it just measures your progress. They didn’t have any units out that I could try on to see how they feel. All their products were behind glass, so I couldn’t even play with them to see if they were easy to use.

Without being able to get a close up view of them, I’m reluctant to recommend them. As always, you can track your course using the Google Pedometer, so that might be the best case scenario until something more portable comes along.

Click here to see the NavMan website:

1/17/2006

CES: Tacx Videos for Your Bike Trainer

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

The road to Pla-d'Adet in the PyreneesTacx, the maker of the virtual reality bike trainers, has released three DVDs that you can watch while you ride your bike on a normal bike trainer.

  • Alpine Classic Marmotte – France
  • Mallorca Tour – Spain
  • Lombardy Tour – Italy

Each of these videos are $29.90, which is much cheaper than the $800 price tag for the virtual reality trainer for your computer. These DVDs might be a great compromise between true virtual reality and simulated reality.

Click Here for the Tacx Video Website:

CES: TacX and Intel

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Playing with the Tacx System

Mike and I were talking about people training for the Tour de France a few months ago. He actually suggested that it would be so cool if someone filmed video of roads and turned them into a game where you could ride your bike on famous bike courses. Tacx beat us to it and they have executed it well.

We talked about the Tacx VR bike trainers back in June, but seeing it in person really sells this product.

Choose Your Course

You can choose your ride from a large selection of bike race courses. The screen shows you the elevation that you will achieve (it will increase the resistance on your bike when the elevation gets steeper). I chose a course in the Alps that is on the Tour de France.

Tacx Screen Shot

Once you start riding on your course, you see a real video of the road that you would be riding on. You see cars pass you and the scenery is perfect. I was riding on a steep incline, so it was very difficult for me and got my heart rate far higher than it needed to be to get into the high intensity range.

Tacx Ride Up The Alps

I only lasted 3/4 of a mile at that intensity. There are easier courses, of course, but this gave me an idea of what it must be like for those cyclists to take on the mountains in Europe. The equipment seems well made. The bike trainer looks like it’s relatively easy to attach to your bicycle, even though it doesn’t have a quick release like my CyclOps trainer has.

Tacx Bike Trainer

I was really impressed with the Tacx employee demonstrating the product and I enjoyed playing with the software. They also make a trainer that includes the steering in the game, which is intriguing. I didn’t try that one out, but I watched another conventioneer try it. Wipe Out!She dropped her player on his head. He just got back up on the bike and kept cycling. That’s the reason virtual reality is better than actual reality. A real wipe out on the trail involves picking gravel out of my bloody skin and hoping I don’t have a concussion.

Click Here to see the Tacx Website:

1/16/2006

PostSecret: I Always Felt Too Fat

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

PostSecret: I Always Felt Too Fat

This postcard from PostSecret rang a bell for me. My friend had a trampoline. The two of us would jump on it all summer long. At night, we would roll our sleeping bags on it and sleep outside. We lived on that trampoline.

Unless there were guys over at her house…

My friend was perfectly willing to jump and flip on the trampoline when guys were there, but I would just stay on the sidelines and hang out. She preferred the spotlight and I willingly gave it up. She was much more acrobatic than I was, so her jumping was more impressive than mine could have been.

I always felt that too much of me would jiggle if I jumped on the trampoline in front of the guys. I guess I wasn’t comfortable enough with my jiggly parts. I don’t even know if I am now. I wore a jogging bra all day at CES because I knew I was going to be trying out games where I might jiggle too much. It was uncomfortable and chaffed, but somehow that was better than jiggling too much when I tried out all the equipment.


PostSecret‘s beneficiary is the National Hopeline Network. It is a 24-hour hotline (1 (800) SUICIDE) for anyone who is thinking about suicide or knows someone who is considering it.

PostSecret: How I Look When I’m Naked

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

PostSecret: How I Look When I

I turned my eyes away from this postcard from PostSecret. I didn’t even want to think about this one. No matter how far I’ve come lately, I haven’t been able to like how I look naked. Sometimes, I can catch a glimpse of enjoying my appearance when I’m wearing clothing that I feel are flattering, but I have never looked at myself naked and felt proud.

When will that come for me?


PostSecret‘s beneficiary is the National Hopeline Network. It is a 24-hour hotline (1 (800) SUICIDE) for anyone who is thinking about suicide or knows someone who is considering it.

1/15/2006

Reebok Speed Pac

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Reebok Speed Pac

I saw these dumbells at Target the other day. I’ve seen similar things at the NordicTrack store that had more weight and cost more, but these ones seemed interesting. Each dumbell can weigh between 2.5 and 12.5 pounds, depending on the weights that are added. Instead of adding plates and attaching a holder, they are all in one. At $59.99, however, they aren’t that great of a price.

I found the knob that you move to change the weight of the dumbell to be difficult to budge and one of the units at the store was damaged, so this isn’t something that I would recommend purchasing. Even more disturbing, I can find no evidence of their existence at Amazon.com or at the Reebok Store. It looks like Target got the last of them just in time for the New Year’s Resolutioners, hoping to get rid of them quickly.

1/14/2006

Diet Book Review: The Raw Food Detox Diet

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

View book details at AmazonThe next book that the library sent me was The Raw Food Detox Diet : The Five-Step Plan for Vibrant Health and Maximum Weight Loss by Natalia Rose. Unlike The Raw Truth, this book had far more to print than just recipes. The groups of recipes are only about one-third of the book, with the rest of the book talking about why the Raw Food Detox Diet will make you lose weight.

The premise of this book is that cooked food (along with animal products and artificial chemicals) create waste in your body. This waste (or garbage or toxins) collects in your body, causing you to be overweight. The author tosses out the very existence of fat cells and wants you to believe that you’re fat because you’re constipated.

“It’s much more common to find a body riddled with cells carrying matter that’s not easily eliminated. This is the fundamental cause of our physical and, some would argue, mental ills. Clean, healthy cells maintain homeostasis (the healthy state of balance in the body), which keeps us feeling well.”

“Waste matter in the body is the fundamental source of the excess weight in your body. Get the waste out and you get the weight off.”

Not only are you constipated, you won’t be able to get unblocked without “waste elimination specialists” such as colonics, enemas, massage therapy and yoga positions. Eating healthy isn’t enough to get the waste out of your body. You need to flush it out with an enema.

It took me a while to find a quote in this book that I actually agreed with, but I finally did. When talking about vitamins, Natalia had this to say,

“If you’re eating of nature’s bounty every day, you don’t need to supplement your diet with pills.”

That is true. When you eat a healthy diet, you don’t need to take vitamin or calcium pills. Raw fruit and vegetables along with a myriad of other foods constitute a healthy diet. When you eat a healthy diet, you also don’t need enemas or colonics. Fiber and healthy oils in the right quantities will eliminate any “waste” you many have in your body.

Just like The Raw Truth, this book has absolutely no medical proof backing up their claims about food combinations, enzymes or colonics. We are just supposed to take the author’s word for it. Without the scientific studies to back up these ideas, I have to classify this book in the “quack” category.

1/13/2006

Durrant’s Crown Bakery

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

Durrant's Crown Bakery in Salt Lake City, UtahOf all the nasty tricks that can happen to someone who is trying to eat healthy, the worst is living near Durrant’s Crown Bakery. Whenever Mike and I walk within four blocks of their building, we can smell what they are baking. Most of the time, the air smells thick with the fragrance of donuts. Just last week, it smelled like white powdered donuts with raspberry filling. The smell was that distinct. Our mouths watered, but we could not eat the donuts.

It wasn’t worries about our health that kept us from partaking of the mouth-watering donuts that we could smell from across the street. In fact, a donut treat every now and again can help stave off the feeling of deprivation when it is planned for. No, the reason we can’t eat the donuts is far more cruel. It is the fact that we can’t buy them. Durrant’s Crown Bakery sells their treats to gas stations and convenience stores in the area. We have walked up to the door of the building many times, but there is no way to buy their treats directly from the source. We have to wait until they are stale and tasteless in the convenience store.

I honestly believe that if I could eat their pastries fresh from their bakery, they would be delicious, but every time I have purchased a Durrant’s Crown Bakery treat from a gas station, I’ve thrown it away, half-eaten. By the time they get to the store, they are stale. The half-life of utterly delicious pastries is something on the order of six hours. By the time their wares are packaged and delivered, they are about as tasty as the cellophane they come in.

Durrant’s Crown Bakery is truly the most nasty trick played on a healthy eater in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Idaho Spud

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

This article on Happy News makes me nostalgic about food and candy.

My grandma used to love the Idaho Spud candy bars. I have no idea if these are available outside the western states surrounding Idaho, but they taste very good. The exterior is a waxy, cheap chocolate with coconut. The insides of the candy bar taste like a combination of maple and marshmallow. It almost melts the moment it hits your tongue. My grandma used to love these candy bars. They were a special treat and she wouldn’t share.

My memories of her eating these candy bars is in complete conflict with her personality. She was obsessed with dieting. She was obsessed with making us be on a diet. There was a time when I had to share the last boiled potato with my grandma. I was so hungry that it was the most delicious potato I’ve ever tasted in my life. How can I equate that grandma that shared the potato with me and the one that obsessed over Idaho Spud?

It’s not like she was bingeing on the candy bars. They are difficult candies to find in Montana. Yet, she was all about denial. She wasn’t at a healthy weight when we were up in Montana, and she never lost weight while she was up there. Was she quietly bingeing in the middle of the night when we couldn’t see her? I learned my bingeing behaviors from my dad (her son). Did he learn this behavior from her or because of her?

Eating behavior is such an “in the closet” thing. There is so much about my grandma and my father that I just don’t know and I have no desire to ask about it. She died years ago and I rarely speak to my dad, so I guess it will all just stay in the closet. It’s such a private thing that I can’t even talk to my dad about it.

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