Categories
Books Science

Western Diet most unhealthy

Michael Pollan writes in his book, In Defense of Food that “we shouldn’t allow ourselves to be intimidated by studies of new reports or especially food labeling. Humans can thrive on all sorts of diets. Some live healthy lives on nothing but cattle or seafood. In fact, he says, there’s only one diet that has consistently proved hazardous to our health.”

It’s actually, you know, people who have done the sort of ethnographic research around food have found this astonishing array of different traditional diets on which people have been extremely healthy. But there is one diet that it appears that we are poorly adapted to, and that is what we call the western diet.

And this diet makes people fat. It makes them diabetic. It gives them heart disease. It gives them an assortment of cancers. It’s just very toxic to our bodies.

Some of his rules for eating healthy are:

…don’t eat anything that doesn’t rot, don’t eat anything your grandmother wouldn’t recognize, don’t eat anything that has an unfamiliar, unpronounceable name, don’t eat anything with high fructose corn syrup, don’t eat food that features health claims on their labels.

The following interview on the radio show with a Nutrition Expert helps reinforce Pollan’s claims.

Categories
History Humanities

Skid Row origins

The term “skid row” takes its name from the run-down saloons and boarding houses near the skid roads of western logging camps.

Source – Modern Marvels Episode: Logging Tech

A skid road was a corduroy road made of logs, used to skid or drag felled trees through the woods or bog to the saw mill.

Categories
History Technology

62 mile log flume

The longest log flume ever built extended over 62 miles running in the high elevations of the Sierra Nevada Mountain range of California. Built by the Kings River Lumber Company in 1890 to harvest the giant redwoods. Regrettably,

…the operation felled over 8,000 giant redwood trees, all over 2,000 years old. Of those trees felled, only 23% made it to the mill. The sheer weight of the giant trees caused them to shatter into millions of unusable pieces while the portions that were too large were blasted with black powder, but this method also proved unsatisfactory.

link iconSanger Depot Museum

Categories
Media Technology

New technology – Highly focused sound

In New York City a billboard emits highly focused sound that resonates within the skulls of passersby.

The Audiohiliac

Categories
Entertainment History Humanities Science Technology

Subliminal Advertising was a hoax

According to Mark Crispin Miller, a professor of media ecology at New York University, the original revelation of subliminal advertising effects was a hoax.

In 1957, an enterprising marketing researcher named James Vicary announced to a breathless world that he had conducted an experiment in a movie theater in Fort Lee, New Jersey during screenings of the William Holden picture, Picnic. Vicary claimed that what he had done was to flash subliminal inducements during the screening of the film telling people to drink Coca Cola or to eat popcorn. His claim was that those subliminal flashes had actually increased sales of those items at the concession stand in the theater by some 38 percent.

This announcement took the country by [LAUGHING] storm. People basically freaked out over it. The networks swore they would never engage in practices like this. The New York State Senate passed a law against this kind of thing. Aldous Huxley appeared on The Mike Wallace Show [LAUGHS] and referred to it as something far worse than anything he’d imagined in Brave New World. It was quite a to do.

And the irony is that it turned out that Vicary had made the whole thing up.

Categories
Books History

The high cost of early adoption

In James Tobin’s book To Conquer the Air, I was amazed to learn that the Wright Brothers paid a premium for their first bicycles, even in today’s money, it sounds like a lot for a bike!

In the Wright family, Orville was infected first, in the summer of 1892, when he bought a fine new Columbia for $160, a very substantial sum at the time when relatively few workers earned more thatn $500 per year. He soon entered races and did well. Will bought his own model-used, for $80- several weeks later.

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Categories
Science

The Brain uses 20% of body’s energy

“Although the brain accounts for less than 2% of a person’s weight, it consumes 20% of the body’s energy.”

Drubach, Daniel. The Brain Explained. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 2000.
as quoted here: http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2001/JacquelineLing.shtml

Categories
Books Science

34 words for do-do

I caught a very interesting lecture by Stephen Pinker author of The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature on CSPAN this weekend. Pinker discussed some of the interesting or in his words crazy aspects of our language. Such as why we use terms like underground and underwater when we mean surrounded by ground or water. He also delved into his theories as to why we use profanity. He says that when we use profanity, it triggers a unique part of our brain. And his research determined there are 34 words in the english language for feces.

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Categories
Media Science Technology

If only I had time

These guys make some incredible projects, if only I had time to try some of them! But it’s not just all electronics and gadgets they also do crazy stuff like zombie makeup, vampire teeth and origami. I just may have to make some time to try the foxhole radio project.

link iconhttp://www.makezine.com/blog/archive/make_podcast/

Categories
Art Internet Media

T-shirts designed by you

T-shirt factory lets you design the shirt. Designs are voted on by site visitors to determine which ones are chosen to be printed. If only I had time!

link iconhttp://www.threadless.com/