Category: News

  • Depression in Children

    Depression is not only observed in adults. Children and adolescents could get depressed as well. It’s known that 5% of the children, 5-10% of the adolescents are exposed to depression.

    Depression is defined as a disease that prevents the child or the adolescent from establishing various functions whereas depression feelings remains stable.

    The risk of getting depressed is higher in children under stress, going through loss, having disorder of attention, comprehension, behaviour or anxiety. Family related tendency is important in depression progress as well.

    SYMPTOMS

    The symptoms of children and adolescents getting depressed may be different from those of adults. It’s recommended that you take an expert’s advice if there exists one or more of the depression symptoms in your children for a long time.

    · Frequently crying and being sorry

    · Hopelessness

    · Reducing attention in activities or getting no pleasure from activities that were done before with pleasure

    · Constant boredom, lack of energy

    · Social isolation, lack of communication

    · Lack of self- respect and feeling of guilt

    · Oversensation in failure or rejection issues

    · Increase in anger, hostility, resentment

    · Having problems in relationships

    · Frequent physical complaints like headache, stomachache

    · Decrease in success in school and attendance at school

    · Lack of concentration

    · Great changes in habits like sleeping and eating

    · Claims or attempts to run away from home

    · Expressions or thoughts of suicide or hurting one’s self

    A child who used to play with friends may come to spend time alone and have interest in nothing at all. The things once used to enjoy one’s self may become less interesting or have no meaning at all for a child in depression. They may say that they’re mean, not loved and blame themselves frequently. With self- respect, they may be lack of self- confidence and be conservative. Children and adolescents in depression may want to die or mention suicide. The risk of suicide increases in children and adolescents in depression. They may apply to smoking, alcohol or drugs to make themselves feel fine.

    Children and adolescents causing troubles at home or school may be going through depression. For the reason the little children would not seem sorry all the time, parents and teachers may not understand that the troublesome behaviours are symptoms of depression. Hyper-activity, harshness, frequent crying may be symptoms of depression in little children. When asked directly, some children may express that they are unhappy or sorry. In little children and girls in adolescence, the symptoms of depression are seen as mostly physical complaints like stomachache or headache. Physical symptoms are frequently seen in children who are lack of self- confidence about school, insufficience in establishing relationships and having problems in getting independant from parents. Symptoms like headache or stomachache may get condensed while going to school in the morning.

    EARLY DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT IS IMPORTANT

    Early diagnosis and treatment is quite important in children going through depression. Depression is a real disease that really requires professional help. A developed treatment usually involves application of therapy both to the person and the family. For example, cognitive behaviour therapy and personal psychotherapy especially are important as personal therapy methods in depression treatment in children.

    Treatment may require usage of antidepressing medication. Recently produced new antidepressing medications could be used with little children in safety and do not have properties like addictivity. For help, it’s essential to apply to a expert in children and adolescents’ mental health to diagnose and treat the depression in children and adolescents.

    Related posts:

    1. Overcome Depression with 6 Methods
    2. Dysthymic Disorder (Dysthymia)
    3. What Are The Symptoms of Depression? (Clinical Depression-Major Depression)
  • ayuda a haiti

    bueno no quiero ser portador de malas noticias ya todo sabemos lo que paso en haiti y por lo cual abri este tema es para ver si alguno de uds sabe algo de la ayuda que se brindara a ese pais desde costa rica gracias
  • Valleywag’s $100,000 Bounty For Apple Tablet Leaks May Face Legal Repercussions

    Tired of sifting through the mountains of rumors leading up to the (still unconfirmed) debut of the Apple Tablet on January 27? Valleywag, the Silicon Valley-focused Gawker blog, has just announced a bounty for anyone who turns over legitimate photos and/or video of the tablet in action. The rewards range from $10k to $100k depending on the type of media submitted: $10,000 for pictures, $20,000 for video, $50,000 for a photo or video with Steve Jobs holding a Tablet, and $100,000 to “let [Valleywag] play with one for an hour”.

    It’s certainly a tempting offer (at least, more tempting than submitting leaked photos and getting zilch in return), but Valleywag may be on the wrong side of the law. We spoke to a lawyer about the legality of the bounty, who says that Apple could have a claim against Gawker/Valleywag for inducing breach of contract, since anyone who has their hands on the tablet is certainly under a nondisclosure agreement. This could result in tort damages, with potential for punitive damages.

    Gawker is no stranger to such bounties — they previously offered a $1,000 reward for photos of Nikki Finke, but there’s a difference between scandalous tabloid photos and breaching an NDA. That said, it’s unlikely Gawker’s Nick Denton would launch the promotion without investigating the potential legal consequences.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors


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  • Get Satisfaction Raises $2.3 Million In Ongoing Funding Round

    Startup Get Satisfaction has raised $2.3 million in funding according to an SEC filing. It appears that the startup is looking to raise a total of $3.5 million in the round. The company previously raised $2.5 million in funding.

    Get Satisfaction makes a network of customer support forums where customers can post their own questions, ideas, problems, or conversations about a product. Companies can also claim their board and put their own employees on to moderate the boards. Zappos, Mint.com and Nike have all created customer support communities on the site. Currently there are over 25,000 communities that have been created on the Get Satisfaction platform.

    The startup has also incorporated social media into its platform, incorporating Twitter into forums. A year ago, the startuo brought on a new CEO, Wendy Lea, to help the company expand its forums to a greater audience. And it looks like Lea is doing her job well; the startup was just invited to the White House to discuss government customer service practices.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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  • Gmail Takes the Lead on Email Security

    Last night, Google announced that Gmail sessions will now be fully encrypted with HTTPS by default. This is excellent news — EFF congratulates Google for taking this significant step to safeguard their users’ privacy and security.

    Previously, it was possible to encrypt your access to Gmail, but it required altering the default configuration. Now every Gmail user will get the benefits of encryption without needing to know that they need it.

    With this development, Google has taken a clear two-step lead over its competition: other major hubs for personal communication such as Facebook, Yahoo! mail, Hotmail, and LiveJournal do not even make the use of HTTPS possible, let alone the default. A handful of smaller, specialist webmail providers do offer HTTPS, but Google is alone in bringing basic email security to the mainstream Web.

    Frankly, it’s time for Facebook, Yahoo!, Microsoft, and company to raise their game. If you are using those email services, then anyone using the same local network as you can read your communications or break into your account. And that’s just not good enough.

    P.S.: A great next step for Google would be to implement HTTPS for Google Search. Until that happens, the only way to get private, encrypted searches is by using a an HTTPS search engine like Ixquick or a third-party proxy to Google like ssl.scroogle.org, which requires users to trust the proxy operator. We understand that there are some latency costs to delivering search over HTTPS, and while new standards are needed to solve that problem, there’s no reason not to offer optional search encryption in the mean time.

  • Facebook Gets Pushy About Its Automatic Friend Finder

    Screen shot 2010-01-13 at 11.07.10 AM

    Have enough friends on Facebook? They don’t think so. Today, Facebook has started pushing its Friend Finder tool at the top of the main News Feed when you log in to the service.

    The feature, which it technically calls the “automatic Friend Finder” suggests you use it by showing you three friends you know that have already used the tool to find new friends too. After that, it has a link to the main Friend Finder tool, which has existed for a while, allowing you to find Facebook friends via email, search, IM, or its own suggestions. Facebook has long included friend recommendations in the Suggestions area of its main page, but never has it been so front and center.

    The reason behind the push should be obvious: the more friends you’re connected to on the service, the more likely you are to keep using it over and over and over again. Thankfully, as you might imagine, you can close this new pop-up box to stop it from showing up again. The reaction thus far on Twitter seems to be positive to the tool.

    Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


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  • Get Paid for Getting in Shape

    That’s very, very close to the most sensationalistic title I’ve written in a long time… but it’s also one of the most accurate titles I’ve written.

    My friend at Weight Loss Journal alerted me to this Time article, which tells the story of Healthy Wage, a website that will pay you to lose weight. Go read the article… I’ll wait. Back? Awesome!

    You may note that this service is fairly similar to the article I wrote about StickK nearly two years. That was my impression 30 seconds after Weight Loss Journal sent me the link. However, I’m glad that I continued to read the article. Time makes the great point that people can subvert StickK very, very easily. While StickK provides a path to accountability, it does not enforce it.

    Healthy Wage enforces it. That’s half of the reason it’s a great idea. When I read that you have to call your physician to verify your weight it was a moment of clarity for me. Long ago I had the idea of a weight loss system where you report your progress in some kind of Internet forum. The Biggest Loser has something like that. However, the missing piece of the equation for me was that I couldn’t figure out the accountability.

    The other half of the idea is that there is a signficant reward. You can win $100 by just losing the weight… or you can risk $300 to win $1000. That’s not exactly “chump change” for doing something that will likely save you much, much more in the long run.

    If you are interested, act quickly. You need to sign up by January 20th.

    Related posts:

    1. StickK to Your Goals Have you ever made a goal and resolution only to…
    2. Ask the Readers: What’s Your Take on Paid Book Reviews? I got a request a couple of weeks ago from…
    3. Is There a Cure for the Economy? The Spending and Saving Catch-22 If you read personal finance blogs or magazines you’ll find…
    4. End of Your Rope? Phases 2 and 3 Yesterday I wrote about some emergency measures you should consider…
    5. My Friend is Brainwashed by Get Rich Quick Schemes, Help! I got a very interesting e-mail this morning… almost 1800…


  • What Can I Do With Fennel Tops and Fronds? Good Questions

    2010_01_13-Fennel.jpgQ: I recently used fresh fennel in a recipe for the first time. It was spectacular!

    However, the recipe called for two bulbs and a tablespoon of the fronds. Is there a recommended method for preserving the remaining fronds and stalks for use in other recipes? Do I dry them and, if so, how does that alter their potency?

    Sent by Janice

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  • FG Abandons Planned 52-Storey Skyscaper in Abuja

    FG Abandons Planned 52-Storey Skyscaper in Abuja

    Quote:

    In 2006, the then minister of Culture and Tourism, Mr. Frank Ogbuewu disclosed that the Federal Government had concluded plans to build a 52-storey building at the heart of the nation’s cultural village in Garki, Abuja.

    The minister further explained that the edifice when completed would be used among other things as a cultural heritage, tourist centre, business and entertainment focal point.

    Further findings at the ministry headquarters revealed that the project may not have been captured in any year’s budget in the first instance till date. Many of the staff of the ministry who responded to Daily Champion’s enquires on the proposed heritage high-rise claimed little or no knowledge of the project.

    The abandoned project, it would be recalled was conceived by the ministry and considered by the Federal Executive Council in 2006, barely two years after the conception and resumption of construction activities on the recently delivered Burj Khalifa skyscrapers in Dubai……………………………


    BLA BLA BLA BLA THE REST OF THE ARTICLE IS ABOUT DUBAI ETC

    link

    :uh::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::uh:

  • RCA Airnergy promises usable power generated from Wi-Fi signals. Possible?

    DSC_3385

    I’m a simple man. I understand certain things. How ambient Wi-Fi signals could be converted into enough energy to charge a BlackBerry is something I do NOT understand. However, RCA not only showed off the technology at CES but the device will apparently be available by the summer and it’ll only cost $40.

    OhGizmo! tells us the following:

    The Airnergy Charger is amazing.

    This little box has, inside it, some kind of circuitry that harvests WiFi energy out of the air and converts it into electricity. This has been done before, but the Airnergy is able to harvest electricity with a high enough efficiency to make it practically useful: on the CES floor, they were able to charge a BlackBerry from 30% to full in about 90 minutes, using nothing but ambient WiFi signals as a power source.

    So here’s where things get convoluted. Instead of just writing it off as crazy vaporware, you can’t help but consider the following:

    1. It’s got a brand name that people have heard of and they’ve put a date and a price on it already. Granted, RCA isn’t so much of a company nowadays. It’s more of a purchasable brand, but you’d hope they wouldn’t license the name out to just anyone.

    2. The technology apparently exists (according to the nerds over on Slashdot), yet it hasn’t been powerful enough to generate the juice to charge anything worthwhile. In this instance, it charged a BlackBerry “from 30% to full in about 90 minutes.”

    If it does indeed work, imagine future applications of this technology. Your cell phone battery would eventually have it all built in and it’d recharge itself all day – even at just a trickle – whenever you were within range of Wi-Fi signals. For many of us, that’s most of the day.

    I can’t honestly say if it’s bogus or not. Most of the sentiment from the commenters on the various blogs who have written about this thing has been more on the negative side. I contacted Mr. Wizard for his take but, alas, he passed away in 2007.

    Any geniuses out there care to weigh in?

    RCA Airnergy Charger Harvests Electricity From WiFi Signals [OhGizmo!]


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  • Bertin Louis

    Bertin Louis
    Lecturer
    Africana Studies

    Expertise:

    Bertin Louis Jr. can discuss the social and economic impacts of the 2010 earthquake and 2008 hurricanes that struck Haiti, and he can place those natural disasters within their short-term and long-term historical contexts.

    A cultural anthropologist, Louis’ research interests include cultural identity, the African diaspora, gender, globalization, Haitian Protestantism, transnationalism and diversity in higher education. He has lectured on these topics in Europe, the Caribbean, Southern Africa and the United States.

    In 2007, he became an Inaugural Member of the Washington University Chapter of the Bouchet Graduate Honor Society at Yale University . Some of his other most recent awards are a Fulbright Award from the International Institute of Education, the National Dean’s List Award, a Lambda Alpha Collegiate Honor Society for Anthropology Award , and the Washington University International and Area Studies Pre-Dissertation Research Grant.

    Expertise Categories: Cultural Identity | Haiti | African Diaspora

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-2139
    Web: http://web.utk.edu/~africana/people/louis.htm

  • The Onion’s CES Highlights

    computer-speakers-radio-shack

    The Onion, always good for a quick larf, just posted a list of great new devices launched at CES including but not limited to:

    Radioshack—Big Sack of Adapters: The right one is probably in there somewhere

    Bose—Noise-Postponing Headphones: Using Bose’s patented SoundDelay technology, these headphones store ambient distractions for up to six hours before unleashing them all at once against the wearer’s eardrums.

    iTunes—”Taylor Swift Breathes”: Using nanotechnology, this new MP3 enables you to feel Taylor Swift’s hot breath on your neck as she sings

    Interestingly, they didn’t mention the WristOffice which definitely gets our vote for best product of CES. You can read the Onion article right here.


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  • What About a Zero Carb Diet?

    no veggies 1 What About a Zero Carb Diet?Zero carb is getting (relatively) popular. A handful of valued MDA forum members eat little-to-no-carb, and several others probably imagine it’s ideal even if they don’t personally follow it. I wanted to address this because there seems to be some confusion as to how a zero carb eating plan relates to the Primal Blueprint eating plan. To begin with: I think zero carb can be a viable option for some, but highly impractical for most. If one had access to and ate different animals, all range fed and without pollutants, and if one ate all offal (and stomach contents) it’s possible to approach zero carb… but again highly impractical. If you really, really love meat and fat and offal, and get genuine enjoyment from eating nothing but meat and fat and offal, have at it. On the other hand, if you are looking for a wider variety – and gustatory enjoyment – of the foods you eat, zero carb may be unenjoyable, impractical, unnecessary, and at worst (if not done just right) downright dangerous.

    Let’s take a look at just a few of the reasons why vegetables are a part of The Primal Blueprint:

    First, it’s highly unlikely that early man would have consciously avoided edible, available vegetation. We already know that current hunter-gatherers take advantage of anything edible within reach – plant or animal. We are adaptive capitalists, ready and willing to exploit any situation to our advantage. Humans are survivors and they’ll eat whatever is available. If you subscribe to the “out of Africa” model of human evolution – as do most anthropologists – the bulk of our evolution took place in the lush, fertile Africa grasslands where both game and vegetation were plentiful. Grok wasn’t throwing together multicolored salads every day at noon, but the precedent for plant consumption is there. The opportunity certainly was.

    People have ranged far and wide across the globe, living in a variety of environments and ecosystems, each with different sources of food. Looking at the fossil records, it’s difficult to pinpoint the exact Paleolithic diet (whatever that means), seeing as how vegetable matter degrades and bone endures. But it’s safe to say that meat and fat have always been preferred by man, and our ancestors’ adoption of a meat and fat-heavy diet necessitated and prompted (in the cycle of positive feedback between culture and physiology that so often describes evolution) the smaller guts and bigger brains we enjoy today. Many like to take this point combined with examples of people surviving on animals alone as proof that vegetables should be restricted or avoided entirely. As I see it, when a carnivorous-predominant group does arise, like the Inuit, it is only out of necessity. They are an exception to the rule. The Inuit survived in a barren, arid environment by eating whatever was available: marine animals, fat, blubber, organs, and fish. It wasn’t by choice. They weren’t turning their noses up at bushels of berries and teeming fields of wild cabbage; the opportunity simply wasn’t there. In every other case, humans will eat both plants and animals if they are given the chance, and plant matter is mostly available all over the world, depending on the season.

    The Inuit do, though, show us that an-all meat, zero carb diet has the potential to be healthy. It might even be desirable for certain people if (here comes the tricky part), as I said, they use organic range-fed whole animals – muscle meat, fat, organs, offal, stomach contents – to get the whole spectrum of fat-soluble nutrients and vitamins. All those thriving near-carnivorous traditional groups the zero carb crowd likes to throw around weren’t buying tubes of 80/20 Walmart beef and nothing else; they were eating spoiled organs, consuming stomach contents, fermenting full-fat dairy, drinking fish liver shooters, gnawing on still-beating bison heart, and feasting on a “guts and grease” diet. Stefansson’s oft-cited all-meat diet experiment wasn’t just muscle and fat; it was fried liver and brains, fish, and a whole host of animal products. As for the ground beef and water diets that seem popular in some ZC circles? You’re fooling yourself if you think that’s an optimum diet for health and longevity, and I’m not sure if some favorable lab numbers garnered after six months of eating nothing but burger mean much at all. Better than the standard American diet of chips, sodas, cookies, and rancid fats on top of the same burger meat? Maybe. Optimum? Not a chance. Let’s see what happens in thirty years. Staunch ZCer Danny Roddy’s strangely scurvy-esque symptoms following a purely pemmican diet should give you pause.

    That sort of fear of macronutrients is silly and potentially dangerous. Avoiding grass-fed beef liver because it contains a few grams of carbohydrates is crazy (or did you conveniently forget that crucial aspect of the Inuit and Plains Native diets – organ meats?). Eschewing pastured eggs and all their yolky goodness because of a fraction of a gram of carbohydrates? Madness. Now, avoiding all carbs because you feel better without them? I can get behind that. Trying to maximize fat loss by going zero carb for short periods of time? Worth trying. Trying to prove your glucose-freebasing marathoner friends wrong by beating them on a ultra-low carb diet? I love a good self-experiment; do it! A complete zero carb diet is possible to get right, albeit a bit impractical and unwieldy for most people (if you think sourcing grass-fed beef is tough, trying finding a steady supply of pastured thyroid glands, kidneys, livers, brains, tripe, and heart!), but so is an omnivorous one. Which would you prefer? Which would enhance your quality of life? As long as you’re avoiding grains, legumes, sugar, and industrial vegetable oils, these are the important questions to dwell on.

    But what of vegetables? Is there anything inherent to be feared? Most plants are, at the worst, harmless. Others, like the seeds of wheat and barley and legumes, really don’t want to be eaten and can cause problems. These guys employ various anti-nutrients, chemical defenses like lectins and gluten to prevent and dissuade consumption. Certain animal and insect species have developed tolerances, but we generally have not. It is necessary for proper health that we humans “deprive” ourselves of these foods. I get that. And people sensitive to nightshades should avoid them, just as the lactose intolerant should probably avoid even raw dairy, and people with a severe shellfish allergy should avoid shrimp. This is basic stuff. But to posit that humans are somehow wholly intolerant of all vegetables and fruits is nonsense. Leafy greens like spinach and kale, carrots, asparagus, broccoli, squash, even the occasional sweet potato – some people would have you believe these are poison. Unnecessary? Perhaps. Dangerous? No, and especially when eaten with plenty of fat, vegetables are excellent vehicles for delivering beneficial nutrients, vitamins, and minerals to the people consuming them (read a few of our Smart Fuel posts on vegetables for more info on this point). Leafy greens, for example, are great sources of magnesium and calcium. Sardines and mackerel are good sources, too, but do they negate the utility (or deliciousness) of a plate of kale, sauteed in garlic butter and topped with lemon juice? This, to me, isn’t a point not to be taken lightly.

    There’s more to this picture. As long as you’re going to be cooking your meat there are good reasons to eat your steak with a side of veggies. A researcher named Joseph Kanner has spent a career looking at how the potential nastiness of cooked meats – oxidized fats, for instance – are neutralized in the “bioreactor” of the stomach with the inclusion of antioxidants from vegetables, red wine, and tea. Does this mean vegetables are required for safe consumption of cooked meat? Probably not, but unless you’re eating all your meat and offal raw, ultra-slow-cooked, or super rare, you may want to include a small salad, a bit of broccoli, or a glass of wine with that ribeye. Plant-based antioxidants (flavonoids, carotenoids, and other phytonutrients) in general provide a good line of defense against stress, inflammation, and the ravages of aging in the context of the former two conditions. A perfect zero carber who closely watches meat sources, gets plenty of sleep, good Primal exercise, and leads a low-stress existence is probably fine without piles of vegetables, but the average person who stumbles upon the PB and needs to drop a few dozen pounds, kick a few prescription meds, and maintain on inconsistent sleep? A Big Ass Salad (BAS) for lunch and some berries for breakfast (along with near carnivorous eating otherwise) will go a long way toward healing them – and they’d definitely be a huge improvement over what they were previously eating.

    And this gets me to my final main point on the importance of plants. The Primal Blueprint eating plan supports vegetation in large part because it’s meant to be a sustainable regimen – for life. Our supportive stance on vegetation is meant to include, rather than preclude. I’m trying to positively modify as many individual eating habits as I can in my short time on this planet. My work is my work, but I’m passionate about it, and I don’t want to be a starving diet guru with an incredibly loyal but miniscule cadre of die-hard followers. I want to affect people on a huge scale. I refuse to water my message down (“drink diet sodas and avoid saturated fat”), but if including lots of vegetables attracts more people without detracting from the nutritional merits of the lifestyle, I’m going to keep doing it. I’m talking about the people who need our help the most. They are our parents, our friends, our neighbors, and they stand to gain the most from adopting a Primal diet. Excluding vegetables right off the bat would only turn people away and relegate us to “fad diet” status immediately. It’s already an uphill battle, folks, and we don’t need any more roadblocks. Please, though, don’t read this as some sort of vague admission that vegetables aren’t a critical part of a healthy eating plan. I only mean to note this added importance that veggies bring to the PB.

    Before I wrap this up, let me speak specifically to how this relates to the official Primal Blueprint Food Pyramid – which is founded on vegetables, and to a lesser extent, fruits. Vegetation gets prime seating at the base as it makes up the bulk of an average PB meal, with meat and other animal products following up immediately after. When you take a look at the average Primal eater’s caloric daily breakdown though, fat and meat take the lion’s share. And when we publish a PB recipe, more often than not it features animal flesh proudly and prominently. Vegetation represents the foundation of the pyramid graphic but not the bulk of the caloric reality, which might seem designed to mislead.

    It’s not, though. For one thing, the sheer volume of raw vegetation is immense. Three cups of raw spinach quickly become less than a cup’s worth when exposed to butter and a heated surface. A few cups of buttered broccoli might displace enough three-dimensional space to fill a plate, but it won’t fill you up; the ten ounces of steak to the left will take care of that. In that sense, vegetation can and often does form the foundation of a Primal diet, calories notwithstanding, but it’s not a ton of calories derived from plants. That would take kilos of greens and pounds of carrots, and we aren’t lowland gorillas with immense fermentation chambers in our protruding guts. To really get a sense of how many or how few vegetables and fruits the PB prescribes, though, look to the Carbohydrate Curve: it’s totally open-ended. At the height, it’s 150 g/day of carbs, from vegetables and fruits and natural starches. Athletes can even extend that and go a bit higher, depending on activity level and glycogen needs. It goes as low as zero carb, which I characterize as an “excellent catalyst for rapid weight loss.” You’ll also note that while I don’t recommend it for prolonged periods, it’s not because I fear ketosis, or that excluding plant foods will kill you; it’s because I can’t support the “unnecessary deprivation of plant foods.”

    In the end, the PB comes down to maximizing quality of life. I want to enjoy every bite of every meal. I want to stay out of the rest home, avoid hospital stays, and stay active into my twilight years. Hell, I want my twilight years to be inundated with beams of radiant light. I don’t want my life to be a heavily regimented procession of pills and white coats. I want to have my sensible vices, like wine or dark chocolate. I want to eat vegetables because I enjoy them – not because I’m under the assumption that they’re magic. I have the means and the wherewithal to eat a complete, totally ideal carnivorous diet, but I prefer variety. I like my steak and my eggs (a gram of carbs doesn’t scare me) and my asparagus.

    Let me know what you think PBers, ZCers and everyone else. Thank for reading!

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    Related posts:

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    3. What’s Wrong With The Zone Diet?

  • Whoa, a Sirius XM App for the BlackBerry? Rumor has it!

    sxmbb

    Will there be a Sirius XM App for the BlackBerry? According to the always-great Orbitcast, yes! Rumor has it that it’ll be available this month, and that it will be pretty damn similar to the iPhone App. No Howard Stern, then. No big loss.

    So the App, which will work with a few select BlackBerry models, will work like the iPhone App. You’ll need an online subscription to Sirius XM. A total of 120 channels will available, but the only channel you’ll need is XM 202 The Virus.

    The App will work on: Storm 2; Storm 1; Bold (9000, 9700); Tour (9630); Curve (8900, 8520, 8530). I have a Curve 8900, so if and when the App drops I’ll let you know.


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  • Gran Turismo 5 delayed. How does “to be announced” grab you?

    gt5

    Bad news, sports fans: Gran Turismo 5 has been delayed. Again. Go ahead and act surprised, I’ll give you a few moments. New release date? “To be announced.”

    The game was scheduled for release in Japan this March, but Sony has stricken that from the record. “To be announced?” What does that mean?

    Who am I to question Kazunori Yamauchi? If the man wants to delay the game, fine by me. Well, not “fine” by me, but I’m sure it’s for the best.


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  • Honda to show Insight Sports Modulo Concept, more at Tokyo Auto Salon

    Filed under: , ,


    Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    For the aftermarket scene, SEMA isn’t the only show in town. Well, in that particular town – Las Vegas, that is – maybe, but not in the world. Europe’s got Essen, and Japan’s got the Tokyo Auto Salon. With the latter fast approaching, Honda has revealed what they’ve got up their sleeves for this year.

    First is the Insight Sports Modulo Concept you see above. Based on the Insight hybrid, the concept demonstrates what Honda’s Modulo customization range can do for the company’s Toyota Prius rival. And if the idea of tricking out a hybrid seems strange to you, remember that this is the automaker that just gave us the CR-Z.

    Alongside the Insight show car, Honda Access Corporation (the accessorizing division of the motor company) will also showcase tricked-out versions of its Freed minivan and Life kei car, and a handful of other customized vehicles Honda offers in the Japanese Domestic Market. Considering how popular Hondas are with the tuner crowd, that should come as no great surprise, but you can read about them in the press release after the jump and view them in the high-res image gallery below.

    [Source: Honda]

    Continue reading Honda to show Insight Sports Modulo Concept, more at Tokyo Auto Salon

    Honda to show Insight Sports Modulo Concept, more at Tokyo Auto Salon originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dragon Age: Origins Return to Ostagar DLC now live on Live, coming to PC and PS3 soon

    BioWare has announced that the Dragon Age: Origins DLC pack, Return to Ostagar, can now be downloaded by Xbox 360 owners from the Marketplace. PS3 and PC owners, however, will still have to wait a bit.

  • Obama To Tax Leverage

    There’s been much talk this week about the Obama administration’s desire to obtain $120 billion from the banks with a new tax, especially for them. The President is expected to explain that tax tomorrow, but the Wall Street Journal managed to get a leak ahead of time. From what it’s learned, the tax appears to be on big banks’ net liabilities. In other words, the more a bank’s liabilities outweigh its assets, the more it will owe. Put one more way, the more highly leveraged a bank, the more it will have to pay. It’s effectively an excise tax on leverage.

    Here’s the WSJ’s description of the calculation:

    The government would likely calculate liabilities by subtracting the total of a bank’s equity and insured deposits from its assets

    So, in a sense, the less capital that a bank has to back up its bets, the more it will owe Uncle Sam. It taxes unprotected risk. From a historical perspective, a tax like this isn’t shocking. Taxing behaviors that the government deems unsavory is one of its favorite pastimes. Just ask smokers how much they pay for their cigarettes.

    If the administration wishes to create this tax as a sort of regulatory check on risk, then that would sort of makes sense (see the next paragraph). But that doesn’t appear to be what it’s doing here. According to what I’ve read, the tax would only exist for a few years, until the $120 billion mark has been reached. Then it will disappear. Maybe I’m missing something, but I’m not sure how a temporary tax on big banks’ risks to pay for costs resulting from mortgage modifications and the bailouts to the auto companies and AIG makes sense on really any level.

    But what about as a permanent regulatory measure? There’s certainly an argument for a framework like this. The tax revenues could sit in a sort of “just in case” fund, to be used in times of financial emergencies. Then, if another financial crisis hits, any costs borne by the government in cleaning up the mess could be covered by the fund.

    I still think it’s a silly idea, however. If you’re want banks to have less leverage, then just create leverage limits. Isn’t that a simpler, cleaner approach than trying to determine a tax rate to pay for the cost of impending doom if highly leveraged banks fail? Why should we want a financial system where banks can take unlimited risks, as long as they’re okay with paying the associated tax for doing so? I’d prefer stability, and a more direct approach.





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  • Prysm Aims for Energy Efficient Displays, with Frickin’ Lasers!

    Lasers have performed wonders over the years but can they push display technology into an era of super-efficient screens? One San Jose, Calif.-based startup is betting on it.

    Founded in 2005, Prysm exited stealth mode this week with the introduction of its Laser Phosphor Display (LPD) technology. At first, shooting lasers doesn’t sound like the greenest […]


  • Chicago Transit Authority to Host Workshops to Assist Employees Preparing for Layoffs

    A 30 percent loss of public funding contributed to a $300 million budget shortfall for the Chicago Transit Authority in 2010.

    Staff reductions, mandatory furlough days and strict controls on spending, along with transferring capital funds to operating, are necessary to help fill the gap.

    The sessions will provide information and resources for obtaining job interviews, training, health benefits and unemployment compensation.

    Representatives from the Mayor’s Office of Workforce Development, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, ICMA Retirement Corporation, as well as CTA representatives will be available to answer questions on topics such as benefits, unemployment compensation and accessing 401K and 457 accounts.

    Every CTA employee who received a layoff notice was also provided information on the workshops. Employees also received contact information for various support organizations. The CTA has worked with its labor unions to provide the information for distribution as well.

    Workshop dates are:

    The Chicago Transit Authority is hosting a series of workshops designed to assist the more than 1,000 employees scheduled for layoffs next month.

    In order to balance its 2010 budget, CTA will be reducing service effective February 7, consequently, there will be a corresponding reduction in the CTA workforce.

    • Wednesday, January 13
    • Thursday, January 14
    • Friday, January 15
    • Thursday, January 21
    • Friday, January 22
    • Monday, January 25
    • Thursday, February 11

    The workshops will be conducted at CTA Headquarters, 567 W. Lake Street.