MJ-Garage

I'm Just Sayin' *puke*

Jan

Where did this phrase come from?  It's as if it came out of nowhere over the last few years and completely decimated any and all sense of ownership.  Suddenly, along comes a phrase that allows one to tack it on to any statement and be absolved of any ill will, harm, or malice.  I liken it to "No offense, but..." and place it not far from "Don't take this the wrong way".  

If you're going to take the time to make a statement and say something then it should mean something.  If you don't want to be held responsible for the repercussions, then perhaps you shouldn't say anything in the first place.  The use of this phrase as a means to absolve one's self of all responsibility for that which was just spoken is no different than making the statement for the sheer pleasure of making a statement then shortly following it up with "I didn't mean it", and then there are those people who will never be able to admit when they are wrong, then there are those people who have trouble knowing when to NOT admit when they are wrong.  You know the kind I'm talking about.  They have come to the realization that they can get away with anything in life, so long as they say they're sorry.  Living their life by the old saying: It's easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission. I see the phrase "just sayin'" as no different.

If you are going to say something, then mean it.  Don't half ass mean it, and don't try and hide behind a veil of uncertainty about what you want to talk about.  Grow a pair, stand up, and speak your mind.  In any case: 

 

Say what you mean and mean what you say - don't just say it.

 

Apple and Truth in Advertising/Marketing

Jan

I take issue with Apple. I take issue with Apple for a number of reasons. If you've been on this site enough, or even around me enough, you will know that I generally tend to shy away from the trendy things in life. The trendy clothing, the trendy hair cuts and hair coloring, the must have shoes, or car, or even the most popular TV watching habits including TV shows and sports. Naturally, Apple tends to fall into this category. I gave it a go. I really did. I purchased a MacBook at one point. I fell it into the hype, the marketing, and the beauty of it all. I kept that MacBook for about 9 months.


Short of an HP laptop, that MacBook was the most troublesome piece of computer equipment I've ever owned.  It would shut down on me randomly about twice a week.  The commercials always indicated that their products were more stable, so I just thought it was something I had installed.  I wiped the install and started fresh.  Same thing.  How could this be?  I did a bit of digging and found the following: http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/apple-notebooks/37401-macbook-randomly-shuts-down.html


Amazing, they're susceptible to the exact same issues that any other computer is susceptible to.  They aren't some magical piece of computer hardware like their commercials lead you to believe.  The software?  It was a pain in the ass to get it to connect to the network at school.  Sure, I could connect if all I wanted to do was surf the Internet.  Anything beyond that proved to be difficult.  Mind you, I hear that things have changed and I'm sure they have, otherwise, Apple wouldn't have made it this long.  That didn't help me back then, and it went against everything their ads indicated: Apple = easy


Today?  Things haven't changed.  Dare I say they've gotten worse on the advertising front.



Really?  I'm pretty sure I can get the same apps on the Android market, the BlackBerry market, and the Windows Mobile Market. True, I can't get them on those phones through the Apple Market.  The ad is extremely misleading in that it leads users to believe that they can only get those applications or features if they have an iPhone.  While I've had some people tell me that there's no way people would think this, I'm here to say I've experienced it first hand.  Sitting at a local bar one night with my husband, we listened to a group of people talking to someone with a BlackBerry, trying to explain to him why he needed to get an iPhone.  They kept trying to tell him that he needed to get an iPhone because then he could get him personal email, surf the web, and have access to xyz applications.  It made me sick.  Apparently, I wasn't the only one.  The guy with the BlackBerry was getting quite frustrated as well.



This is really the ad that set me off recently and lead me to this whole rant.  If I don't have an iPhone, I can't have my favorite books in my pocket?  Are you kidding me!?!?!  It would have been one thing if Apple had stated "If you don't have an iPhone, you can't have your favorite iBooks in your pocket".  I would have actually been ok with that because it would have been factual.  This?!  What about the Kindle app, Nook app, Google Books, Aldiko, etc.? 


It is one thing to state the facts in such a manner that they favor your point. For instance, car companies tell you all about the awards that they've won in a specific category, how they have more vehicles with x mpg or better than any other in a specific category, etc, etc. Or take TV companies, they always market the strong feature of their particular product: how thin a tv is, how vivid the image is, a specific new technology that's unique to them. Or take other phone companies: they talk about their processors, 4G/LTE, screen type & size, camera specs, etc. While Apple did this to an extent, they never left it to this. They told blatant lies: saying you don't have your favorite books in your pocket? Saying you're not susceptible to viruses? It's one thing to take the facts and talk about them in such a way that they favor your points and your product. For instance: If you don't have an iPhone, you don't have the largest App store. I could understand that. Never mind that there are a ton of completely useless apps, never mind that you have to pay for the vast majority of those apps compared to the Android market. That's NOT a blatant lie. It's a statement of the facts in such a manner that it favors their product and NOT falsifying and twisting the truth to such an extent that it's no longer recognizable.


To brain wash people into seriously thinking that this is the case is bad business. It's no different than then saying that you can't get a virus on a Mac. You CAN get a virus on a Mac. The same vulnerabilities exist. The difference is that not as many people own them. If you're going to write a virus, you're going to write it for the masses. It's a low, low way of playing the game and frankly, it's why I can't stand Apple. Truth in advertising is important. As Americans we should expect this in our companies, and in our history, we have expected just this and thus have passed legislation to prevent just this kind of thing. Now, suddenly, it's deemed an ok business practice? Why?


Truth in advertising and truth in marketing. At what point did we as Americans throw out our morals and roll over to accept that falsehoods and twisted truths are ok? I guess it was the point at which we decided that stepping all over each other to make a buck was the American way. I'll have none of it. My morals won't allow it.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 07 June 2011 18:39 )
 

Osama is Dead, Now what?

Jan

Great, a man that we've been hunting for 10 years is dead. A man who is likely not even the leader of 'Al Qaeda' even more. A man who supposedly has to rely on kidney dialysis in order to live in the first place. This same man has been hiding in plan sight for the past 5-6 years, with little to no protection, just yards from Pakistan's premier military academy.

We as a nation spent how much and lost how many lives to hunt down this man? Do I think that he was an evil man? Sure. Do I think that he didn't share the same ideals as our nation? Sure. Do I think that that means that we need to expend billions of dollars and thousands of additional human lives in order to exact revenge? I'm not so sure there.

My number one fear after this, above all else, is that we have provoked the Hydra. We have cut the head off and that two more will grow in its place. We didn't follow a proper burial per Shia law. This alone is enough to incite riots. Sure, what he did to us is atrocious. However, as has been played out time and time again in history, always having to have the last word proves nothing.

When will it end? When is enough enough? Once the whole world is of one common religion? Once everyone believes in your God? Once everyone follows a common religious scripture and carries the same beliefs?

I sure hope to be long gone by the time that scenario unfolds.

 

Dallas MS150

Jan

Monte and I rode in the Dallas MS150 this past weekend.  This ride went from Frisco to the Texas Motor Speedway on day 1, then from the Texas Motor Speedway to Ft. Worth on day 2.  Unfortunately, we had some pretty nasty weather roll through on day 2 and they ended up canceling hte second leg.

 

The first leg went great though!  We signed up to be ride marshals with the Lifetime Fitness/Sun & Ski sports team out of the Sun & Ski Sports Frisco location.

 marshals

 

Dave, Jim, myself, and Monte decided to do this ride together.  Here we are at packet pick-up the day before.

 

All along the route, there were these video cameras that apparently were triggered by the passing of cyclist.  Here's a few of the videos from the ride as our group passed by:

 

Here's our team going over the dam at Lake Ray Roberts.

Lifetime Fitness/Sun & Ski going through Krum

At the finish line on day 1

 

Pretty cool to watch our large group pass by on camera!  We were booking it through most of the route at around 20-22mph.  The ride was a blast, the group was great, and it was all for a great cause!!!

 

DSC_2675

 

Here is the Garmin information from Day 1:

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 03 May 2011 14:45 )
 

Indoor Training in the Off Season

Jan

With the weather turning colder, I knew I had to pick up a trainer for our bicycles.  I know I'm a pansy when it comes to cold weather.  We haven't bought the right gear for much below 55 degrees.  Why?  Here in Texas, we don't deal with long stints of cold weather enough to justify it.

 

At one point in my life, I loved the cold.  I didn't mind being out in it and I didn't have to bundle up in 13 layers to be warm.  That point was about 25 pounds ago.  Since losing the weight, I've found myself constantly seeking warmth and counting down the days until it's 100 degrees outside again.  Call me sick and twisted, but I do look forward to those days.

 

Since starting to ride the trainer indoors, I wanted to get more out of that time.  I tried to work on intervals outdoors but found it to be difficult in our area.  Traffic, stop signs and stop lights, turns, etc. all made for a difficult time keeping time as well as maintaining a consistant effort.  Not to mention, when you don't have someone there telling you what to do, you tend to relax a bit.  I figured with the trainer set up in front of a TV, it would be the perfect time to really hammer on the structured workouts.

 

Naturally, a few of our friends are also cyclists.  Being friends with them on Facebook, I frequently see what their workouts consist of.  One day I saw where one of them posted up something about The Sufferfest and how the workout completely anihaliated him.  Having peeked my interest, I decided to head on over to Google and take a look.  After watching just one of the videos, I knew I had to purchase.  These videos had me pumped!  I couldn't wait to get home and get to pedaling!  I realize that to an outsider, this might make me sound like one sick, twisted individual.  However, if you've ever been involved in any kind of athletic venture, or if you have any sort of competitive bone in your body, you should know the feeling I'm referencing here.

 

I purchased two videos and started downloading immediately: Revolver and Fight Club

 

I popped the bike on the trainer, suited up, downed my pre-workout drink, threw my water bottle in the cage, started the Revolver, and got to spinning.

 

The Revolver is a pretty simple idea for a work out.  Structured intervals: 1 minute on, 1 minute off.  15 times.  Go as hard as you can, then recover.  I knew I wanted to work on intervals and I knew I was weak in that regard.  This is an area I wanted to really hit in the off season and come out ahead on once spring came back around.  Thus, I figured it made perfect since to purchase this video for training purposes.

 

Plain and simple, it kicked my ass.

 

I made it through roughly 11 intervals.  I say roughly because on a few of them, I didn't last and instead did a longer recovery.

 

Have I noticed a difference?  Absolutely.  After just one time doing the video, I went out 2 days later when the weather had warmed up  and managed a 20 mile ride in an hour.  Something I've never been able to manage in a ride on my own before.  I finished the ride and wasn't completely gassed.

 

Since then, I've completed Fight Club and most of The Downward Spiral.  I have yet to ride to The Hunted, it is next on my list.

 

I should note that after completing 2 videos, I found the Sufferfest Facebook group, joined it and started reading some of their past posts.  I found this little tidbit, which would have been nice to know in the beginning:

 

sufferfest_fb

 

I suppose it's nice to know if I can make it most of the way through the hardest workout, then I'm in a little better shape than I initially thought.  I'll be honest, after that first video, when I was about to hurl, I was beginning to question my own mental judgement.

 

All in all, I'm extremely pleased with the videos and can't suggest them enough to friends looking to take their training to the next level.  For anyone looking to improve their cardio, THIS is something they should look into!

 

 

 


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