The Good


7
Feb 10

I’d say that I’m in the best shape I’ve been in for 10 years, but that wouldn’t really be saying much.

What I’m about to describe is the story of how I went from an active, (overly) skinny 16 year old to an incredibly unfit, overweight 25 year old, and what I’m doing about it. Some of you may want to leave now.

Are we sitting comfortably? Then I’ll begin.

Ten years ago I weighed very little. My Mum once told be that I was “a little bit weedy”. Love you too Mum.

At 16 I was around the six-foot mark and maybe weighed about 55kg wet through (that’s just over 8.5 stone for those  still living in the previous Century). I used to walk roughly five miles a day on average, I walked the dog everyday after school and I rode my bike at the weekends. This basically meant that I ate whatever I felt like and never seemed to gain any weight. I also had a nightmare trying to find trousers which fit properly, I had a hard time getting trousers with a 30-inch waist to stay up, which isn’t supposed to be possible when you’re six-feet tall if the availability of suitable jeans was anything to go by.

Then, in the 18-months before I left to go to University I got a part time job, in a Little Chef. This had a number of disadvantages, not least of which that I became less active; I had more money to go out and drink beer, and I got a free meal when I was working – which usually consisted of a cooked breakfast or a burger, with chips, cheese and very little salad. Needless to say finding jeans started to become less of an issue. At one point I put on over 10kg in two months.

At 18 I left home to go to University, this didn’t help matters. Why would I want to go and do exercise when I could go to the pub and watch the football? Drinks flowed and late night visits to the local take-away became the norm. About halfway through Uni I peaked somewhere around the 90kg mark. I was wearing the same size trousers as my Dad – who was a little too happy to highlight the fact that he’d never had the same size waist as his father.

Almost eight years after starting, I’m still at University and I spend most of my day sat behind a desk reading and tapping away at my keyboard punctuated by regular coffee breaks, which usually involve cake, or at least biscuits. However, for a 12 month period I was walking 45 minutes to and from the office every day, and I lost a not insignificant amount of weight very quickly.

Then I joined the university Hiking Club.

My jeans started to get loose and my shirts were hanging off me.

But then I moved house and am no longer living within sensible walking distance. I bought a bike, but that was a lot more like hard work compared to walking, and when the wet weather started to move in and the days got shorter, the bike stayed in the garage.

My weight started to head skywards again.

I had to do something, so I bought a high-tech scale. The first time I used it was a bit of a wake-up call.

I weighed 88.6kg, of which 30.4% was fat, 33.2% muscle, and my visceral fat level was on the borderline between normal and high.

I started to eat a bit better. No more pizza and chips for lunch; I’d have soup instead. My weight started to fall, slowly; a little to slowly for my liking. I bought a cross-trainer. It was a gamble, would I use it? I hate going to the gym; I just can’t stand the atmosphere. If I paid for a gym membership it’d just sit there being neglected? Would the cross-trainer, or would the fact that it was there, in the house, in my face, mean that I used it?

Well, I’ve been using it about four times a week, so I think it’s safe to say that the later is the case.

I started out doing about 15 minutes a day and after 10 weeks I’m quite happily doing 45 minutes a day on the highest setting. I’d say that I’m in the best shape I’ve been in for 10 years, but that wouldn’t really be saying much.

What about my weight? Well, the figures from this morning, 90-days after the first set, read:

Weight: 83.5kg. Fat: 30.4%. Muscle: 37.0%. And my visceral fat had dropped significantly.

I’m by no means lean and I have a long way to go before I’d call myself fit, but I have noticed a huge improvement in my general fitness and people I haven’t seen for a while keep telling me that I “look well” – which I’ve managed to translate to “less fat” – so I guess I’m actually pretty happy with my investment. Even if I am having to buy a whole new wardrobe. Again.


9
Jan 10

Drobo: mini review

Last year I bought a cheap two bay NAS enclosure and a couple of 1TB hard drives to go with it. Sadly, in this case, cheap truly was nasty. It was temperamental from the start, you got very little feedback from it, the web-based interface was appalling and after a few months it started to become a chore to use. Thankfully I saw its impending death coming and kept a copy of all the precious data it contained on various USB drives. Last week, running low on space on all of my other drives, and unable to get the NAS to serve up any data at all, I replaced it with what I wanted to buy in the first place, a Drobo. [Link to manufacturers page: http://www.drobo.com/]

Data Roboto:

The entry level Drobo is a 4-bay USB2.0 and Firewire800 enclosure for SATA hard drives. It uses a proprietary technology known as “BeyondRAID” to provide redundancy for your data; should one disk fail, your data will (in theory) be intact, and you can simply replace the failed drive with a new one. Should you run low on space you can simply insert a new drive, even while the unit is on; if there are no free bays, you can replace one of the existing drives with a larger one. Simples.

The manufacturer offers various other solutions including network attached options with 8-bays, and a 5-bay version offering protection from two simultaneous drive failures.

The unit has a reasonably large light next to each drive bay which indicates the current state of each drive. Green is good. Red is bad. Somewhere in between means that you need to think about replacing the drive soon. There is also a row of 10 small LEDs along the bottom of the device, these indicate how much of the installed capacity you are using, one LED = 10%.

Thoughts?

I’ve had the unit for less than a week, but so far I’m impressed by it’s solid build quality, excellent design, and blistering speed. It’s biggest flaw is that it’s not network-attached, but I knew this going in. There is an optional module called the DroboShare, which you plug the Drobo into and it essentially turns it into a NAS, but I didn’t think that the cost was justified. I have experimented with plugging the unit into my Apple Time Capsule’s USB port, which not only allowed me to access the device over the wireless network, but also over the Internet via MobileMe. Handy, but there does see to be a significant performance hit, even when connected directly to the Time Capsule via Gb Ethernet.

I’m a very happy customer so far, I’ll keep you posted with any new thoughts and developments.

Why don’t you buy from a Drobo from Amazon.co.uk?


2
Sep 09

If you only buy one thing today, buy this song.

Love Of An Orchestra


25
Aug 09

Snow Leopard is available to pre-order

Old news, maybe. But, it’s cheaper at Amazon. Did you know that? Huh?


24
Aug 09

I just had to post this

Saw a link to it on Twitter the other day. Wow. Just, WOW!

Give it a watch.

Kuroshio Sea – 2nd largest aquarium tank in the world – (song is Please don’t go by Barcelona) from Jon Rawlinson on Vimeo.


14
Aug 09

New Project…

Decided that I needed another kick up the backside to get my photography mojo back. So I’ve started Project50, 50 photographs at 50mm over 50 days. Easy, right?

Here’s Day 3:

#3 - Red Red Wine


15
Dec 08

Finding focus

I’m finding so many good photos recently that I just need to spend a bit more time working on.

This was taken back in October in the Peak District. I’m hoping to spend a little more time with Aperture over Christmas, going through some of my photos from the past 12 months. Keep ‘em peeled.


15
Dec 08

WOW! (Office 2008 12.1.5)

Microsoft seem to have fixed the Office 2008 update installer!

Well… It 12.1.5 worked for me without the hackery.


14
Dec 08

Because I’ve not posted a photo for a while…


5
Dec 08

Best music of 2008?

Last.fm have published details of the “Best of 2008“.

The music of 2008 that it’s users have played most.

Based entirely on your scrobbling, this is a real look at what you’ve been listening to (not just buying). The charts are ranked by total number of listeners.

Interesting, if not surprising.