Thursday, May 22, 2008

BabyEidson Update

Susan has taken over as editor and chief of the BabyEidson blog, so check in on her updates from time to time. I think she was tired of my snarky baby comments, so she is now taking the reins.

Business Casual Rules


I violated Business Casual Rule #3 this week (or Biz Caz if you are on the street) - wearing brown shoes with black pants. Not sure which is worse - violating the rule or not remembering even putting on my shoes in the morning. Either way here are the rules:

1) No logos on your shirts - avoid horses, penguins, alligators, swooshes, or anything that says "I've been to XYZ and bought/received this great shirt in order to remind both you and other random people that I visited place XYZ". (I violate this rule at least twice a week, just to make sure people don't think too highly of me)

2) Wear formal attire strategically - wearing a tie/sportcoat can belittle those who don't, making all of us wonder if our attire is somehow sub-par. Your coworkers will then combat your over-dress with a counter-assault of casual: rolling up sleeves, taking off their shoes at their desk, and wearing bluetooth headsets.

3) Don't mix black with brown unless you know exactly what you are doing - I think MacGyver did this once with explosive results, so be careful and make sure you don't cross the line from complementing-contrast to colorblind.

4) Button down collars are the standard - collars that don't button down can cause an unintended 70' vibe. Be even more careful if you have substantial sideburns.

5) Jeans are not slacks - even if you get the dark blue ones that are expensive, they are still jeans, and much like how free-range pork doesn't belong in a burrito, neither do jeans in the office. One caveat - if you can pull off the jeans/cowboy-boots/large-belt look, then wearing jeans could possibly catapult you into Biz -Caz lore...

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Addicted to iGoogle


I officially have an unhealthy relationship with iGoogle. What's that you say? How can someone really be that involved with RSS feeds? On my 4th iGoogle tab I decided it was time to scale back and really take a look at my life, and what info I really needed on iGoogle. Here's the RSS feeds and Widgets I currently employ:

Home Tab - Gmail, Daylight Map, Farside Comic of the Day
Deal Tab - Fatwallet RSS, Dealnews RSS, SlickDeals RSS
News Tab - CNN, BBC, Drudge Report, Houston Chronicle (TX edition), Google News, ESPN, CNET News
Market Tab - Google Finance Portfolio, CNNMoney, MarketWatch

Basically, this allows me to review my email, current deals, global/local news, and the market with seconds...and makes iGoogle my quick fix...give it a try...

Tire Buying


I recently had to purchase tires for my Dodge Ram's 20 inch rims (oh yes, I have been rolling on dubs since March 2003 - as a side note, Kyle once asked Susan, who at that time was my new girlfriend, how she liked "rollin on dubs?". Susan, believing that Kyle was referring to her recent 20th birthday, answered that she enjoyed rolling on dubs, and that was that.)

So, back to tires - unless you know someone at a tire store, here's my favorite way to buy tires: First, go to TireRack.com and using your tire size (printed on the side of your tire), do a quick search and find out the lowest and highest tire prices. Next, go to Discounttire.com and do the same. For the most part, TireRack will be cheaper, so take note of their cheapest tire for your car and head into your local tire store with that price as your target. Buying tires is almost like buying a new car - the price they quote you is full of profit margin, and can usually be cut by 10%-30%. Having the online prices in hand helps you break into negotiations and get the best price.....my 2cents.

TV 2.0 News

TV 2.0 is alive and well....

Netflix box - $100 + $8.95 a month for unlimited access to 10,000+ movies from your Netflix queue, but not HD just yet...

Tivo gets HD downloads from Amazon UnBox - I had a sneaking suspicion this was coming. AppleTV beat Tivo to the punch, but this is what I love about competition. Add to this that the Tivo box (like AppleTV) can be given new firmware, functionality, and content all without any additional cost to the buyer, and you have an evergreen product. I covered this in a previous post on the iPhone...

Guitar Hero


I'm finally diving into Guitar Hero, Amazon dropped its price to $59.99 for the whole package. I had stayed away due to my pompous "I really play guitar" attitude, and have found myself on the outside of this dinner party phenomenon.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Carbon Footprint

Has anyone paused to think that maybe we are actively becoming carbon neutral? My point is in how online technology has changed my physical behavior - I connect with people online instead of driving to see them (sad, but true), I check prices and do my shopping online which again avoids driving, I use telecon and video-conference at work so that I can work from home instead of driving or flying to another location, I send an email (or write a blog entry) instead of mailing a letter which requires both paper and fuel to deliver....see what I'm saying? Gore acts like we are in a perpetual landslide toward oblivion, but technology has already begun to take a bite out of carbon....but of course, Al invented the Internets....

Thursday, May 8, 2008

The Pain of Gas Guzzlers


Check out this article about people trying to sell their gas-guzzling SUVs and trucks. Then look at the picture of the guy and his truck at the pump - he has to fill up 3 times a week at $75+ a pop. Typical American experience? Notice the 22 inch Mopar SRT wheels, and the body side moldings - this guy is driving an SRT-10 Viper Powered Dodge Ram that get 6 miles to the gallon. Yes, trying to drive a Viper back and forth to work and the grocery store will cost you at the pump. When you buy a vehicle that has single digit gas mileage, be prepared for the worst...

I think most of us are experiencing the pain at the pump, but in some ways I view this as a much needed diet for America - both literally and figuratively. For the past 20 years our economy has been driven by cheap oil, leading to huge cars and bad habits that need to be modified if we are to continue as a world power. High oil prices mean several things for me -

1) Higher returns on your mutual funds and pensions that invest in energy stocks (before you trash Big Oil, check your fund prospectus and see how much Big Oil stock you own),
2) More expensive food and pinched budgets, forcing us to eat from our grocery store and not McD's - could this be the obesity solution we need?
3) Demand has created incredible monetary motivation for alternative fuels - now that it is profitable to make solar panels, lithium batteries, electric/hybrid cars (or even small cars), we are seeing an explosion in the alt fuel markets and will see leaps in technology now that venture capital is behind the green wave
4) More efficient use of resources (driving less, carpooling more), and spurring on public transportation

This will not be a popular post, but just my positive take on the issue at hand.

One last thing - don't be fooled by electric power (just yet) and those who tout it as the solution to save us all - a majority of our electricity is created by coal and natural gas, meaning that plug in car is really still burning fossil fuels....