Good Guide

When it comes to “being green” and living a lifestyle that is kind to the earth, I admit that I am still just learning. But I came across a great site that I am finding very helpful. It’s called the GoodGuide.

GoodGuide provides the world’s largest and most reliable source of information on the health, environmental, and social impacts of the products in your home.

With GoodGuide, you can:

  • Find safe, healthy and green products that protect you and your family
  • Search or browse over 70,000 food, toys, personal care, & household products to see what’s really beneath the label
  • Use expert advice and recommendations on products to quickly learn the impacts of what you buy
  • Find better products and make purchasing decisions based on what’s important to you
  • Create a personalized favorites list with the products that are right for you and your family

They even have an iPhone app to help you make better choices when shopping. With this app, simply scan the barcode of the product and immediately see detailed ratings for health, environment and social responsibility for more than 50,000 products and companies. GoodGuide provides this information about personal care, household chemical, toy and food products for free on your iPhone / iPod Touch and is adding thousands of products every month. By making information about consumer products transparent, GoodGuide’s goal is to help people shop smarter and motivate companies to offer even better products.

But what really blew me away is their SMS application! It makes this type of “on the go learning” accessible to anyone with a SMS enabled phone! Simply send a text message to 41411. Every text message must begin with the word “gguide” in the body of the message. Then, add whatever it is you are searching for after “gguide”. You can search by Product Type, Product Name, or UPC code.

Twitter: What you need to know

I arrived at Laid Off Camp NY yesterday morning bright and early, eager to give my session on Networking 101. However, after I put my session topic on the board, a few people asked me if I was going to do a session on Twitter. So I decided to do an extra session on Twitter. In the spirit of Laid Off Camp I am going to post my session notes here.

So Twitter…What is it? What’s it all About? (shameless show plug)

Most of the people in my session yesterday knew what Twitter was, but they were having a hard time finding value, or an effective way to use it.

Of course I got asked the now age-old question: Isn’t twitter just like facebook status updates? Why do I need twitter when I have facebook?

Twitter IS NOT the Same As Facebook Status Updates

Let’s start with some simple twitter terms:

Followers = the number of people who have chosen to receive your updates in their twitter stream

Following = the number of people who’s updates you would like to receive.

Unlike most other social networks, because twitter does not work on a ‘friends’ model (which requires that you accept someones ‘friend request’ before you can communicate with that person), someone on twitter can be following you and you are in no way obligated to follow that person back.

Twitter has been categorized as a ‘micro-blog’ which give the misconception that someones twitter stream can be read like a blog, from top to bottom. Chances are if you were to try and read someone’s twitter stream like that you would become very quickly confused because the stream would simply not make sense.

You would come across updates like


All you see is a lot of @‘s and #, it can look like a foreign language sometimes.

@ replies = when you see and @ followed by a twitter username, that tweet is a response to another tweet. This is how you have conversations on twitter.

# hashtags = when you see # followed by a word or acronym, it is called a hashtag. Go to search.twitter.com and type in the hashtag to see what all the fuss is about. (some twitter clients turn these hashtags into twitter search links already but twitter.com does not as of yet)

Passively reading twitter is not a great way to get started using it. I suggest you start following people who you find interesting. Do not start following only celebrities, because to be honest, they don’t really know how to engage in conversation on twitter. Check out WeFollow.com, it’s a twitter directory. You can add yourself and search for people based on tags. It’s a good place to get started.

The next thing I recommend is turning on SMS with twitter. (only do this is you have unlimited text messaging, and if you don’t have unlimited text messaging, get unlimited text messaging)

I know a lot of people who only really use twitter via SMS and it works great. It’s fast and easy.

I recommend testing out some twitter clients for your computer. Some people might disagree with me on this one, but I feel like if you really want to start using twitter you need to put some filters in place. There are a TON of twitter clients to choose from but I recommend trying tweetdeck or tweetie.

One thing a heard a lot yesterday was people that had signed up for twitter, looked at it for a few days, and never touched it again.

I say, give twitter 30 days. Really make and effort to use some tools, and engage in the conversation. You won’t be sorry.

If you have more twitter questions, or I am missing something that I talked about yesterday, please leave it in the comments and let’s continue the discussion.

Building a theme

I have always wanted to design my own theme, while I love the random sarah theme now, I find from time to time I just get the itch for a redesign! Looking through the thousands of wordpress themes out there can be daunting, and if you have been reading random sarah for long enough you know what I went through when choosing a theme last time.

You will like a part of one, and a part of another one, and so on. You get to the point where you want to build it yourself (or in my case at least design what it will look like)

I cannot code for my life! This is a fact. But I consider myself to be a pretty good designer. So I wanted to know if it was possible for me to design what it looked like and how all the buttons would work, and someone else just code it for me. I have a few friends who are willing to help me out with this once the design is finished, so I started to build! You can watch the full evolution of the theme on flickr (I posted a link to the set below) I have been posting screen shots as I go along and getting feedback from my twitter peeps on how it looks.

The whole idea for the theme started with a set of free icons I found on Spoon Graphics of hand drawn icons for bloggers. I have seen a lot of hand drawn web design and it’s an aesthetic I like. So I decided to look around the web for some great blogs and find inspiration. Another important step was using iStockPhoto to get great art I could tear apart and use for the design. I got the background image and most of the other artwork from there. TIP: YOUR DESIGN WILL LOOK BETTER IF YOU SPEND A LITTLE MONEY!

So here is where I am so far, I would be happy to answer any questions about how I did this, it really wasn’t that hard. (and it’s not done yet!)

Walking in New York City

this is a re-blog of a post from a friend of mine Michael Gruen

I found it very funny (and also helpful) I hope you enjoy!

Optimal Walking in New York City, a How-To

Walking in the city is a full contact sport. From one professional city walker to another, here’s how I do things.

Please note: this guide is intended for solo walkers. For couples and groups, many of these tactics are sub-optimal; however, they may prove useful for those serving as group leader in the mama duck role. If demand exists, I will expand and modify this guide to include optimal-walking recommendations for dates, business conversations, threesomes, and for groups four and larger. Please enjoy.

Principles

  1. Use the road.
    Don’t be afraid to walk in the street. Sidewalks, particularly downtown, weren’t built with a bustling metropolis in mind and are narrow in many places. If you’re stuck behind a slow-moving tourist, check for motor vehicle traffic, and walk in the street. The lights in NYC are pretty predictable, and likewise the traffic (when it’s not at a standstill). Take advantage.
  2. City blocks are not one-dimensional: cut corners wherever possible.
    If we take a city block and take a look at the cross-section, you’ll notice that streets have dimensions. That is, they have sidewalks, and road, parked cars, and traffic lights.
    Look at all that space between buildings!

    When walking down the street, look for opportunities to cross the street before an intersection or cross walk. But, don’t walk in a straight line across, perpendicular to traffic… cross at an angle.

    The Blue Line is how you’ve likely been doing things. Follow the red line next time… but watch for traffic!

    The other clear advantage to cutting the corner is that you often avoid most of the pedestrian traffic on both the sidewalk and the crosswalk. As discussed with principle #1, use the road. Don’t let dumplings* slow you down.

  3. When aggressively cutting corners and crossing blocks, prioritize avenues over streets.
    Avenues run along Manhattan top-to-bottom whereas streets run cross-town. In general, avenues are wider and are much harder to cross because city engineers prioritize uptown/downtown traffic flow over cross-town traffic. So, cross them when you can, and use the entire road (as in the red-line above.)Cross-town traffic tends to be at a standstill. Coupled with a narrower road, they’re much easier to cross.
  4. Avoid corners of immobility.
    On many street corners, particularly in midtown, some lights block you from crossing the street in either direction. Avoid these where possible.
  5. Show preference towards how the crow flies.
    Usually, walkers travel up/down-town and cross-town. If you max out your amount of up-/down- or left-/right-ness, you’ll be subject to the lights in one direction only– meaning, there’s a lot of waiting around. Sometimes, this is unavoidable, but keep it in mind.
  6. Cut through parks and building tunnels whenever possible.
    This should be obvious but for one caveat: sometimes those tunnels are filled with people. Often not, so check foot traffic density before committing, because they’re no way out.
  7. Avoid touristy areas, unless you don’t mind walking in the street.
    They’re full of dumplings… and for you tourists out there, the streets are where all the celebrity’s walk. They have about as much tolerance for tourists as I do.
  8. Avoid Construction Sidewalks
    You’re much more susceptible to being caught behind a dumpling. And, to boot, the area is often filthy with small ponds forming when it rains. Just walk around, in the street if possible.

I hope this has been helpful.

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*Term coined by Oz Sultan