Pages

Monday, February 24, 2014

Taking care of Exercise




It has been a whole week of Olympics in Sochi and I try not to let that interrupt my weekly exercises. How has it been with you? Have you watched the games and have you kept up with your normal rhythm?


A good start to Skeleton

Today I was taking my daily walk in the morning. This time around the Töölönlahti bay.  First up the Linnanmäki hill and then again down the  hill towards Eläintarha park. There I noticed some children with their sledges and my thoughts jumped to the House of Horrors in the neighboring  amusement park and  “Skeleton”, the Master of the House of Horrors. Taking a few more steps down the here and there icy path my brain combined the children’s sledges to the sport I had watched on TV yesterday: Yes: “Skeleton”. I don’t mean the system that provides the support to my living body but I was thinking about this strange looking Olympic sport discipline where sports men and women will accelerate their sledges down an icy chute.  They are dressed in shiny outfits of fabrics with plastic touch as they rush down with their heads leading the way and their noses nearly touching the fast by passing icy surface. The speed of their sledges reaching up to 135 km per hour they seem to be risking their lives for their sport of choice. And the strange name “Skeleton”?  How did it get there? I remember the sport was named after the bony appearance of the sledge they use.
Then I needed to take a crosswalk to get to the other side of the street and I had to concentrate on the traffic. I walked on and passed the Opera House and kept on going in direction of Finlandia Hall. Quite a lot of people did the same. They were doing the circle around the bay, making a walking distance of about 3 kilometres.  I could not avoid overhearing the discussion as a couple passed me. They were praising the amazing styles and the vocabulary of the snowborders they had watched: “Goofy foot”, “clean air”, “nose grab” and “rail slide”. I smiled and silently accompanied their opinions: Really relaxed sportiness and refreshing language.

Soon I returned home. Walking felt good. It must be a good exercise discipline for me. I admire the people, the sportsmen and women in the Olympics practising their fancy sports and even enjoy watching them in the Games. But I don’t envy them. How about you? What do you think of all this? Have you got a passion to exercise more or are you happy with what you are doing to keep yourself fit? 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Structures of blogging





This is my blog post about the qualities of different blog structures and my comparison between two interesting blog examples. I can somehow sense your enthusiasm although this is not exactly an interactive way to discuss. Anyway I’m certain I can manage to surprise you and catch your attention.  I do have a challenge here, as some of you are experienced bloggers, thus having your own preferences; but I’m confident we share some!

Now on to the Topic for today. I started  browsing this site  “Thirteenth Annual Weblog awards” (http://2013.bloggi.es/ ) that has lists of award winning blogs. After surfing a great number of blog categories I soon felt like a tourist walking around Salzburg, Austria,

Saltzburg, a city of many wonders

looking for  W. A. Mozart, my favourite, if not everybody’s favourite composer. Trying not to get too excited about all the beauty I encounter, I decide to axe every other category of blogs except the category: “Most humorous WebLog”.  I go on with my inspection of the Salzburg of blogs but now just walking through this one block of the city. I realise that it well could be that Mozart never lived in this block. So I forgot about him and just picked two different nice looking blogs for comparison:

The Oatmeal  http://theoatmeal.com/

This is a kind of a toy box, or if you want to take a more adult attitude, a tool box of entertainment. It includes an assortment of humor: Comics, Quizzes, a Blog, Books and even a Web Shop. It’s got lots of checkboxes which offer alternative ways to move forward, sideways or backward.

The Bloggess  http://thebloggess.com/

The structure here is, if I dare say, the traditional one: the post, the reader comments; then after an intermission, the next post, the reader comments for that and so on. The analogies to the music world now come back to my mind. I’m not looking for my favourite composer, but I see The Oatmeal-blog as a symphony orchestra. The reader of the blog has for a moment the power of the conductor:
He can choose the instrument which takes the lead and makes a sound and in which volume. Unfortunately the conductor himself or herself also has the responsibility to have all the members of the orchestra well trained and tuned; there’s a lot of work there.
On the other hand The Bloggess is more like a solo pianist who makes her or his
solo in the rhythm chosen by the blogger, and the readers (listeners) digest it and hopefully respond.

For a moment, be the conductor

Liking – disliking and conclusion

You may well already anticipate what I’m going to say here, but I’ll say it anyway. The blogs in comparison are very much different. At first I thought The Oatmeal was a real mess and a potential target for my dislike, and Bloggess appeared to be just what to expect and very straightforward, easy to like. My conclusion is that both of these blog structures can be justified. It just depends on what are you aiming at with your blog. If you want it to be a day-to-day source of contents with a partly constant content and partly with some often updated current information you may choose the Oatmeal –style. If you aim to offer mainly a current and often updated journal –like service, then you might choose the Bloggess –style.
So I say both are fine. It just depends on what you aim to achieve. What do you think?

Now then, please return your opinion as a comment to my blog text.