Categories
App Reviews

Endless Alphabet Review – A Fun Way For Children to Learn Words

Endless Alphabet is a cute and fun app that teaches spelling, words, letters, and letter sounds. I purchased it several months ago, and it is now one of my daughter’s favorite apps.

It’s simple to use, and there are not any detailed instructions to follow. Any child that can drag the cute monster letters across the screen should be able to play and learn. If your child is like mine, they want to use the iPad without help (and often can), so the simplicity here is a big win.

Endless Alphabet word selection screen

How it Works

The app begins with a selection of words to choose from, one for each letter of the alphabet. After selecting a word, it appears on the screen for a few seconds before a crew of monsters storm across the screen and knock the letters aside, leaving just a the grey shadows of the original word in their wake. The player must then drag the letters back where they belong.

This is where the action begins… While dragging, the letters wiggle and make the sounds of the letter being dragged. If the letter is placed correctly, it locks down. Place the wiggling letter in the wrong location and a sad, “wah-wah” sound indicates that the player should try again. The letters to not need to be placed on the word in the correct order.

Endless Alphabet monsters scrambling the letters of the word
When the word is completed, another cute and often humorous animation sequence is played reinforcing the word pronunciation and meaning.

Categories
Science Technology

International Space Station (ISS) Funding

It’s nice to learn that the current administration decided to extend funding for the International Space Station (ISS) through 2024. Seems like a no brainer to me. The station cost $150 billion to build. I think a mere $3 billion per year to maintain (which I can only assume includes supply/experiment launches and crew changes) is almost nothing when you consider the value of having the ability to conduct orbital experiments and improve the human ability to survive in space. I also would like to believe that since it’s an “International” station that other nations are contributing to the upkeep as well. In any case, I don’t want to throw away the $150 billion we spent on the ISS before we’re ready for the next step.

The Next Step

Space StationWhat is the next step? I like to think that the next step into space is a more robust space station. Something like the space station in 2001 would be fine with me, but I’m open to other ideas. It just needs to be something that can act as a “launchpad” for humans to reach deeper into space from Earth.

I have a strong belief that humans need to move beyond Earth. If the human race is to survive for a VERY long time we need to colonize other planets (in other solar systems) and need to continue the steps that take us there. A comet or asteroid could arrive at Earth at any time and completely destroy what has taken humans thousands of years to develop.

Why Keep an Orbital Presence?

Benefits. Huge benefits. The following is a short list of the benefits of NASA research:

  • Microcomputers
  • Advanced Keyboard Design
  • Water Purification
  • Portable Coolers/Warmers
  • Dustbuster
  • Shock Absorbing Helmets
  • High Density Batteries
  • Solar Energy
  • Pollution Measuring Devices
  • Radioactive Leak Detector
  • Air Purification
  • Breast Cancer Detection
  • Ultrasound Scanner
  • MRI
  • Wireless Communications
  • Robotic Hands
  • New Wing Designs for Jets

A more complete list can be found at the Santa Ana College website.

Buck Stops Here

The United States government (partially my tax dollars) has spend a lot more than $3 billion each year on things that help far fewer people than the International Space Station (ISS). The benefits the United States and humans have gained through space exploration cannot be underestimated. The ISS should continue to be funded until plans for a new, better station are finalized and construction is underway. It’s what I would do if I had the power to do so.

Categories
Health and Fitness

Get Moving – Fitness Plan to Lose Weight Part 3

If you haven’t already, you might want to read through Eat Better Foods – Fitness Plan to Lose Weight Part 1 and Should You Count Calories? – Fitness Plan to Lose Weight Part 2 before reading this.

It’s Time to Move It

Almost every morning, my alarm buzzes to signal the start of a new day. I say, “almost every morning” because sometimes I wake a few minutes early and shut it off before it can cut through the cool morning air with that awful sound. Either way, I’m not able to jump right out of bed and get moving… it’s a process. It takes a few minutes, and my responsibilities of helping get the kids to school and getting myself ready for work ultimately take priority, so I get up, start moving and every reason I had to stay in bed disappears. It’s a new day, and time to get moving and get something accomplished.

My point is that while sometimes we would rather stay in bed, in a nice pocket of warmth and not move at all, our bodies were designed to move around. Our hunter gatherer ancestors had to move frequently, or else be killed and eaten by something bigger and more fierce. They also had to move around to hunt their own food. Walking slowly at times and sprinting at other times.

Woman Running

To lose weight effectively and be healthy, we all need to move around. If you’re like me, when you simply get moving and exercise on a regular basis, you feel better, and it’s even easier to eat better. The best part is that moving around doesn’t mean you have to use a treadmill or get a gym membership. You can do anything you enjoy that gets you moving. If you like walking, walk. If you like running, run. If you like swimming, swim. If you like dancing, dance. If you like walking the treadmill at the gym, then go do that.

High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT)

There is one key exercise technique I’ve found to help accelerate the weight loss. It’s called high intensity interval training (or HIIT). Our hunter gatherer ancestors knew about it, but they did it merely to survive. Whatever the activity you choose, be sure to vary the intensity throughout. When done properly, the body will burn fat for energy (long after you’ve completed your HIIT workout) instead of getting energy from other sources. There was a key study published in 2012 to support this position, and, in my personal experience, it is the style of aerobic workout that made me feel the best and was the most fun.

HIIT alternates between high and low intensity exercise for a relatively short total workout time (it should take no more than 40 minutes or so, including warm up and cool down). In my opinion, short workouts are great because they let me do the other things in life I enjoy.

Using running as an example, HIIT training would be running as fast as you can (high intensity) for a short period of time (30 to 40 seconds), then a slow jog or fast walk (low intensity) for a longer period of time (one to two minutes). The exact times will vary depending on your fitness level. As fitness level improves, the low intensity time can get shorter, but should never be less than the high intensity time
interval.

Alternate between the high and low intensities for between 12 and 30 minutes. By the time you finish you should be very tired, and hopefully surprisingly energized.

The HIIT technique can be applied to just about any aerobic activity by alternating the intensity. In addition, some studies have found that HIIT accelerates fat loss. Just two of the many reasons I like incorporating high intensity interval training as par of my routine.