Posts Tagged ‘paul’
Paul Frank Space The answer
The Garmin Forerunners initially were a big scare for me
All the buttons, functions and applying heart rate got me fidgetin’
I used to heavily use the Nike+ Sportband with sensor pouches
It was straight forward – single button use and will last for long duration uses
Once th Sportband started showing signs of times drawing near – I decided to go for the Garmin Forerunners
I saw little price difference when looking at the 305 the 205, so I went with the 305 for the HR reading
When the box came in – out comes the Garmin AND an HR Strap
So I tested just with the Forerunner alone – it worked great
Did it a second time with an elevated path – once again a great read
Then I gave the HR strap a try – Boy it was actually cool seeing the HR flux about silly to the run
A 1/2Marathon run with HR really was test to see if the strap becomes an irritant for longer runs
It feels little bit tight (not constricted / fixed) and it holds position well
The software is a bit clunky – but it gives great readoffs and a rough visual of the path taken
Has issue of not getting rid of some unwanted recordings
The Forerunners does give some pain to the wrist and according to spec would not operate past 8hrs in GPS mode
That could become detrimental in future if I start doing runs exceeding 8hr (I may have to buy another one to keep going!?!)
PROS:
Thorough information readoff (Ele, HR, Pace, Distance, Lap)
Weather / Sweat Resistant
Program-capable to acknowledge downtimes, walk times and Lapping
Relatively straight forward program for PC / Mac
CONS:
Pains associated to the Forerunners physical build
Short lifespan in GPS mode
No info on Linux / OSS Install?
Paul Frank The Space
Why must Body Sebastian Paul Design
The issue I have with this author is the obvious intent to deceive the potential readers into thinking this is based on Christian beliefs. And with young target audiences, it is very scary. This book is another “new age” individual belief system that is deceptively titled Conversations with God. It seems to support man’s selfish viewpoint of tell me what I want to hear, rather than what is right. Living a life based on long-standing, steadfast beliefs is not easy in todays me-me-me world. This book is too accepting of any and all behavior and actually states there is no sin! While over 35,000 Christian religions have sprouted over the last 500 years, they have mostly been based on someone’s interpretation of the Christian foundation of the Bible. Many of the “answers” provided in the book are totally opposite of what our Christian God teaches to be true. The title should at least be conversations with my god.
Paul Sebastian Design Body | ntmconline