The very many questions-not-worth-their-own-thread question thread XXVIII

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:confused: Well... crap, I dunno then. You two should just move to Missouri where weirdness like that isn't done. ;)

Now watch Hobbs or Phrossack pop up and say they have to dial 1!

EDIT: I -am- just talking cell phone calls, in case that wasn't understood.


No, I can't really recall having to do that.

I do not have to dial a 1 either.
You just have to dial 10 digits for every call you make.
My cell phone number is tied to the area code where I lived 5 years ago (as Kennegit said actually) and I don't have to dial 10 digits for numbers in either the area code where I was registered or where I live now. I also haven't run into any situations where numbers I dial without the area code are the same in both area code so they went through to the wrong person.

In the US you may keep your phone number if you change carriers/service providers - however, that only applies if you stay within the same area code. If you move to a new area code, the carriers are allowed to change your number (not sure if they really would though).

To get around this, when I switched carriers, I just listed my address to my grandmothers in the old area code with both the new carrier and the old one, waited until I was physically in the area code over Christmas to make the switch, then once the switch was made I changed my address with both carriers back to my real current address.

Sounds elaborate, but when you have a ton of job applications out with your number, you really can't afford to have it change on you.
 
My cell phone number is tied to the area code where I lived 5 years ago (as Kennegit said actually) and I don't have to dial 10 digits for numbers in either the area code where I was registered or where I live now.

True you may not always have to, but the thing that is really neat about cell phones (at least it has always worked for me) is that you CAN, always, dial that whole 10 digit number and it just works. Every time. Never have to think about it. Just weird that Owen and Mars have to sometimes dial one, though. Glad to see you and Phrossack also don't have to deal with it.
 
What is this girl's accent? The bioware forum says several things. Cockney, something called "brummy" whatever, and a couple of others. I don't trust them. I'll believe what you guys tell me.

I think it sounds Southeastern, but rather dubious too. Then again, I thought Leliana's accent sounded dubious until I read that it was her natural accent.

English speakers who have seen King's Speech: did you spot the Australian guy's accent, did you notice it after it was mentioned he was Australian, or was the accent and Australianiness all separate thigns to you?

I didn't notice that he was Australian, no, but this was supposed to be the 1930s, with King's English everywhere in high society. (That's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!)
 
He did get a quite snooty comment at his on-screen audition for Richard III that he was 'not supposed to be King of the Colonies', didn't he?
 
I meant that of course I noticed after it was pointed out, just not beforehand. :)
 
Oh, I'm sure of it. Not only were people a lot more snobby about such things then, people in general are also much better at recognising accents than I am!
 
I just went to the gym for the first time in a whole bunch of years, sat down on a bike, and biked 5.5km. Then I got on the bike right beside it, picked a slightly more challenging course, and biked for 10.5km. It wasn't easy, but it wasn't really tough either. I just kept a good pace and my body worked through it and made it happen. When I got off the bike I had some problems walking, but after 15 seconds that went away. Going down the stairs I probably looked like an idiot, but by the time I got changed everything seemed normal.

But now it's like 3 hours later and the left side of my face is partially .. pink. Okay - I looked at the mirror again - and some of the pinkness is gone.. it's like a very red blush. I think I just figured out that it's blood - due to the hightened amount of oxygen I was pumping through my body? Or something? It's gotta be something like that.

My questions:

1. Is that normal?
2. My plan is to go 3-4 times a week and increase difficulty and length each visit - so that in a couple weeks time I am doing 40km rides every day... or maybe even longer. Is this a good idea, if I want to increase my body's endurance and general fitness?
3. This gym also seems to have weird curved treadmills, rowing machines, and stair climbing machines. Would the stair climbing one be good if I want to get ready for hiking? What's my best option?
4. If I'm walking behind a girl in very tight clothing and I don't want to seem like a creep, but we're going in the exact same direction, and there's nobody else walking nearby, and there's no way to pass her, what the hell do I do? Do I need to turn around and forget going in that direction? If your answer is no, consider that a part of the route takes us up stairs. What now? Is this okay? If it's accepted, then great, I'll keep my distance and try not to stare.. but it seems awfully creepy - a lot of those girls don't really wear much of anything.
5. I told both bikes that I'm 22 years old (not even close). I figured it would make things more challenging - is this a bad idea? I don't want my standards to be of people who are my age. Those people are usually not really in shape. Young people seem to be where it's at and that's where I want to be.
 
Yes, it is a bad idea to use standards not appropriate to your age.
 
I figured it would be "improper" to some degree, but I handled the "medium difficulty" courses designed for that age well enough. Initially I did enter my age, but biking was so easy that I wasn't really doing anything... so everything went up, and the age went down.
 
Next time drive everything up but keep the age where proper.
I don't know about the pink tinge in your face. It might just be heat.
 
But now it's like 3 hours later and the left side of my face is partially .. pink. Okay - I looked at the mirror again - and some of the pinkness is gone.. it's like a very red blush. I think I just figured out that it's blood - due to the hightened amount of oxygen I was pumping through my body? Or something? It's gotta be something like that.

My questions:

1. Is that normal?
2. My plan is to go 3-4 times a week and increase difficulty and length each visit - so that in a couple weeks time I am doing 40km rides every day... or maybe even longer. Is this a good idea, if I want to increase my body's endurance and general fitness?
3. This gym also seems to have weird curved treadmills, rowing machines, and stair climbing machines. Would the stair climbing one be good if I want to get ready for hiking? What's my best option?
4. If I'm walking behind a girl in very tight clothing and I don't want to seem like a creep, but we're going in the exact same direction, and there's nobody else walking nearby, and there's no way to pass her, what the hell do I do? Do I need to turn around and forget going in that direction? If your answer is no, consider that a part of the route takes us up stairs. What now? Is this okay? If it's accepted, then great, I'll keep my distance and try not to stare.. but it seems awfully creepy - a lot of those girls don't really wear much of anything.
5. I told both bikes that I'm 22 years old (not even close). I figured it would make things more challenging - is this a bad idea? I don't want my standards to be of people who are my age. Those people are usually not really in shape. Young people seem to be where it's at and that's where I want to be.

1. It is probably fine unless you have some other skin condition. I notice it especially after working out in the cold, but you are going to get a little flush even working out indoors.

2. 3-4 times a week is good, you might want to structure your exercise routine to have shorter rides during the week and a long ride on the weekend with a day off before and after to rest up. Do it gradually, don't be afraid to repeat a week if you barely made it.

3. I generally stick with treadmills and bikes, but ellipticals are good for low-impact exercise (esp. good if you are really overweight or have knee/ankle problems). I guess stair climbers would help for hiking, but I have more experience going for the free weights + running route. Really, anything that gradually builds up your endurance will be good for that if you aren't going to be fiercely competitive about it. I like rowing for variety but it's not the #1 exercise for hikers.

4. Uh, you stare at her butt and you pretend to be fiddling with your phone/music player if she turns around. And you appreciate it!

5. Depends on how the bike is programmed. If you could set the intensity separately, it didn't matter, and that's true for most of the machines I've seen. Generally, your age is used to calculate stuff with your pulse (whether you are in the fat-burning regime or intense cardio regime). So long as you didn't feel yourself going light-headed, it's a perfectly appropriate program to try again next time you go. Same thing with your weight, it's used to calculate how many calories you burned, not determine the intensity of the exercise.
 
Hey, thanks for the insightful answers! I will only be going to this gym on weekdays - it's an 8 minute walk from my work and on my way home... so the plan is to basically show up after work a couple times a week and rest on weekends. I am hoping to at least do Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, but want to throw in Tuesdays and/or Thursdays if I'm feeling up for it.

I have some problems with my knees, not big ones mind you.. they only flare up if I'm hiking large distances over a couple days and I'm not being careful and am overextering myself.. so I'd prefer not to run too much. Weights I will probably do some of, but I think I have plenty of strength in both my upper and lower body, so I don't really need to focus on that. My main focus is going to be conditioning, fitness, and cardio. I think. I am considering incorporating swimming into the routine too - maybe once a week? The pool at the gym looks amazing.
 
No, no, no, no. Don't start it going every day. Try two days a week, then after a couple weeks add another day, after another few weeks another day, and so on.
 
1. Is that normal?
2. My plan is to go 3-4 times a week and increase difficulty and length each visit - so that in a couple weeks time I am doing 40km rides every day... or maybe even longer. Is this a good idea, if I want to increase my body's endurance and general fitness?
3. This gym also seems to have weird curved treadmills, rowing machines, and stair climbing machines. Would the stair climbing one be good if I want to get ready for hiking? What's my best option?
4. If I'm walking behind a girl in very tight clothing and I don't want to seem like a creep, but we're going in the exact same direction, and there's nobody else walking nearby, and there's no way to pass her, what the hell do I do? Do I need to turn around and forget going in that direction? If your answer is no, consider that a part of the route takes us up stairs. What now? Is this okay? If it's accepted, then great, I'll keep my distance and try not to stare.. but it seems awfully creepy - a lot of those girls don't really wear much of anything.
5. I told both bikes that I'm 22 years old (not even close). I figured it would make things more challenging - is this a bad idea? I don't want my standards to be of people who are my age. Those people are usually not really in shape. Young people seem to be where it's at and that's where I want to be.

1. Never heard of it. Make some doctor friends, there are probably some at the gym.
2. Eh, it's fine, but sounds boring. I'd probably try for more intensity and less distance to save on time. Or get some podcasts to listen to while you bike.
3. I dunno that it makes a whole lot of difference. I've never found hikes particularly taxing muscle-wise. If there's a lot of elevation gain it can be tiring, but breaks and/or slowing down make it fine. Chafing and sun exposure have been my biggest challenges.
4. I mostly ignore everyone at the gym and listen to my podcasts. If you want to stare at girls, you need to bounce reflections off at least a couple mirrors to appear non-obvious.
5. I'm fairly lazy when it comes to precise measurements, particularly when the bike probably isn't good at it and doesn't have particularly good programs put in anyway. Just go by what feels challenging, and remember what settings you used the previous time. Note them down on your phone/podcast device/notebook if you can't remember.

I have some problems with my knees, not big ones mind you.. they only flare up if I'm hiking large distances over a couple days and I'm not being careful and am overextering myself.. so I'd prefer not to run too much. Weights I will probably do some of, but I think I have plenty of strength in both my upper and lower body, so I don't really need to focus on that. My main focus is going to be conditioning, fitness, and cardio. I think. I am considering incorporating swimming into the routine too - maybe once a week? The pool at the gym looks amazing.

I wouldn't avoid running because of knees, studies show that running correlates with healthy knees. I'm much more familiar with ankle issues and related treatment than knees, but I'd look at related balance exercises and exercises that target stabilizer muscles to the knee.

Lifting shouldn't be thought of as being in opposition to cardio - crossfit-like (I'm not a big fan of crossfit, for various reasons, but it's popular enough to have lots of source) routines work cardio pretty much as well as any dedicated cardio workout. You can get a lazy version with pretty much any lifts by just replacing all your rest periods between sets with burpees.

Swimming's awesome. I can't do it, but highly recommended exercise.
 
2. Don't do too much at start. As said before, go there twice a week to start, let your muscle rest between training session. And when you are sure your body can handle, increase duration/difficulty and frequency, but aim for the long term.
4. Maybe is she is wearing a tight fitting leggins, she wants you too look ;).

Swimming would be nice.

And you should incorporate stretching and flexibility exercice.

Don't neglect upper body.

If you want to be fit, you should work everything!
 
Pink face might mean you're still a bit hot and your capillaries are expanding at the surface of your skin to release heat via your blood. If you put more clothes on over the rest of your body after working out then your face might be the best place to release heat, hence greater redness on your face 3 hours after than 3 minutes after. You said you felt faint after working out: you should drink plenty of fluids and make sure that your salt levels are adequate. Your body might be particularly prone to expanding your capillaries in order to release heat (i.e. more so than other people, who might just be naturally better at cooling by sweating than you); if that's the case then you'll feel faint as your blood pressure lowers and less blood reaches your brain.

I wouldn't worry about it unless you feel super faint or start feeling pain.

I AM NOT A DOCTOR
 
Resting seems like a good idea, but I just woke up and my legs aren't feeling any of the workout at all. I think if I go tomorrow I would be fine. I guess I'll see how I feel tomorrow morning.

And I meant I felt fine after the workout, maybe there was a typo. My legs felt super powerful but I couldn't use most of my muscles. I felt a bit like a robot and walked funny for 1-3 minutes. Everything else was fine, I wasn't really out of breath (which surprised me actually)

And as if Mise is not a doctor.
 
4. Don't change where you walk to avoid being creepy. People who go to gyms expect to be in close quarters with other people and your situation isn't really that creepy.

What is creepy? Staring or trying to strike up a conversation with a chick that is in the middle of a workout.
 
I asked that question because I was behind her on the stairs with nobody there - she knew there was a dude there behind her. She knew that it would have been easy for me to stare at her perfect butt. She probably assumed that was exactly what I was doing. It made me feel awkward and like I was invading her privacy. And that's not my style. I felt like I was put in a situation that I didn't enjoy being in, while at the same time it was niiice (borat voice).
 
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