Saturday, September 17 2005

This entry doesn't really relate to software development, but nonetheless it covers human behaviour and subconscious decision making that does significantly impact our marketplace.

Here in Canada, a year or so ago there was a big kerfuffle in the federal government concerning transfats - a controversy that got a tonne of press (both by boosters encouraging this consumer protection, and critics who decried it as the actions of a nanny state). Namely, that there were calls to ban transfats from the food system, legally eliminating this purportedly dangerous, artificial fat from grocery shelves. This would have made us the second country, after Denmark, to ban transfats. Transfats are, of course, the hydrogentation of otherwise normal, in-moderation-healthy unsaturated fats, molecularly altered to improve handling (hydrogenated oils are solid at room temperature, and in fryers need to be changed less frequently), and reduced spoilage and possibly consumer convenience - goods stay "fresh" on grocery shelves for longer, while baked goods made with transfats, for instance, often stayed bizarrely fresh out of the package for days. Humorously, a couple of decades ago transfats were seen as the saviour from the evils of saturated fats.

While McDonalds, along with the other big fast-food companies, are addicted to transfats, and they're finding it difficult to cut their use of the stuff, I've been noticing more and more formulation changes on store shelves - I've always been a label reader - with transfats being voluntarily eliminated from whole categories. Occasionally this change has occurred silently (there was a mass migration from trans-fats in potato chip products about a year ago, with only a few of the companies actually noting the dramatic health benefit change), while in other case it has come with a huge marketing campaign. Even for those people blissfully unaware, the quantity of transfats in their diet has plummeted, apart from a couple of hold-outs like McDonald's french fries.

So why has this mass change occurred? I suspect two reasons:

  • The publicity relating to the debate brought this to the attention of the public, and the public started to subconsiously (or consciously) associate transfats with bad things. This subconscious association is enormously effective in altering behaviour at the root level. Children's treats like Goldfish, which used to be made with hearty amounts of transfats, were suddenly like handing your child a pack of cigarettes, which obviously is unacceptable to parents. The Goldfish company, after switching to a transfat free recipe, claimed that they did it out of the goodness of their hearts, and there was little public demand. I suspect that they are being disingenuous, and they knew that their marketshare would disappear if they didn't accommodate this new health information.
  • Legal concerns. Now that everyone knows that transfats are dangerous, and we know that alternatives are possible, food companies are building themselves a massive liability risk with every transfat laden product they ship. It's one thing to rely upon them when there is ignorance, but quite another to turn a blind eye to their dangers when it has been well documented. I suspect a lot of the silent switching has been to limit future legal threats.

Interesting seeing the impact public information, and the future threat of lawsuits, has had upon such a huge part of our marketplace. And in such a short period of time! Government intervention was entirely unnecessary (and might actually have slowed the switch, as what should be a simple health debate would inevitably turn into a bunch of partisan nonsense, with the opposition party and boosters sucking back a tub of hydrogenated oils in the name of freedoms, proclaiming the rights of all Canadians to eat transfats. Such political nonsense is typical in those scenarios, regardless of who is in power and who is across the floor).

   
Friday, September 16 2005
I've unintentionally come across this website several times (today I had a need to reference a double-slit experiment), and each time it has sucked me into meandering through its excellent interactive demonstrations. While this is high-school level physics, if you haven't brushed up in a while it can be eye-opening and educational. The site appears to have been designed some time back, and aesthetically it is subjectively rather dated, but it is pure genius the way it uses interactive elements for education - This is the sort of thing that demonstrates computer and web learning at its finest.
 
Irony (or is it?) - Mental confusion over how to spell genius ("Genious? Hrmmm...")
   
Sunday, September 11 2005

Today's hike was at Rattlesnake Point, a great little conservation area, again featuring the Niagara Escarpment. Rattlesnake Point is located in the Halton Region Conservation Area , just North of Dundas on Appleby Line, North of Burlington, and has trails that attach it to the Bruce Trail (and to other conservation areas). You can see the satellite map here. If you're driving North on Appleby to get there you'll be treated to one of the most interesting roads in the flatlands of the GTA (it's very Italy like, with too narrow of a road twisting and curving at amazing gradations).

Rock Formations

The ropes you see there are evidence of the rock climbers who scale this face, one of the few natural opportunities to do so in this region.  A couple more pictures from today's outing can be found here. This area is a great little day outing, and is absolutely beautiful as fall rolls around.

   
Friday, September 09 2005

Webster's Falls is an interesting little conservation area located (you can actually see the falls right in the center of that map - follow the river coming in from the left, and in the center of the page it disappears below the trees) just North of Hamilton (a little West of Burlington), featuring landscape courtesy of the Niagara Escarpment. Offering two pretty impressive waterfalls (this is the more traditional, but shorter, falls), you can even go up under the falls on one of them. Visiting there with two small children, that option was ruled out when we visited last Saturday.

On the topic of photos, why does every blogger imagine themselves a photographer? Is it the accessibility, or is it the ability to claim some credit for easily capturing a snippet of the beauty that our world drops in our lap every day?

   


About the Author
Dennis Forbes Dennis Forbes is a Toronto-based software architect. While focused primarily on the .NET and SQL Server worlds, Dennis frequently ventures outside of this comfort zone into game development and image processing. He has been published in several industry magazines, has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal and has been interviewed by NPR.

He is a vice president and lead software architect at an innovative New York City hedge fund back-office services firm.

Dennis has been working on solutions for the financial, telecommunications, and power generation markets for over 15 years.





 
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