The Secret of Dieting Success

Effective long term weight loss is about psychology not biology – we lose weight with our minds not our mouths.

Buy The Geek Diet now Lulu.com

Saturday 19 January 2008

Meet Geek Man

Here he is, in all his glory - the Geek Man from Happyworker.com - you can buy geek man and all his friends.

Notice the poor diet of Geek Man?  He needs the Geek Diet!

Thursday 17 January 2008

LifeHacker loves The Geek Diet down under!

Sarah Stokely of the Australian edition of Lifehacker has written a great review of The Geek Diet which can be read here.

It's great to see the Geek Diet gaining momentum around the world! Geeks of the world unite - and loose weight! 

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Happy Workers love the Geek Diet

Heidi Bedore of happyworker.com has written an excellent article about The Geek Diet and even come up with some excellent new Geek Diet style formulas for dieting geeks to try out, including:

LET SERVING = .2 * BAG OF CHIPS
and 
TANGO ≠ FRUIT SERVING

Brilliant!

Happy Worker make a range of toy figures for the 21st century including Super Mom, Boss Man and of course: Geek Man.  

This is how they describe Geek Man:

With oodles of brain power he authors code, battles tech holy wars and moves nerdom to new heights...

geek superhero and light-hearted take on techy types, GeekMan's a 6-inch tall plastic geek action figure that can be posed in lots of nerdy positions. GeekMan comes equipped with 5 'weapons' of Wisdom and Tech Gadgetry: Visual Input Device (removable glasses), PDA (handheld computer), Cerebral I/O and Trusty Sidekick (laptop), Geek Battery Charger (coffee mug), and Wristwatch. 


Wednesday 2 January 2008

Feliz Año Nuevo

Happy New Year from the south coast of Spain, where the Geek is spending New Year with Mrs Geek's parents in Almunecar, Granada.

Here in southern Spain, it' not just the expected festive feasting that poses a challenge to the Geek's diet- here is another problem - where did all the vegetables go??!!??

It's proving harder than expected to consume half a plate of vegetables for dinner when no vegetables are offered.  There's lots of cheese (Manchego- made from sheep milk)  and Ham (Jamon, made from the salted flesh of raw pork kept in a pit on a mountain side for a year- or so I'm told...) but nary a stick of Broccoli, carrot or bean to be seen on the home stove.  It's not just the domestic cooking either, in the restaurants it is very much the same story.

Now I am being a little disingenuous, as there is lots of Salad to be had... but this geek is not a fan of most salad and while the rain is noisily flooding the cobble streets outside (it is the middle of winter after all!) I want hot food not chilled.

Oh well, not to worry - next week I'll be back in good ole Blighty and able to over-compensate on the veg-front for a few days to make up for it.

Pass the tapas... and a Satsuma please!