Hazardous Effects of Gaming

All things in moderation could be the byline of this story. Computerworld brings to light a CDC study that apparently says gamers are 35, overweight and sad

The average gamer, far from being a teen, is actually a 35-year-old man who is overweight, aggressive, introverted — and often depressed, according to a report out this week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

The study correlates gaming with indoor inactivity, which then correlates to health problems and loneliness. This hardly seems to be a direct causation argument. Perhaps that is why the CDC is not issuing a statement that games cause obesity and depression.

I noted that the data is derived from an online survey of fewer than 600 people in Seattle, Washington between the ages of 19-90. Is someone in the target group most likely to buy a game, especially if they live in a cold and rainy climate, or can we blame gaming for them becoming the target group? Must be tricky to make conclusions about teens when the majority (13-18) aren’t even in the survey (probably to avoid the complication of surveying minors).

The study notes that half of gamers are between 18 and 49 years old, while 25% are 50 and older. The CDC also pointed out that of online gamers aged 8 to 34, nearly 12% showed multiple signs of addiction.

The percentage might go up if more teens were allowed to answer the survey. On top of suspicious data collection gaps, it also seems some are quick to expand the study findings to anything related to a computer.

Jim McGregor, an analyst at In-Stat, noted that his concern isn’t just with gaming but with social networks, as well.

“My issue is that it’s not just gaming. It’s social networking. It’s the Web in general,” said McGregor. “We’ve gained so much, but still it puts people in front of a computer screen for hours on end. It gives Americans just another reason to be fat, dumb and lazy.”

Harsh words considering a causal connection is missing. It’s the web. It’s social networking. It’s information. Clearly, as found in this study of a small group in Seattle, filling your head with facts and data and sitting around and working at a desk is the route to being dumb and lazy. Save yourself now. Why are you still reading this? Go away (not to Seattle) and run on a treadmill until you’re smart and happy.

In an apparent contradiction to the above survey results, Computerworld also wants you to know that men aged 25-49 are the group most likely to be found in cafes with their computer. They don’t just sit at home anymore.

The survey also found that 67% of cafe Wi-Fi users were 25-49, 74% were male and 66% had a household income of $50,000 or more. About 44% of the cafe users reported working for small companies of fewer than 99 workers, indicating the value of a Wi-Fi-enabled cafe as a kind of nomadic office.

This all suggests that surveys of groups using computers will find a majority of them are middle-aged men with a steady income. Some of them stay at home, some go out. Some are happy, some sad, some overweight, some fit. This does not suggest to me that using a computer will make you a middle-aged man with a steady-income, or that the flow of information that comes from a computer causes depression and obesity…

Clean Diesel Locomotives

California was awarded millions this summer for new Clean Diesel Projects

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced today that it has awarded $25 million for clean diesel projects in California under the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA) of 2009 National Clean Diesel Funding Assistance Program

A single clean-burning diesel locomotive engine can cost $1.6 million, so companies like California Northern Railroad (CFNR) have been encouraged to upgrade by federal and state financial incentives. 80 percent of the cost of the new CFNR 501 engine came fom the Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program at the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. Likewise, Caltrans is upgrading their fleet.

The first Caltrans locomotive to be upgraded is a Model F59PHI originally built by Electro-Motive Diesel in October 2001. EMD has installed a 710ECO™ Repower upgrade package with the latest microprocessor-controlled locomotive engine technology for lower emissions, increased fuel economy, greater reliability and predictable maintenance costs. The newly upgraded locomotive will now achieve EPA Tier 2 emissions performance – two levels cleaner than required for this model.

Thus it has taken state laws, local and national grants, as well as 40% more fuel efficiency, and concern about health quality (85% particulate matter reduction in the new engines) to get the railroads to finally get moving in this direction.

“Hacker-free” Iomega ix4 NAS

Iomega marketing materials give a good laugh on their new ix4 NAS products:

Other security features include robust username and password authorized access, and RSA BSAFE encryption technology for hacker-free installs and upgrades.

What? Does this mean if you are a hacker you are unable to choose a username, set a password, or enable RSA BSAFE? Sounds like some amazing security technology. Hacker-free? Can’t wait to get my hands on one.

Seriously, though, it’s nice to see that a self-contained automatically configured 2TB device costs under $700. Network admins should be considering rules right now to detect Iomega mac addresses. One of these things pops up on the network and you can almost bet trouble is coming — “hacker-free” trouble.

DHS Report on IT

News from the US government:

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Information Technology Sector Coordinating Council (IT SCC) today released the IT Sector Baseline Risk Assessment (ITSRA) to identify and prioritize national-level risks to critical sector-wide IT functions while outlining strategies to mitigate those risks and enhance national and economic security.

The news release claims the ITSRA “validates the resiliency of key elements of IT sector infrastructure”.

That sounds suspiciously like the SAS70 approach to security where audits can be targeted to very limited areas of an organization and success is never measured across the whole.

Key elements?

Reduce scope enough and success is found somewhere. I think Calvin and Hobbes had a nice variation of this. It was a graphic of a snowman with just two balls — no head. Calvin stood back in admiration and said something about the secret to good-self esteem comes from lowering expectations until they are already met. Here’s another variation from Calvin that will have to do until I can dig up the one I remember:

I’m not saying that is now the case here, as I have not finished reading the full report yet, but the press release language is already steering me in that direction.