Update soon.
Look out tomorrow evening. Ryan has been doing some great work with Simpleweight. We’ll be doing a minor upgrade Sunday, Jan 6, 2008. There may be some down time between 9pm and 12am updated: 6pm – 9pm CST.
There are no big feature changes for paying customers. (Those will come soon.) But, we do have some changes. I’ll detail later.
Thanks for your patience.
Weight Loss incubator?

Sometimes baby chicks just need to incubate.
As you can probably tell, my brother and I took most of the past five months off from serious Simpleweight development. We made sure to continue using simpleweight in some capacity or another. We prepared a blog post or two (some are still unpublished waiting for future dates). We made sure simpleweight was working and continued to provide personalized service to our subscribers, but we delayed some feature development.
Like newborns learning how to adjust their own body temperature right after birth, we wanted simpleweight to incubate.
By stepping away for the summer and fall, we were able to gain some perspective and motivation. Not to mention, we were also able to enjoy the time off for play time with families, running a triathlon – great job Ryan, bring a new baby into the world – that’s why Scott is tired, and generally just concentrate on fun and other work.
Funny thing about stepping away. When you come back to a passion that you set aside to incubate. One gains a greater understanding of the whole picture. Our huge simpleweight to do feature list we had is not as huge.
We can re-evaluate:
- Do you really need this new feature we’re planning?
- Is this the best way to complete that task?
- Is this getting real with weight management?
- Our we meeting our stated goals and mission?
Let’s step back: What’s our Philosophy?
Our philosophy is to make weight management so simple you’ll actually do it. Food In = Food Out.
Funny thing about newborns. They just seem to know how to moderate their temperature and know how to eat and grow. Same thing with chicks in an incubator. They get out of the incubator and then grow and grow with a beauty a child adores. Natural organic healthy moderated growth.
That’s our plan. Take our new perspective and follow the natural organic moderated growth pattern of simpleweight. We’ll go where the simpleweight users take us.
So, What’s next?
- We’re (I should say Ryan is) migrating Simpleweight to the latest Rails 2.0 release. We’re making some bug fixes and stabilizing some internals.
- After we iron out these technical details, We’re going to add some new features we’ve been promising such as implementing the Simple Weight Club, Simpleweight Workouts, Forums, and User Interface changes. (One at a time of course, it’s much better and easier to do it the slow weigh.)
Stay Tuned for more information on our pending release.
Remember, If there is one thing we can do to help you achieve your weight management goals, tell us, and we’ll do our best to help you!
Let us know what you think should be next for Simpleweight?
Photo Credit: Watching the Hatching via Flickr, by Troy B Thompson
Pay it forward – Simple Weight Loss style!
Leo Babauta from zenhabits.net is sponsoring a pay it forward web event, and I am giving away free 12 month simpleweight subscriptions. To learn how to receive your subscription, keep reading.
What is a pay it forward web event?
The purpose of the event is to bring people closer and restore kindness
To quote Leo quoting Ben Franklin:
Here’s Ben Franklin on this concept:
I do not pretend to give such a Sum; I only lend it to you. When you […] meet with another honest Man in similar Distress, you must pay me by lending this Sum to him; enjoining him to discharge the Debt by a like operation, when he shall be able, and shall meet with another opportunity. I hope it may thus go thro’ many hands, before it meets with a Knave that will stop its Progress. This is a trick of mine for doing a deal of good with a little money.
To Demonstrate the goodness of Humanity, The idea is to perform some act of kindness, but with the intention of never receiving anything in return except asking the person to perform some act of kindness to someone else in the future.
So instead of paying me back, you need to pay it forward.
Leo mentioned he would link to my website if I perform some act of kindness. I don’t know if he will or will not link to me.
(Leo if you’re reading this and you do choose to link to my fantastic simple weight loss site. Thank you.) Regardless, I plan to participate.
What do I have to give to fulfill my act of kindness?
- First, I have some positive inspiring comments I can give to my family and friends.
- Second, I have some stuff (clothing, home furnishings, technology items) I will bring to the local goodwill.
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle to clean the environment. - Finally, I will give free 12 month subscriptions to use simple weight to the first 12 people who leave a comment on this post describing how they will use our website to better handle their weight management goals.
(I recommend SMART goals).
What do I ask in return?
- You truly need to dedicate yourself to using the site. We want you to reach your weight management goal. Using the site can be as simple as entering your weight weekly or tracking exercise habits daily.
- Of course, I will trust you to pay it forward and help someone else down the road.
I know you do not want to be the Knave to stop the progress of random kindness.
Remember, weight management is as easy as food in = food out.
Simpleweight outage planned
We’ve been notified by our service provider slicehost.com, that we’ll be experiencing an outage sometime between 0600 – 1000 GMT Nov 9.
If my calculations are correct, that would mean sometime between 12:00 AM CST – 04:00 AM CST.
If you’d like to read more, you can read about the outage at our VPS provider: http://blog.slicehost.com & http://status.slicehost.com/
Thanks for your patience.
3 Tips to help you start Eating Salads as a Meal.
The three tips for helping you Eat Salads as a meal are:
- Home-made Salad Dressing
- Add Protein
- Experiment

When I go out to eat, I never just order a salad. I usually order a salad as an appetizer then eat my entire main course. You can guess that with today’s growing portion sizes, my waist grows. You might ask:
Why do I even order a salad?
Because everywhere you look, the experts say eat more vegetables. Eating salads are easy way to add those vegetables. Eating Salads also helps cut down on eating the larger meal and reduces your total caloric intake assuming you stop eating when your body tells you to. Yet, Salads at restaurants have always been difficult for me to order. I think it’s always, because there are so many other good things I want to eat.
What about at home? Do I eat a salad at home for a meal?
Nope. I just never really liked salads for a meal. It took me a long time to figure out why. Like any good computer training, hacking scientist, I began to study the situation.
First define the knowns: What is my normal home-made salad? For my typical salad, I’d put lettuce, green pepper, cucumber, carrots, and red onion. Then, I add a store-bought salad dressing usually a Paul Newman’s or Kraft’s dressing. So far, nothing really sticks out why I cannot eat that salad as a meal. So, I let the situation stew for a while and let my mind take over.
Fast forward to recent times, while visiting friends in Orlando, I had a great home-made salad. In fact, The salad was enough for my meal. Why was I satisfied with that salad as a meal? What was different with that salad than the salad I make?
- An ex-Disney Chef made the salad, and all I had to do was eat. (Doesn’ t it always taste better when someone else makes it?)
- The salad had crisp bacon and sunflower seeds.
- The salad had homemade dressing.
PRESTO. I have my solution, and I now eat salads for meals. All I do is ask my ex-Disney Chef friend to make salads for me and ship them from Florida to Illinois.
As much as I’d like that, the feasibility, not to mention the lettuce, starts to break down around Tennessee.
Yet, I still found my solution. If you compare my salad to the Disney chef prepared salad, What’s different? The homemade dressing and the protein, and that’s what I add to make my salad a meal. Here’s my recipe:
A Simple Salad Recipe (~175 calories)
Ingredients
- 3 to 6 Green Leaves of Lettuce (~115 grams)
Note you can substitute whatever lettuce you like. - 0.5 Medium Green Pepper (~25 grams)
- 0.5 Medium Cucumber (~120 grams)
- 1 Medium Carrot (~35 grams)
- 1 Tablespoon good Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- 1 Tablespoon Red Wine Vinegar -or- Balsamic Vinegar -or- Lemon juice
- 1 Teaspoon Italian Seasoning
- Dash of Fresh Ground Pepper (to taste)
- Dash of Fresh Ground Sea Salt (to taste)
- (optional) 2 pieces of fresh microwaved cooked bacon
- (optional) 2 tablespoons Feta Cheese
- (optional) 2 tablespoons Almonds, Sunflower Seeds, or some other seed/nut
- (optional) 1 clove fresh minced garlic
Directions
- Mix Vinegar, Olive Oil, and Italian Seasoning. and set aside.
- Rinse and Wash Vegetables
- Chop Lettuce into desired size
- Chop Green Pepper and Cucumber into bite sizes
- Use a Vegetable Peeler and Peel Carrots into thin slices
- Toss Vegetables and Dressing together in a bowl
- Add Any of your optional items (Bacon, Cheese, Almonds) and Toss Salad again
- Add Fresh Ground Pepper and Sea Salt and Toss
- Serve on a nice big plate
- Enjoy
One benefit to home-made salad dressing, is I now have a healthier salad due to the lack of typical store-bought High Fructose Corn Syrup in my Salad Dressing.
What are my 3 tips to help you start Eating Salads as Meals?
- Make your own Salad Dressing and Use the best extra virgin olive oil you can afford. It makes a ton of difference
- Add protein to the salad. Such as: Almonds, Bacon, Chicken, Ham, Salami, and/or Cheese. The protein really helps impact the meal and accelerates your fat burn. Although, I’ll save that for a future blog post.
- Experiment to find your own tastes.
If you’d like more tips for a good salad: Eric Gower posted 7 great tips for the immaculately Dressed Salad. After reading his article, I realized that I had been doing what he suggested for the past two months, and that’s how I started eating Salads as a meal. I make my dressing count, add protein, and experiment.
Do you have any tips to help someone start eating salads as meals?


