I was crusing the aisles at Whole PayCheck the other day and noticed these Kettle brand Organic Chipolte Chili Barbeque potato chips. Junk food nowdays comes low sugar, reduced fat, trans-fat free and yes, sigh, organic. I mean you’d hate to be eating any non-organic bad things with those oh so good for you deep fried chips.
The trouble is being a chilie head I had to try them. The worse problem is they taste great. Net weight five oz. Five servings per container — who are they kidding? Once opened that packet is mine. At one serving per container thats 38% of daily calories, 70% of daily total fat, 25% daily saturated fat… but 10g of protein, 40% of daily fibre, 70% of daily vitamin C, and Organic to boot. Hey, almost good for you. Ugh now I’ve really got to go work out at the gym.
posted by darryl at 11:31 am
It is pretty embarrassing when the premier news publication in Silicon Valley can’t get basic email to their readers right. Like not a clue.
I used to get one useful news summary email each morning from the Mercury News. I found it useful and I was more than happy to put up with the advertisements. Over the last few weeks I’ve been getting spammed a few times by the Mercury News with sponsored email from them on behalf of advertisers but the worst is that they seem to be doing insane experiments on their readers with poorly formatted html email. So badly formatted I will not read it. I’m using Yahoo!Mail Beta, but this stuff looks awful under Microsoft Outlook. It looks better under gmail but that’ s because gmail strips the background image, the text formatting and column layout is still awful.
I mean why would anybody with even the slightest clue about html portability try to stick background images in html emails? The screen shots show yesterday’s email rendered in Yahoo!Mail (Beta) and in Microsoft Outlook 2003.
There is just no need for attempting the overly complicated html formatting they are trying to do, and even if the design changes were justified there is no need to be slamming experiments out to all their reader base until have the formatting stable. Oh and you would think that they had email preferences for receiving plain text emails instead of mis-formatted html. Think again (or good luck finding them if they exist). That link at the top “If you cannot see this newsletter correctly, please see out online version here” needs the “If” replaced with a “Since”. Sigh.
posted by darryl at 9:29 am