Deano’s answer to: “How do you hula hoop?”

The easiest way to hoop is the simple waist hooping motion: 

  1. stand in the middle of the hoop
  2. place the inside of the hoop against the small of your back
  3. place your dominant foot about a step ahead of your other foot, comfortably apart, no more than shoulder-length
  4. lean forward a bit, then push the hoop into a spin with your dominant hand forward (for right-handers, this will cause a counter-clockwise motion)
  5. gently rock back and forth between your two legs – NOT moving your hips/waist in a circle, but simply forward and back.
  6. The goal is to push back against the inside edge of the hoop as your weight is on your rear leg, and forward into it as your weight hits the front leg.

It can take a while to get used to, but the main key is to focus on that front-back rocking motion, and synchronizing with the hoop's rotation.

If you run into trouble, you may want to google "hoopdance", or perform a Youtube search on "hula hoop for beginners", for access to many straightforward video demonstrations like this one:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o…

Good luck and good hooping!

How do you hula hoop?

Deano’s answer to: “In TRON: Legacy, how difficult would it be for Olivia Wilde (the actress who plays Quorra) to run around in her high heel boots?”

Theoretically? Impossible! In reality? Not all that hard.
The image above depicts the Glamour Magazine-sponsored "High Heels Race", an annual event in Moscow Russia that is also spreading to other countries like Finland and the Netherlands.

The photos still look pretty awkward, perhaps, so you might want to check out the video of one of the events: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f…

They're running pretty darn flat-out, with a minimum requirement of 3.5" heels on[*].

Quorra's heels don't look quite that high – and being wedges, they are probably much less fragile/dangerous than stilettos.

Thus, I would say that there's plenty of evidence that, with practice, Olivia Wilde could run quite easily in high heels – though the boots from her Tron: Legacy costume would be more challenging than regular daily-wear fashion stilts.

As Eunji Choi points out in her answer, if you're considering an actual run in the "real world", stilettos are probably your best bet all around, with stiletto boots leading the pack… One caveat – Quorra's wedge-style heels are going to have much greater potential ground-touch surface area, which will mean easier stopping once you're a skilled heel-runner. Also, the more heel there is on the boot, the harder it will be to accidentally break off (and when you do, broken boots will be the least of your problems).

[* Glamour ran a similar race in NYC, but the minimum heel was 2.75", hardly sporting! ]

How difficult would it be for Olivia Wilde (the actress who plays Quorra) to run around in her high heel boots?

Deano’s answer to: “Assuming you had a “super brain” (iq >1000) where everything you read just clicked in, how long would it take to amass enough knowledge to be able to build an iron man like suit?”

The other answers make several excellent points about the super brain's failure to reduce absolute R&D time on all the component parts of an Iron Man suit.

However, if a non-imprisoned Tony Stark wanted to make such a suit from his office under no physical duress, the tactics involved would likely be primarily the purview of his super-brain:

  • Quickly generating a list of required components for the suit
  • Identifying any components for which the technology did not exist
  • Locating all of the patents, companies and people worldwide needed to create these "sci fi" components in the fastest manner possible
  • Recruiting, purchasing, or licensing said personnel, materials, and organizations in a friendly manner
  • Tricking/coercing any unwilling partners as needed by quickly determining their vulnerabilities and exploiting them
  • And of course, all the while, sectioning off a small portion of brain activity to make the required financial investments and other business/social moves to generate the necessary funding and connections to pull everything off without significant competitor/government intervention.

Ultimately, whether you are a "regular" super-brain, or a comic hero like Tony Stark, you cannot actually invent/create everything on your own. Rather, you must use your "brain powers" to:

  • manage a huge number of simultaneous initiatives at the highest possible levels,
  • possess (and continually develop) a huge store of functional knowledge across almost every imaginable field,
  • and quickly identify, vet, and persuade a great number of the world's best and brightest people to work on a challenge that in most likelihood cannot be fully or openly revealed to any of them.

Given this answer, it should be far less odd that Tony Stark is portrayed not only as brilliant, but also a party-loving playboy: super-brains make super-schmoozing that much more important and valuable. A lot of the most brilliant SV Tech CEOs could probably take a lesson from that.

Assuming you had a "super brain" (iq >1000) where everything you read just clicked in, how long would it take to amass enough knowledge to be able to build an iron man like suit?

Deano’s answer to: “Should English-speaking parents have their children learn Chinese to prepare them for the future?”

As a semi-competent learner of languages as an adult, I'd say Dan Holiday is pretty solidly on to something with his "yes/no" answer… But it applies much more contextually against the backdrop of "an American living in America, primarily working in a role that does not interact with Chinese clients/bosses/etc a great deal".

Basically, Chinese is a valuable asset if you think you'll ever need/want to work or live in a Chinese-speaking nation, or if you will work with Chinese speakers a great deal.

And in that light, learning Mandarin Chinese while young has numerous advantages over another popular language – it is actually a very difficult language to learn not only to speak fluently, but also to read and write, for someone whose primary language is English.

Young language students are often much quicker to pick up a second or even third language – my 3 year-old speaks Japanese better than me already, has above-average but non-stellar English, and has memorized a dozen common children's songs in both, plus Chinese! Oh yeah, and now that she's talking non-stop, her sign language is going to hell. Kids.

If I had to make a solid recommendation based on overall usefulness/life fulfillment, I'd recommend learning English, plus 1-2 languages that use a significantly different alphabet (cyrillic, Arabic, character-based, etc) as a child.

Not to knock French or Spanish, for example, but both have lots of English-friendly cognates – due to the flow of history, both have deposited large quantities of their language into our own, and in turn all our American ingenuity has imbued these older languages with new words mostly based on things we've invented in the last 100 years[*]. Because of this, learning such languages as an adult is far easier for those with the desire to learn and no fear of looking stupid when they start speaking like an infant in some public market in Central America.

Similarly, once you've learned, say, Chinese reading and writing, Japanese will also prove a much easier target to defeat – all you'll need to punish yourself with is a very Yoda-Spanish like grammar, and general vocabulary… But the reading and writing will be merely annoying, rather than mind-numbingly difficult.

Still, above all else, remember this: kids start out loving to learn, and the best way to cure that is to force things on them that not only take away from their general play time, but also never get to "show off" – at least with something like violin lessons, when they finally complete a recital, they start to understand how cool it is to be good at something. It doesn't make much sense to start your kindergartener in Chinese if you aren't also willing to commit to trips to China/HK/Taiwan, and/or otherwise immerse your child in the language on a regular basis at home.

It's far more interesting for a child to learn the language of a parent, uncle, grandparent, cousin, etc. And if none exists… Well, music is an even more universal language than English, and can even be a far more useful skill when you're stuck in a country and don't speak a word of the native tongue.

[* In fact, the French got so mad about this trend, they made a law banning the use of such words, in favor of more "natively French" ones! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tou… ]

Should English-speaking parents have their children learn Chinese to prepare them for the future?

Deano’s answer to: “How can I stop 7 year old boy speaking in girl like tone?”

If by girl like tone you mean a raise in pitch when excited, then the goal is more to get him to moderate excitement as expressed vocally. A couple good ways to do that are voice acting/singing lessons (ideally it needs to be something that interests him), and meditation/breath work techniques focused on keeping calm in tense situations.

Please note – prior to puberty, your kid's voice is going to hold a higher pitch. It may even remain that way forever. What you are really shooting for is a less jarring screeching tone, rather than "enforced manliness".

The tone and wording of the question, though, is a little offensive. Girls have beautiful voices, and men with more feminine or higher pitched voices have certainly gone far in life. While doing any/all of the above steps, I'd also look at why his voice upsets you so much.

How can I stop 7 year old boy speaking in girl like tone?