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'Gamercize' Cardio at Our Desk

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thu Nov 15, 2007 09:15 AM
from the fewer-leotards-tho dept.
Gustoman writes "A new device that hit the market this week may not be able to help you put in fewer hours in the office, but it can help you get a good cardio workout while you're troubleshooting that laptop or reviewing that spreadsheet. Gamercize, a British company, this week launched the GZ PC-Sport & Power Steppe, which is designed to fit underneath a standard-sized desk so someone can sit at their computer or talk on the telephone while using the stepper. Gamercize officials note that the machine is not just a small version of a StairMaster machine that you'd find at the gym. The machine can be hooked up to a keyboard or mouse through a USB port. The user can set it up so they can use the stepper whenever they want, or they can prevent their keyboard or mouse from working unless they're exercising. There are five settings on the under-desk step machine. The lowest setting lets workers simply exercise their legs at an easy pace whenever they want. At the top level, the work out is much harder and the user must exercise to keep his or her keyboard or mouse working. At the lowest setting, a user could burn 100 to 200 calories an hour. At the top level, it is possible to burn as many as 500 calories an hour. (That's like burning off the equivalent of an entire milk shake.)"
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  • Ok, (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AltGrendel (175092) <ag-slashdotNO@SPAMexit0.us> on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:22AM (#21363447) Homepage
    So why don't they set it up to recharge your laptop battery too?
        • I've not had that problem.

          I can't drive (vision), and ride my bike to work, and walk to the store all the time.

          And I live in Ohio (we drive like New Yorkers, but without any good reason to do so)
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Or, you know, being hit by cars who couldn't care less about walkers or cyclists.

          Exactly, I submitted this as a slashdot story a while ago, but some random diatribe about the RIAA was more important I guess. But anyway, Americans are 8x as likely [vtpi.org](pdf warning and beefy academic paper warning, though there are graphs) to die per bicycle trip than their European counterparts.

          First and foremost, Americans seem to have this opinion that if you aren't driving then you are defective and your life isn't wort
          • Just yesterday I was riding my bike back from work. I just starting biking occasionally last week when I got my bike from my parents. In the course of a 40 minutes ride, I had the following:

            Honked at by cars for riding in the street
            Yelled at by pedestrians for riding on the sidewalk
            Cut off by cars not paying any attention (when I say cut off, I mean I stopped the bike two inches from this guy's car)
            Had dogs jump in front of me

            All in all, a hair-raising experience. I live in LA (riding down Wilshire Blvd), a
          • Secondly is the SUV. It needs to be banned tomorrow. Those things pose more of a risk to the safety and well being of the United States than any terrorist has, ever.

            Gee, and here I was, thinking stupid drivers that run over bicyclists were the real problem.

            Remember, the size of the vehicle you use doesn't matter: right of way is 1/2m * v^2. You see, mass is only a first-order term, but velocity is a second order term. Notice how bicycles have neither mass nor velocity, but even a Toyota Rollerskate

  • Come on . . . (Score:4, Interesting)

    by PeeAitchPee (712652) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:27AM (#21363539)
    . . . is it *really* that hard to get to the gym or outside to exercise? Sometimes a break away from your desk is a good thing. Stuff like this just preserves the sweatshop mentality already too prevalent in many IT shops. Just my .02.
    • Re:Come on . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

      by barzok (26681) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:37AM (#21363703)
      Yes.

      I get up at 6:15, get myself ready for work, eat breakfast, get my kid ready for daycare, go to work, get home, make dinner or feed the kid, spend quality time with him, put him to bed, and by that time it's 9 PM or later. I have 2 hours left in the day to do anything else I need to do (pay bills, manage some household stuff, etc.) and then I'm back in bed.

      I tried exercising after 9. It kept me up till 12:30 AM while my body spun down and I was useless the next day.
      • by Red Flayer (890720) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:49AM (#21363861) Journal

        I get up at 6:15, get myself ready for work, eat breakfast, get my kid ready for daycare, go to work, get home, make dinner or feed the kid, spend quality time with him, put him to bed, and by that time it's 9 PM or later. I have 2 hours left in the day to do anything else I need to do (pay bills, manage some household stuff, etc.) and then I'm back in bed.
        You have a kid... this implies you have had sex.

        Speaking for a large portion of the slashdot population...

        What's it like?

        Seriously, though, I'm in the same boat. What I've discovered is that there is unused time to at least go for short walks (lunchtime, for example -- 10 mins (maximum) to eat, 20 minutes to walk around the parking lot/campus. I've also discovered that 4:30 AM is a great time to go for a walk -- I bring a bottle of water, and this wake-up ritual has replaced my early-morning coffee. It's amazing how much more energy I have throughout the day if I begin with some moderate exercise. I suppose an exercise bike would serve the same purpose, and give me a better workout while allowing me to still catch the news.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          My youngest is 9. I'm home when she gets off the bus (I work 6am to 3pm, thanks to flexible work hours). We spend 30 minutes a day walking around the neighborhood and chatting about her day. Some days we stop at the neighborhood park (less exercise for me, but keeps her motivated to continue). Sure, it isn't heart-pumping cardio, but movement is movement. I start cooking at 4 and supper is ready by 4:30 (when the next one gets home from middle school). Homework and housework are allocated about an hou
        • by IndustrialComplex (975015) on Thursday November 15 2007, @11:19AM (#21365301)
          You have a kid... this implies you have had sex.

          Speaking for a large portion of the slashdot population...

          What's it like?


          Actually it just implies that his wife had sex. ;)
      • Have you considered running your kid to daycare on your shoulders?

        Sorry, that was just a funny image to me.
          • I have you beat - I carry my daughter down to daycare... in the elevator. I work from home and have the daycare center in my building. I could get really fat, but this is New York, so I don't have a car.

            I used to take the stairs, but they are sort of lethal.
    • Or ride your bike to work.

      Instead of wasting time in the car/bus on the ride to/from work, you can get in a lot of your excercise.
        • You'd be surprised. Probably aren't many places worse than Ohio (Imagine NY City, but with room to actually accelerat to speeds faster than granny-needs-a-knee-replacement), and it can be done safely here.
    • . . . is it *really* that hard to get to the gym or outside to exercise?

      Yes. YES. It's hard to get the TIME. Many people have so many demands on their time, both business and social, that taking an hour (or make it 1h30, what with changing, showering, warming up/down etc) is very difficult. If you can take that long for your lunch hour and go during the day, lucky you. I know I can't, and I would much rather use the time I am sitting at my desk letting my brain do the work, to exercise my body at the s
    • I lift weights 3 times a week for an hour and a half, and try to squeeze in a half-hour of cardio after lifting. It's not easy to break out huge amounts of time to dedicate exclusively to exercise and nothing else. There's a great deal of things I'd rather be doing with my time outside of work but I don't have the option of not going to the gym, and I'm still barely getting enough to keep fat at a "normal" level.

      Light cardio can be done for a long long time and burns off large amounts of calories with relat
    • I have not done anything remotely related to execise after I crushed my stress-reliever ball last year.

      Damn, and I liked that ball too. It laste me a whole month.

    • Alternatives (Score:3, Interesting)

      Some exercise professionals recommend [sf-chiro.com] that instead of sitting on a chair at work, you sit on a Swiss ball. Then your core muscles have to work moderately hard to keep you stable. I haven't tried it but it's said to be fairly tiring to do it all day long.

      If you prefer to just burn some energy, there's always the desk treadmill [computerworld.com.au].
  • Milkshake? (Score:4, Funny)

    by onion2k (203094) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:27AM (#21363547) Homepage

    That's like burning off the equivalent of an entire milk shake.

    If you're drinking 500 calorie milkshakes then this is probably something you need. If you can fit it under the desk with your huge fat legs. ;)
    • If they're talking junkfood quality milkshakes, they'll probably be 500.
      If you make one yourself with good ingredients (low fat milk and icecream, artificial sweetener, fresh fruit), it'll be about 250 for the same size.
      • If you make one yourself with good ingredients (low fat milk and icecream, artificial sweetener, fresh fruit), it'll be about 250 for the same size.

        Hmm. Artificially filtered milk, artificially filtered and sweetened ice cream, artificial sweetener -- and fresh fruit. Yep, them's good ingredients! Just like Grandma used to make!

        • How do you artificially filter milk? I had to do some work at a dairy for several month a while back while I was working on a food technology project (in the old chem eng days). The pasteurizer did nothing more than heat the milk quickly and cool it back down quickly (HTST Pasteurization). Anther centrifuge separated out a lot of the fat to make it skim, 1%, 2%, etc. Another machine homogenized it by putting it through a tight pored filter. It was still milk when it came out. It just makes sure the fat
    • If you're drinking 500 calorie milkshakes then this is probably something you need. If you can fit it under the desk with your huge fat legs. ;)
      it's "big boned" you insensitive clod. all those milkshakes have a lot of calcium.
      • An eight oz serving of your average vanilla ice cream (which is like, three scoops) has over 500 cals in it...

        Well, there's your problem. A proper milkshake starts off with three scoops of Rocky Road or Heavenly Hash. Vanilla, Pfft. If I wanted water, I'd ask for water.
  • I wouldn't recommend using it while on the phone. People might get the wrong idea from your heavy breathing. (Or the right one, depending on who you are calling).
  • by Silver Sloth (770927) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:30AM (#21363581)
    How - puff pant - can I help you - pant puff - your account's locked - puff pant - certainly - pant puff - I'll reset your password

    Sorry, I forgot, we're never that helpful.
  • Does it work with Linux?
    • Yeah I know it's cliche, and someone expects this to be posted in every thread, but I was serious. :)
      • It'll work with Linux as soon as someone writes a walker for it.

        /Table 19, your pizza's ready. Don't forget to tip your waitress.
        • Come on Mods, that was the funniest thing I've read all day. Excuse me while I get back to my cobol programming.
  • by kacksperky (1189485) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:34AM (#21363633)
    Honestly, every day I wonder about the lazy people surrounding me.

    Simple steps to get some exercise without going to and paying for a gym.

    • Leave you car at home, ride a bike to go to work, visit your friends
    • Dont use escalators or elevators
    • Run a few blocks in the morning or evening
    • Get a hobby that does not involve sitting in front of a tv or monitor
    Its just that easy and in the end might get you a few more years of healthy living.
    • Cycling to work, climbing stairs and running a few blocks every now and then sure are nice ideas, but all you're really going to tone with 'em are your legs. If you're going for the healthy living, don't forget about the "Get a hobby" part or add half an hour of pushups and/or situps before and/or after work.
    • Get a hobby that does not involve sitting in front of a tv or monitor
      Don't sit in front? You mean like FIXING tvs or monitors? How will that make me exercise more?
    • "Honestly, every day I wonder about the lazy people surrounding me." ...says the guy without a kid and family and house to take care of.

      If you're young, free, and have time to spare, then sure, desk-based cardio is a lazy choice. If, however, you have a life full to the brim with responsibilities, you can't just "Run a few blocks in the morning or evening".

      Enjoy the luxury that is free time, and don't talk down to those of us who don't have it.

    • Yeah, I started biking to work in the summers. 7 miles each way and I loved it until I tore my ham string. It had be significantly weakened by strains throughout the year due to over use (see my 'homepage'). The only thing I didn't love was the lack of a way to shower at work.

      But watching TV is not a hobby of mine. Though I did sit and play Assassin's Creed for four hours last night... So now I've had to resort to, you know, not eating everything in site. Which I'm usually pretty good at anyways.

  • I was just wondering how it would effect the work place, if everybody was doing this. Wouldn't it cause a major sweat and thus a terrible smell? I am also worried about the noise level, from the machine, but also as a previous poster commented, the puff puff from human beings.
  • ... as an excuse for breathing heavily down the phone.
  • My sister-in-law-to-be bought one of these things on a home shopping channel a year or so ago. Or more accurately, one of those mechanisms. From what I can see in photographs shown in another web page [gamercize.net], it looks quite similar.

    Hers hadn't been marketed as an under-the-desk exercise solution, but instead came with a handlebar support one gripped while standing on the pedals. In that capacity, I found it ridiculous. The piston mechanism under each pedal readily collapsed under my weight, though they might indee
  • Could this be fitted on airplanes as a help to stopping DVT on long flights?
    It could stow away under the seat if you didn't want it... plus you wouldn't have to watch the silly 'inflight exercises' video.
    • It could stow away under the seat if you didn't want it...

      Haven't flown lately, have you? Airline cabins are so small and the seats so tightly packed that I highly doubt people are going to be willing to give up any of what little leg room is left (more leg room is actually sold as part of premium fare tickets on United, for example). Also, with fuel prices being what they are, the weight-conscious airlines aren't going to be willing to increase the weight of the plane with lots of these things withou

    • It's *going* to be fit into planes as soon as we run out of mineral oil. You won't be able to stow it away, though. And there won't be any more sleeping on long flights, it'll all be exercising. :)
  • ...this can give online games like ET an whole new dimension...Fuel Depot where every inch is conquered with a drop of sweat mixed with tears...in the end the neighbor downstairs calls the cops...
  • I have yet to see any exercise machine that doesnt make any noise, except maybe "power grips".

    Sure, most office environments are noisy, but it's office noise, not gym noise.

    My suggestion is get a nice folding bike, like a Brompton for example, that you can keep in your cubicle and go for a relaxing ride during your lunch break.

    As a bonus, it'll reduce your stress levels
  • In this age, any machine that is manually operated especially those designed for the sole purpose of offering physical resistance to muscles, needs to have a generator attached to it so that the exercise charges a battery.

    I have a cheap crank flashlight. Inside is a small generator with a stiff winder, a NiMH battery, and four high-intensity white LEDs. Cheap and effective. This kind of thing should be inside every exercise bicycle and piece of gym equipment, along with a device that converts bat
  • I have a simple 25 lb free weight I keep at my desk and do a few curls whenever code is compiling. (Cost $20, found anywhere)

    You really, really shouldn't be doing cardio at your desk though. You should become sweaty and stinky by the end of it (assuming you're actually getting a workout) which your coworkers probably won't appreciate. Just jog for 20 minutes after work.
  • If you're playing a stairclimbing game with your stairclimber, then you're no better than the guy that drives 2 miles to the gym, runs 4 miles on treadmill, then drives home. It's a good idea, but a waste of resources unless it is helping to run the computer with your extra wattage.
  • I find this stupid.

    Cut calories, cut snacks, you'll drop weight. All this little device is going to do is build up muscles in your legs, and "500" calories an hour? Seriously? Just for moving your feet? I think not unless you're pushing the Rock of Gibraltar. Do you want giant calfs and muscles on top of them? I think not.

    If you can't exercise cut your caloric intake, even on a week where I worked 70 hours I still dropped 3 pounds. The whole secret is watch what you eat. Exercise makes the body look
    • Anyway, here's a user review:

      No, that's called "advertising".
    • Re:News? (Score:5, Funny)

      by PeeAitchPee (712652) on Thursday November 15 2007, @09:37AM (#21363709)

      I lost a stone and a half using Gamercize

      Uh oh, better run to the emergency room! I hear they can reattach those things (with minimal impact on your sex life!) if you get there quick enough and keep them in a cooler full of ice on the way . . .

      • I can't tell if you're joking or not... but just in case I'm being "Humor Impaired" (I need more sleep)

        A stone is 14 pounds, or about 6.4 Kg