The relentless rule of my fitness tracker

(timharford.com)

11 points | by Arnt 2 hours ago ago

3 comments

  • sublinear 3 minutes ago ago

    On the flip side, if a user expects too much from a fitness tracker it can lead to unreasonable health anxieties.

    A user trying to determine an accurate heart rate or blood oxygen level during exercise (not at rest) will find that the guidelines are too broad and the tracker data is too slow and noisy to get the feedback they want. They can get a rough idea of how hard they exercised and for how long, but you don't really need a fitness tracker to tell you that.

  • iknowSFR an hour ago ago

    Good lord the reveal at the end seemed mistimed.

  • michaelhoney an hour ago ago

    >My watch takes walking, cycling and running seriously — especially outside rather than on a treadmill — but a hard session at the gym barely registers. It will count my steps for me, but I have to count my own pull-ups

    The Strava of weight training (not _counting_ the pull-ups for you, but recording them, helping you build workouts, track progress, social sharing) is the well-named Hevy: https://www.hevyapp.com