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Quantified Self Show & Tell 05/22/2011: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/29/us/29shields.html Obituary of Reverend Robert Shields---the dark side of QS?]
*[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/29/us/29shields.html Obituary of Reverend Robert Shields---the dark side of QS?]


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===Erica===
Erica talked about her experience with the Bodybugg, a fitness device that tracks steps and calories. She explained some principles of weight loss, showed some photos and graphs of her results, and talked about some common ideas about weight loss and whether her experience confirmed or debunked those ideas.
 
[[File:Bodybugg_presentation.pdf | Erica's slides]]

Revision as of 14:31, 25 May 2011

We'll meet at 6, schmooze a while, and start presentations around 7.

Presenters

Xaq Rothman: Tracking smoking with CigLog, a webapp I wrote.

Bjorn Westergard: Dietary logging with Cron-O-Meter, journaling with tiddlywiki, carrying a gps logger, DIY pulse-oximeter.

Erica Kane: Using a Bodybugg to monitor calorie burn, and to confirm or deny common beliefs about weight loss.

Elephant Ninja: Using the sticker method to track and improve pull-ups.

Matthew Velderman: A total fitness tracking system, including key metrics, the system itself, and outcomes so far. Fitness Tracking Spreadsheet and DMAIC Fitness Presentation

Blue of hello-the-future.net: Every week I sit down with my guitar and make a new song for the internet. In my presentation, we'll hear just how fast a musician can level up in a year.

Recap

What do you track/quantify with?

Here is an informal/incomplete list of the tools people use that we collected on the whiteboard.

Whatdoyoutrackwith.jpg

Presentations

Xaq

Xaq presented CigLog, a home-brewed cigarette-habit-tracking PHP/MySQL webapp. He talked about the value of social support in trying to create (keep tracking!) or destroy (stop smoking!) habits.

Links

The Science of Self Control This book is required reading for anyone interested in how habits are formed and extinguished, and the paradox of self control... why is is hard to do things that are good for us, and so easy to do things that are bad?

Bjorn

Bjorn described working with data from UAVs, which led him to wonder how he could benefit from similar data analysis on his self. He presented an impressive array of projects: GPS logging, using a web notebook to keep track of his thoughts, and a DIY pulse/oximeter (which I, Xaq, saw in prototypical form this past Monday and dang was it cool).

Links

TiddlySpace or TiddlyWiki "discoursive non-linear web notebooks" Bjorn metioned a few articles:

Erica

Erica talked about her experience with the Bodybugg, a fitness device that tracks steps and calories. She explained some principles of weight loss, showed some photos and graphs of her results, and talked about some common ideas about weight loss and whether her experience confirmed or debunked those ideas.

Erica's slides