Archive for the ‘Walking & Tech’ Category

New for walking programs: Facebook integration

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Here’s a new feature for our corporate walking programs.

Facebook integration!

logo-facebook-small

We’ve had this for a while in our community program and now custom walking programs for corporations, cities and educational institutions can take advantage of it. After a walker has posted his/her steps, a box will show up asking if they would like to post their steps to Facebook. The step blog entry will be posted right into their Facebook newsfeed.

Screen shot 2010-04-16 at 2.23.25 PM

We know that there are some of you who shudder at the thought of your employees posting their steps to Facebook. That’s why there are two controls on this.

Turn it on in your administrative panel under ‘Features’. It defaults to off. After that, each walker will have the option to turn it on/off in their own settings.

Get a second chance to edit your post before posting it into your Facebook feed

Get a second chance to edit your post before posting it into your Facebook feed

iPod Nano Pedometer Survey

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Here’s the survey we’re going to post in our newsletter that goes out tomorrow.

Who is using an iPod Nano pedometer? How accurate is it? Are you using Nike+? Should we find a way to automagically pull in the data?

iPod Nano Pedometer Survey >

Feel free to get a jump on the responses! The responses are open – so you’ll be able to see the results (of multiple-choice questions, not the text fields)

What kind of pedometer should I get?

Monday, July 27th, 2009

I’ve been asked this question a ton of times — here’s what I usually tell people:

Depending upon your budget, I’ve definitely found that nicer pedometers encourage people to stick with walking. A pedometer is a cheap investment already — and so I would encourage everyone to bypass the $1 – $5 pedometers and go for something that will:

1) Last you

2) Not count a bunch of steps for non-walking activities

3) Be very wearable (most of the people on Walker Tracker wear their pedometer all day, every day)

A pedometer like this is going to cost you in the neighborhood of $10 – $40. Walking really is one of the cheapest physical activities.

My favorite pedometers are the ‘pocket pedometers’ — you don’t need to clip them on, you just put them in your pocket and they’ll count fine from there. The cheapest of these is the Omron HJ-112, which is about $20 at Amazon. Its big brother is the Omron HJ-720ITC. If  you are ordering in bulk, you might try onlinefitness.com for a discount.

For cheaper options – the Omron HJ-150 and HJ-151 are both decent, sturdy pedometers. It’s also worth checking out  what pedometers our community likes here —  it looks like other highly-rated pedometers according to our community are the Sportline 345, Sportline 350, Yamax DigiWalker CW-701, New Lifestyles NL-2000.

In order of features, I like:

  • wearable in a pocket. If you don’t wear it, it’s not going to do you any good.
  • memory (usually 7 days – I like to see how I’ve done over a week, and it’s useful for entering on Walker Tracker)
  • resets at midnight
  • sturdiness
  • can’t ‘fake’ steps (uses an accelerometer over a pendulum. Or rather, it’s much harder to fake steps)
  • a continuous activity measure (on Omron pedometers this is called ‘aerobic steps’ (in the newer ones, for some reason they renamed this to ‘moderate steps’ - it measures when it feels you’ve been walking long enough to benefit your heart)

There are lots of other metrics that pedometers can calculate — miles walked, calories burned, etc, but most of these are just mathematical calculations based on the number of steps you’ve walked. They’re useful features, but not absolutely necessary.

Best of luck!

Walk and make electricity!

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

There’s a great article in BBC Technology today about a prototype gadget that allows you to generate electricity while you walk.

Knee dynamo taps ‘people power’

One minute of walking will power a cell phone for 30 minutes – I find that incredible.

I love the idea of ‘energy harvesting’, and I especially like the idea of being extra motivated to walk knowing that I would be recycling a lot of that energy into a battery source that could be plugged into other things. Can we go carbon free via walking?

“We’re pretty effective batteries,” Dr Donelan told BBC News. “In our fat we store the equivalent of about a 1,000kg battery.”

Awesome.

Walker Tracker API + Google Charts API: Awesome.

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

I whipped up a quick example of using the Walker Tracker API together with the Google Charts API to draw a nifty looking chart.

The Google Charts API, while a teensy bit limited, is very cool. You can probably expect to see a little more of it here.

Dynamic Chart using Walker Tracker API and Google Charts API

(not saying my step counts are awesome… unfortunately)

Have a look at the Walker Tracker API Example