Monthly Archives: June 2016

Technology Taking Over Training?

Exercise; we all love it, right? “No!” shouts my imaginary friend. (yes he is still hanging about like unwanted mould on cheese). “Well with the amount of gadgets, gym memberships, cycles bought and fitness APs being sold or used we should be,” I reply.

The answer is that many people do and many don’t and that hasn’t changed in millennia. What has changed is how technology is used and taken for granted.

When I was a young man the only bits of technology, or tech as the trendy say today, that I could use for running and cycling were a stopwatch, a mechanical odometer and a map. One measured distances roughly and then one had to work out approximately how long and at what speed was travelled. All pretty hit and miss and boring really. But is was simple and it worked. If one was good then these statistics were pencilled into a small note book.

Move  on 40-50 years and things have developed, and I mean developed, beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.

There are step counters, heart-rate monitors, GPS and cycle computers, altitude readers and a plethora of other gadgets designed to improve fitness.

But do they work? Mmmm? Only if used correctly and if your interested in the data produced. Many rate them high up on their priority lists of needs and others just stick to the old fashioned ways or nothing at all. Oh, thats only the folk who train, exercise and try to keep a little fitter to hold back busting waist-lines and quadruple chins.

So what has changed exactly and what can one use? Loads is the simple  answer, loads.

However, its not as a confusing minefield as it appears and a few basic principles should guide you through so as not to get blown to pieces.

Question one; do you like having feedback from activities and would you want to spend money on a devise to gather that information? No? Then read no further and lead a tech free life. Yes? Please carry on.

Question two; take into account activity type, budget, desired information and where you are going to use this tech.

Question three; what to do with the data once its gathered and recorded.

So if you are just interested in basic exercise verses calorie burn the something like a Fitbit or an Up are brilliant. Wear them (normally these are bracelets but they do have broach styles), set up the Ap on a smartphone and off you go. They really can motivate one to move a bit more and it can be fun comparing and competing  with friends. They are relatively cheep at around £60-£100 and the information gathered is quite comprehensive. Its how I started.

I am a fan of cycling, jogging and walking (off games at present due to illness and injury but less of that negativity and me, me, me. Sorry) and there are Aps for them and pretty decent gadgets.

I use a Garmin cycle computer, “The Garmin 810”, ( there are a few different ones from cheepish to not cheepish £100 £400). ((Milo do a good one  too.) This measures distance speed, calories burned, heart rate, altitude temperature and direction and all this can be seen on the screen whilst cycling and it can even be used as a sat nav. All this data can be downloaded to the garmin web site and then one can see improvements. Its accurate and even has a virtual training partner so it can beast you on to bursting. (no Pain no Gain). I also use an Ap called STRAVA to download to and I use this simultaneously on my phone as  I find this  a better data source and its free and bloody good.

For jogging and walking I use the phone with strava. Its easy to use, accurate and you can see your route taken and many other stats. For a free Ap its fantastic. However, Garmin, Sunto and TomTom do some brilliant watches all with GPS and some can be used for triathlon and even golf. Again they range from around £75- £350 so find one to suit yourself.

Many of these watches and heart rate monitors will interact with machines in the gym so even there your data can be saved to relish at a later time.

“Yes , yes, yes, I will.”

Sorry imaginary friend told me not to forget to mention the Smart Watches.

The Smart Watch… These very much are subject to the type of phone one uses as most are tethered to the phone for a complete use of their functions but they are becoming more stand alone. They are very much  influenced by which camp the user falls into. Apple or Android? Your choice..I’m not getting involved in this argument as they are all competent contenders in my mind.

If you run an  Apple device then the only real option is the Apple Watch. Its brilliant and the Watch 2 will soon be with us and that is exciting for those who love it. It does a basic job of all the above with the added advantage of being a watch, receiving texts and emails and using Aps.

Android, however, have many other avenues of beauty and styles. Samsung have a quality watch as do motorola and Sony. They are a bit cheaper than Apple but fundamentally they do the same.

Pebble have served up a watch that works on both Apple and Android and it very looks cool.

For the serious trainer none of the smart watches are practical and I would suggest at present they are only good as a gimmick. Athletes should look at the Garmin, Sunto, TomTom and other dedicated sports equipment related to their game.

So what have I missed. There is a whole world I have not mentioned and the reason for that is that I haven’t used them or seen them in action but for the curious and more adventurous maybe take a look at Headphones that work as pedometers, glasses that can give one heads up information and record data, rings that can count steps and foot pods that can measure stride and force. There are golf buddies for swing and courses and tennis shot anylisers. Too much? You decide.

So from the humble stopwatch and pen and paper we have come a long way and its all thanks to acceleromters, algorithms, the lithium battery and some very, very clever geeks. Though Once again some will embrace this technology and some will run to the hills to try and avoid its pointlessness. One thing is for sure its here, it will grow and it will become part of our daily lives; if it hasn’t already.

I know I have missed out a tonne of gadgets and information but I only wanted to touch on the idea that technology can make life a bit more fun and informed and you can comment or ask me if you would like to discuss any points made or not made.

Thanks for reading and may your targets and stats be achieved. Froggy

Ch,Ch,Ch,Changes….

Many things change in life, well most things do apart from men’s underpants, and technology is one of the massive changes that have influenced the way computers are used and have evolved.

When I was at school I remember a computer lab being opened. Yes there was a dedicated room for the learning of computers and it was the only place they were used and that was only in the junior school of my school in Wellingborough.

This pokey room with, if my memory serves me right (which often does not), no windows and formica topped tables was furnished with a dozen or so Commador 64 computers, cassette decks and a single printer and cost over twelve thousand pounds. A vast sum in 1979. Probably around £240,000 today. Gulp, gosh, strewth!!

They were only good if one could programme, understand the BBC programming code and use a keyboard. I could do none of this and the more the teacher spouted out about this alien language the more confused and  lost I became to the point of loosing any interests these strange machines held. Games were something one got dressed for and played outside not to be used on computers. No, no, no!

So it was safe to say that this put and end to wanting anything more to do with computer technology. A pen and paper held enough of a challenge for the like of me and probably many other like minded people.

Ten years later I did get to play games on a Spectrum ZX 64 whilst getting over Scarlet Fever. Only because I was so bored and had to be isolated. Some think I still should be but that is another issue. I’m not strange or mad its everyone else. So there!!

It wasn’t until Microsoft, love em or loath em, introduced its Windows platform that the PC truly became a machine that could be used by relative idiots. Whahoo I thought;a group I can finally fit in to.

Okay it took a while and they were quite limited and bulky and internet connections took a while to catch on and were incredulously slow (using dial up and unless you had two phone lines which was terribly posh and costly you couldn’t talk to granny on the phone) in comparison to the modern fibre optic broadband we have now ( and you can phone granny, record programmes on your digi top box and use another computer all at the same time; wowzers)). It’ll never catch on but it did and look at us now. PCs are becoming less used in favour of laptops, tablets, hybrid phablets and notebooks but fundamentally they are the same and can be found in the most far flung and remote places on earth and in nearly every home. (my dad must be the only exception as he doesn’t want one or use one, even though he know how to a bit).

Apple has had a stab at this market too and has been quite successful. Stop it! Tongue in cheek humour. My imaginary friend doesn’t have one. Humour sense that is and come to think of it neither does he have an Apple computer.

I remember seeing an Applemac computer a dozen or so years ago (I know they came out before that but I had never seen one in real life before) and thought it to be fantastic and why can’t my portable telly do this? Now look at them with their stand alone Operating System and sleek designs. Expense is an issue but they do last longer and are slightly more efficient that the Microsoft Windows options.

Ah now Windows!!

Windows 10 is a love it or hate it set up. I love it and its the most stable and reliable platform to date and in my mind and is a good enough rival to Apple for me not to switch.

So thats about it really.

64 bytes! Yes that is all you got back in the 70s and early 80s and my E-reader has more memory than that by a long stroke. Now we are looking at phones with 128 Giga bytes which is, well lets just say loads more. Its probably the same difference in size comparison as a matchbox car against a massive ocean going oil tanker or modern cruise liner. Pcs and laptops are engaging in tera bytes now which would blow the mind of our early computer  and the teaching/user buffs and the need for the masses to programme? None, none what so ever as applications, software and hardware do it all for us without blinking an eye. We just take it for granted.

My teacher, whoever he was ( I honestly have no idea of a name or description of the person), will surely be supporting a very red face today as games on computers have over taken the boring work and office uses of this machine and even have their own dedicated machines designed around play. Oh how I smile at this.

A lot has changed in nearly 40 years and my guess is that a lot more will change in the next. I might just get to see it and be able to post another boring post about what I have seen so till then happy changing.

 

 

 

 

“Gadgets; Friend or Foe?

 

2012-07-13 18.13.13

 

“Great scot not more!” my imaginary friend screams across the room. “Go boil your head” I reply.

Like it or not we love gadgets and everyone uses them and has their favourites.

Communication and Information gadgets are one area of interest to me.

Maybe to some of you too? Well I was only asking. Some of you must like too. Please.

Expensive in some people’s eyes is the Smart Watch and yes it is but some still love it and compared to many precision or fashion watch its priced reasonably. There are many cheap and exppensive ones around and they are all gimmicks at the moment if you don’t like them. The best ones to date are the AppleWatch, The Samsung Gear 2, The Motto 360, Pebbles New Round one and Sony’s Smartwatch 4 and for the runners, swimmers, cyclists and golfers there is the Garmin Vivoactive or Vivomore.

If you do like them, my imaginary friend does not and still uses a sun dial with a rusty gnomon and a piece if string to calculate distances covered, then they are fantastic and funky.

I really don’t think they will take over the world even if battery life is extended but then unless your gadget has a nuclear warhead stuck to it then very few would or even could.

Now whilst phones became smaller and smaller the natural step was to see this gadget downsize into a watch but “whoooa there mule” it didn’t and now we see phones which need a suitcase to carry them around. I just don’t get it. A mobile phone or cell phone (I hate the Americanisation title of the telecommunication device) is meant to be just that, mobile, not something that won’t fit into a pocket and makes one look like they have a TV attached to their head. Granted talking into a wrist or ring is also a bit weird but spies do it and its a little less comical than having a large piece of plastic sticking out of your ear. But I guess if you want your phone to be a computer, a TV, a camera, a phone, a bank card and a whole load of other devices then that is what we will get; Massive phones.

So this is where a compromise is needed. Google glass is quite a good concept for those who actually have to wear glasses. I mean having a screen in the lens and a microphone in the arm and voice control complimented with a small phone for writing  would be great. Great for what? Well brilliant for cycling as it could show routes, speed, time etc. Fantastic for working to see information hands free so one could write a dictated letter, see e-mails whilst walking or gardening and things like that. It could replace all the sat nav furniture and handlebar realestate that we have cluttering up space. It could mean an end to neck droop. Neck droop? Yes neck droop that is creeping in as an ailment for those who constantly have the head bent to look at their phone either whilst sitting or walking and it could lower the amount of collisions in the street by allowing people to get back to seeing where they are going rather than relying on others to get out of their way.

So there we have a start and my first insight of how I see the world in gadget form.

One thing is for certain. Things have come a very long way since my imaginary friend and I were kids and teenagers. But that is another day.

Should we add to it? I think we should so I will think of the next chapter to come whilst floating this in space with the pigs and elephants that share it

 

I Can’t Believe I am So Stupid.

Why does blogging have to be so hard, confusing, costly and time=consuming to set up?

Do others feel intimidated by domain costs, host costs and how to start?

I only want to give this a go to see if its for me, gain experience, have a laugh and get legal exposure.

I don’t want to initially get tied into a monthly domain subscription, a yearly host fee and a whole lot of other hidden payments.

If anyone reads this who have honest, free and helpful suggestions of how to get some confidence and experience then please come  forward and give me some tips.

I wouldn’t buy a car without asking to take it for a test drive free of charge so why a BLOG?

Please help me before I go even more mad than I am already.

Lord Frog awaits your comments so please leave me one..or two..

Thanks.