


I recently met with a woman who made me laugh at how "science people" are convinced with numbers, graphs and trends while "humanities people" are convinced with thoughts and feelings articulated. So I wonder if there would be a fitness app for touchy-feely types that would be less quantitative and more qualitative. Emoticons! I wonder if you can sort your workouts on MapMyRide by those which you felt the best...
MapMyRide used to have a feature where you could export your workout data in a spreadsheet (or at least a table containing links and calories. I cut and pasted them here. At some point (June 2012) you could no longer highlight your list of workouts. I had to settle for screenshots after that. So it's taking me a long time to transfer the data to a spreadsheet. I just found a way to cut & paste it but you have to put your cursor in a weird place! So that will be the topic of a new post. I read that Big Data is defined as data so large that traditional spreadsheet software is ineffective at dealing with its size. Right now I have a separate sheet devoted to each year but I plan to collate the data into one big sheet, catergorize the workouts and do some multivariate analysis. More on that later.
References
http://www.tbd.com/pictures/2012/01/the-calories-in-a-cupcake-photos-/14517-1020.html January 06, 2012.
Sturm and An. Obesity and economic environments. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians 22 May (2014) Early View (Online Version of Record published before inclusion in an issue)
http://blogs.plos.org/publichealth/2014/05/27/think-know-obesity-rates-rising-youre-probably-wrong/ via Samantha C. Lewis, Ph.D.
Janssen, et al. Years of Life Gained Due to Leisure-Time Physical Activity in the U.S. Am J Prev Med 2013; 44(1):23–29. http://www.ajpmonline.org/article/S0749-3797(12)00734-9/abstract
Janssen, et al. Years of Life Gained Due to Leisure-Time Physical Activity in the U.S. Am J Prev Med 2013; 44(1):23–29. http://www.ajpmonline.org/article/S0749-3797(12)00734-9/abstract
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