|
|
|
|
|
by silviogutierrez
3879 days ago
|
|
Great question! While I've considered being able to track exercise (just for progression in that area), I purposely left out exercise calories affecting day calories. 99% of people that "make up/eat back" the calories they burn off by exercise end up overeating them. Ultimately defeating their goals to lose weight. There are exceptions (I imagine yourself included). But that's a summary of why it's not accounted for. A much better system is for people to set an activity level and just adjust based on weight loss or weight gain. Basically, looking for a trend line in the reports section. Of course, that area itself could be improved (and will be improved). |
|
I do like the idea of a "push to fitbit" - but only at the end of the day, and without the ability to edit. One might track their foods a little differently if they saw they were 10 calories away from going over. ("Well, that sandwich didn't really have all too much of X on it")
I actually hadn't considered using this to track exercise or calorie burn. I like the idea of separating the two, and joining the data later to get (as close as you can get at least) an accurate representation of caloric I/O. Historically, tracking anything more than those two singular ultimate values (or even just one of them) results in a really bloated app that makes tracking way too complicated.
An interesting thing would be an exercise tracking app based on the principles presented here. UX 100% focused on data entry (which is by far the worst part of tracking this kind of data), and very little else. Making exercise tracking as simple as scribbling down onto your notepad on the bench between sets (or whatever your process is).
From there, you can take your calories burned as it relates to your workouts, and your caloric intake, and join them up in a way that makes sense to you. Whether its through a ping to your Fitbit profile or a batch update to MFP or even a blob of workout data over to Fitocracy for your badge fix (again, spitballing).
Sorry for the ramble, excited to try this out.