mark st1
Plastic Manc
- Location
- Leafy Berkshire
Work has been manic the last 2 weeks god bless the "snap election" 

5k at best, but that's only recorded if I have the phone on me.
Just bought my wife the Garmin Vivioactive HR, which wasn't cheap, but got £50 off RRP at Halfords. She also has the Xaiomi, but wants one for swiming, hence the Garmin.
My daughter uses one of these bits of technology. However, somewhat reversing @Cunobelin 's experience, when she's pushing her youngest one's buggy, it decides that she's cycling. Perhaps it senses a lack of movement in the arms, with increased vibration, and a raised heart rate. (She does walk unreasonably quickly, it has to be said.
The 10,000 steps a day so called recomendation first came into being just before the 1964 tokyo olympic games and that number was being plugged by a new gadget that was invented to yes, measure the number of steps that a person walks per day. And the gadget was invented in Japan of course, plus that number is a very auspicious number as far as the Japanese are concerned. In reality any amount of walking is good for you. Its the act of getting up and moving at all that is what is important.
I think that 2,000 steps equates to roughly 1 mile. Obviously some people have longer strides than others, but this gives you a rough estimate at least of the number of steps you have walked. Instead of spending money on gizmos and gadgets, i would prefer to just use strava or another app to measure the distance i have walked, then work out the steps from that.
I think there is also an equation that will roughly translate the distance you cycle into equivelant steps.i think some of those gadgets are a bit hit and miss but if they get people off of the chair and exercising, then they are a good thing simply for that reason alone.
I wonder what info he wants regarding his heart rate. My cheap Xiaomi 'monitors' heart rate...rather measures it, a snapshot only. As a long term cyclist I always knew my BP and heart rate was low...and still is even though I'm nowhere near as fit as I used to be, i occasionally measure my resting HR and it's rarely over 60 bpm.I have a stand up job, no walking. I do however do 5k to 10k every day. Two of the people I work with have now got fitbits and obsessed with hitting 10k steps a day and somehow doing it at work, but of course they don't achieve it. My phone measures steps anyway and I have no great interest in it but people at work when I've shown them it amazed how I clock up those number of steps per day.
In the old job did 18k and more easily and cycle commuted 10 mile round trip a day.
P.S. I have a friend who tracks carefully his steps on his phone and has averaged 25,000 steps over the last 3 months. He said he hasn't got the fitness benefits but then got into a conversation about heart rates. I pointed out that he didn't have a HR monitor, but if he had he could confirm the expected fitness improvements one way or another. Essentially the steps isn't telling him what he wanted/needed to know.
I wonder what info he wants regarding his heart rate. My cheap Xiaomi 'monitors' heart rate...rather measures it, a snapshot only. As a long term cyclist I always knew my BP and heart rate was low...and still is even though I'm nowhere near as fit as I used to be, i occasionally measure my resting HR and it's rarely over 60 bpm.