You’ll never achieve work-life balance if you don’t know what you’re balancing
Get more out of your week—in and out of work—by creating a detailed picture of how your time is actually spent, says this productivity platform executive.
Feedback: Personal Work Tracker to Improve Your Productivity (whoop/fitbit for work) - Quantified Self / Apps & Tools - Quantified Self Forum
Hey all, I’ve been working on a building a person work tracker, built for us as individuals, not our companies/managers. In a lot of ways, it’s like a Whoop/Fitbit but for your work. I’d love to hear your thoughts and feedback. I’m love quantified self apps and I have an Apple Watch which I use religiously to track my health metrics. I realized that I track almost everything I do (exercise, sleep, meals) but I have no metrics around how I work. I couldn’t tell you how long it takes me to compl...
Personal informatics is a class of tools that help people collect personally relevant information for the purpose of self-reflection and self-monitoring. The...
Feedback on our free happiness+efficiency app? - Quantified Self / Apps & Tools - Quantified Self Forum
Hi everybody! I’ve been enjoying developing and using an app for measuring+optimizing happiness+efficiency over the last ~9 years, but I’ve been having difficulty getting users to try it out and to give feedback. Would anybody here be interested in any of: Trying it out and offering feedback? Suggesting how to get more feedback? The application has a bunch of properties that I think are super interesting: Record what you do Super-convenient autocomplete: it only requires pressing a few bu...
Quantifying the self - Why I track 80 metrics about my life every day - Quantified Self / Research & Media - Quantified Self Forum
I started a data blog on my quantified self journey. You can read the first post here. Let me know what you think, and if there’s anything in particular you’d be interested in reading in future posts. Thanks!
How private do you consider your personal data? - Quantified Self - Quantified Self Forum
I for one, find it fascinating to see other people’s data, and see what conclusions they’ve come to about themselves. My question is, how many qualms about sharing your biometric data do you have (voluntarily and publicly, as opposed to giving it to a company to improve ad selection…)? There have been performance art projects like livestreaming a constant video of themself, publishing their every location, etc. I’m curious where people draw the line.
Personal Dashboards for Self-Tracking Data - Quantified Self / Apps & Tools - Quantified Self Forum
This is a general topic for discussing ideas about personal dashboards for your self-tracking data. I started it with some posts from earlier topics that were happening on the forum, sparked by @LNP. I apologize for some slight timeline issues on the posts and making small edits to add coherence, but I think it will be worth it. #virtualbreakout
Quantified Self
Quantified Self (QS) is the term that embodies self-knowledge through self-tracking. The list of things that we can measure about ourselves is endless: among others our heart rate, respiration, hours slept, or even the number of sneezes and coughs during a day. However, not all important things in life can be measured and not everything that
The purpose of this website is to support anybody who wants to use empirical methods to explore personal questions. We call this practice “everyday science.” In the decade that we’ve been working with people doing self-tracking projects, we’ve come to appreciate the diversity of motivations, methods and tools people use to gain insight into a...
Lifescope lets you search the internet of you using passive automatic life logging. Connect accounts for events, people, places, things, and digital content in one lifelogger. Built on BitScoop.
“We’ll never have true AI without first understanding the brain”
Neuroscientist and tech entrepreneur Jeff Hawkins claims he’s figured out how intelligence works—and he wants every AI lab in the world to know about it.
Augmented reality affects people’s behavior in the real world | Stanford News
Stanford scholars found that people’s interactions with a virtual person in augmented reality, or AR, influenced how they behaved in the physical world.
From autonomous vehicles, predictive analytics applications, facial recognition, to chatbots, virtual assistants, cognitive automation, and fraud detection, the use cases for AI are many.