Tag: qstop

BLOG

Tweet Sheet – (Plus QS SHOW&TELL #6 – Tonight!)

June 9, 2009

Tonight’s Bay Area QS Show&Tell will be fun and interesting. There are a number of people who have told me in advance that they have something to show, and as always you are welcome to present your self-tracking projects spontaneously as well. Our host is Orange Labs, the research and development group of France Telecom;…

BLOG

NYC QS Show&Tell I – The Beauty of Self-Tracking

June 3, 2009

Last night was the inaugural NYC version of the Bay Area QS Show&Tell held at Parsons The New School for Design, on the newly renovated ground floor in the “Bark” Orientation Room (it’s literally covered in bark). Presentations included lots of very original and self-expressive charts of stuff tracked. Mimi Chun presented some beautiful artifacts…

BLOG

QS SHOW&TELL – Tonight in New York City

June 2, 2009

Please join New York QS readers at the first NYC QS Show&Tell tonight. There is a great lineup, a great location, and a high probability of an interesting, fun evening. For location and time details, follow the link above to the NYC Quantified Self Meetup page. The Show&Tell format will be the same as the…

BLOG

Measuring Vital Signs From 40 Feet Away

June 1, 2009

The US Department of Homeland Security has invented a Star Trek-like tricorder. Called the Standoff Patient Triage Tool (SPTT), it can measure pulse, body temperature, and respiration from up to 40 feet away. The obvious application is for emergency response teams, but why not have a tricorder stationed conveniently in your bedroom and office to…

BLOG

“The most fascinating thing in the world is a mirror…”

May 26, 2009

What do we see in the mirror of our data? A couple of recent stories bring this question to mind. The first comes from Adam Bryant’s profile in the New York Times of Jim Collins, author of business advice books that have sold millions of copies. Collins is tremendously successful; a few hours of his…

BLOG

QS SHOW&TELL – 6.2 in NYC, 6.9 in SF

May 22, 2009

We’re happy to announce that we’ve got a date and location for the next QS Show&Tell. The SF group will meet on June 9 at Orange Labs in South San Francisco. The program has been so much fun that we’re just going to keep doing it the same way. There will be a series of…

BLOG

Politican as self-tracker – Bob Graham’s notebooks

May 19, 2009

Politicians have always been self-trackers. In the flow of political action, you need a notebook just to keep track of people’s names. But when a recent political controversy was resolved by the notebooks of the most conscientious self-tracker in the history of the United States Senate, the reputation of people interested in personal data got…

BLOG

Measuring My Brain Function: One-Finger Typing

May 15, 2009

Noticing that flaxseed oil improved my balance led me to measure its effects on other tests of brain function. It also made me wonder what else in my life affected how well my brain works. Eventually I measured the mental effects of flaxseed oil with four tests, but each had problems: Balance. Time-consuming (15 minutes…

BLOG

Make Your Own Mobile Self Tracker with Google Docs

May 13, 2009

Today we’re going to learn how to build your own multi-purpose mobile self-tracking application. The origin of this simple tracking method lies in the second QS Show&Tell when I outlined my dream self-tracking system and expressed a wish that somebody would build it. Among other things, I wanted an easy way to capture any kind…

BLOG

Top 38 Data Blogs to Watch

May 7, 2009

Nathan Yau at the FlowingData blog has compiled a list of “37 Data-ish Blogs You Should Know About.” His list includes blogs on statistics, visualizations, maps, design, and “others worth noting,” a category that includes our own Quantified Self blog. Thanks Nathan! (Adding Nathan’s blog to the list makes 38.) Happy RSS-ing!

BLOG

The power of false remembering

April 30, 2009

Deep mysteries of human nature will be exposed by self-tracking, aspects of our behavior so disconcerting and bizarre that they will lead us to question whether we understand ourselves at all. I know this is true because such disconcerting results are already being produced at a rapid pace by experimental psychologists, and self-tracking brings the…

BLOG

Stop the Pain! Self-Tracking Migraines and a Live Research Study

April 28, 2009

A common question people ask me is, “Why do you track yourself?” The primary answer, for anyone living with chronic pain, is simple — to help reduce the pain. Migraine, for example, is a chronic condition where self-tracking can have a positive effect. According to the National Headache Foundation, migraine affects 13% of the US…

BLOG

Self-Experimentation with Cognitive Enhancers

April 27, 2009

The New Yorker has a very good article on self-experimenters — mostly college students — using cognitive enhancers, beyond the traditional caffine and NoDoz.  It’s unclear how many of these folks are quantifying their experiments, but they should be. A few excerpts: The effects of piracetam on healthy volunteers have been studied even less than…

BLOG

What we need is a good standards war

April 23, 2009

I’ve been meaning to link to this post for a couple of weeks. Nathan Yau over at Flowing Data has been writing personal data collection projects quite a bit. In this post, A Perfect Personal Data Collection Application, he talks about what is missing from current tools and about his dream system for personal data…

BLOG

QS SHOW&TELL – New York Edition

April 21, 2009

Self Quantifiers in New York now have their own QS Show&Tell Meetup, courtesy of Steve Dean, who has been following QS almost since its inception. Steve was out here in the Bay Area for the second Show&Tell we had last year, and he has arranged to have the first meeting at Parsons, The New School…

BLOG

Stop worrying and start experimenting!

April 15, 2009

In this inspiring talk from the recent QS Show&Tell, author, scientist, and self-experimentalist Seth Roberts explains why worries about experimental design are overblown. You will learn what’s wrong with your experiments by starting to do them.

BLOG

“But my job description just said ‘office chair…’”

April 14, 2009

As John Herrman writes: Man Builds Chair that Tweets His Farts, Single-Handedly Justifies Twitter’s Existence. Today’s New York Times has a story about twitter that, in passing, points out that SMS offers a pretty convenient format for automatic monitoring human behavior. But I think the automatic flatulence detecting office chair tells the same story, more…

BLOG

To see ourselves as others see us

April 14, 2009

Self-tracking is about self knowledge. But what if the knowledge you want is contained in the minds of others? In these videos, Joe and Lisa Betts-LaCroix discuss self-tracking in a relationship, and Paul Sas shares his proposal for a “dynamical dinner party.”

BLOG

Quantifying Now

April 8, 2009

Sprint’s commercial tries to sell its 3G network by quantifying “now.” Does this mean it’s the beginning of a trend, or the end of one?