I built textWeight in my basement on New Years Eve and planned to just have it as an experiment with a few friends to better understand usability of SMS and whether it could have an impact. I was inspired by Tim Ferriss's book 4 Hour Body on keeping it simple. We ended up getting picked up by Tech Crunch, and the reception was pretty phenomenal.<p>One of my ambitions in this version is to see if we can get people to stay more engaged with their health on weekends. We know people are more likely to eat unhealthy foods over the weekend. Excited to see if we can make a dent and help people out.
It seems like they have a subset of the features that we have created in Lose It! and they are clearly going for simplicity.<p>Lose It! is a little more complex(?) in the sense we do full food and exercise tracking. But I do still have some insights into the observations they have written about.<p>We offer reminders to log your food if you have done so far today. Users can pick the time and then we use iOS notifications to remind them, similar to the way they remind users to log their weight. Tis feature is iOS only, no Android or web only version of it. If you compare users with reminders enabled to users without reminders enabled we see users with reminders enabled lose 1.8 more pounds. (8.4 vs 6.6lbs)<p>However there are two other observations that we see from the Lose it! base. First, weighing yourself daily is stressful. People get down on themselves all the time because they gained weight from one day to the next when they thought they were doing good. This is because people fluctuate weight so much day to day based on so many factors. Most users on the forums always recommend only weighing yourself once a week. We also had to build in a buffer range for users once they hit their goal weight because so many users complained that their weight moves around so much once they hit their goal weight they kept getting bumped back into a weight loss plan.<p>Another pattern we see is that users that have a Withings scale that automatically records their weight receive a lot of value (expressed in emails to us, posts on the forums, or written on their wall) from the device. We haven't had time to run stats (on how it effects weight) on this yet but we are starting to talk about the 'passive tracking' for users that have a Fitbit and a Withings connected to their Lose It!. Users cannot get over how much a better picture of their health they get after the values come in on their own. The Withings scale takes the textWeight idea to a new level. Sadly, both of these devices are pretty costly and out of the range of a lot of people. So textWeight might be a good way for people to track weight that are on a low cost budget.<p>All in all though, the most important feature that will improve your weight loss is accountability via social / friends both online or in real life. Studies have shown this in the past so we are not the first to notice or the first to say. In fact, this is the first thing out of the mouth of most health startup CEOs.
This seems pretty retarded. Firstly weight is not a measure of health and weight loss is not the goal (you can improve fitness without changing weight, just shifting weight from fat mass to muscle mass).<p>Secondly, Who can't remember how much they weighed last time they weighed themselves? It's such a pitifully simple piece of information where small variances are inconsequential. If you weigh about 110, and your ideal weight is about 85, you hardly need to know historically what your weight was.<p>Thirdly, the best measure of "weight loss" is how you feel, not how much you weigh.<p>I can see merit in recording something but I think weight is the wrong metric, or maybe weight isn't an appropriate metric when taken in isolation.<p>Perhaps if it were weight correlated with mood, diet, time (of month? day? year?) or various life events then it'd be worthwhile.<p>Perhaps sending a text: "110kg :S pizza" indicating you're 110kg, feeling stressed and the last thing you ate was pizza.<p>If the "request for information" SMS were sent out at some sort of "random sampling" time, then you could probably build some sort of useful statistical model based on mood and food consumption correlating to fluctuations in weight then use the feedback to reduce weight over time.
I am using Google Docs with a simple form for daily input. Entries are automatically timestamped and the Google Docs trend chart works quite well for this kind of data.