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Ask Slashdot: Do You Find Self Tracking Useful Like Stephen Wolfram Does?

New submitter Manzanita writes "The domain of personal analytics, or 'Quantified Self,' is rich with interesting things to measure and many hackers have started projects. But they will only take off if it is sufficiently easy to gather and use the data. Stephen Wolfram has collected and analyzed a lot of his personal data over the last 20 years, but that is far beyond what most of us have the time for. What do you find worth tracking? What is ripe for developing into a business?"

13 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. Been tracking real wages going down for 30 years by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does that count?

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    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  2. Not tolerable for the average person by Dinghy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the average person is sat down and told how much of their life is spent in front of the TV or playing video games, I would expect them to have a breakdown. It's one thing to know "I watch TV for 2 hours a day" but it's completely different when you're told "In the last year you spent 732 hours (yay leap year) watching TV." It's bad enough when MMO's and Steam made it possible to see your playtime. :)

    1. Re:Not tolerable for the average person by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But I enjoy my play time. A moment enjoyed is never a moment wasted.

    2. Re:Not tolerable for the average person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I actually had one of these moments.

      I wrote a quick perl script that scanned through my IRC logs and graphed how much time I spent on there. I did it mainly as a joke (was also graphing some other channel regulars) but the numbers actually led me to do serious thinking about how I was spending my free time. I still spend a lot of time on IRC (I recognize it as something I enjoy and have little guilt about it) but I've also got into other hobbies as a result.

    3. Re:Not tolerable for the average person by Ihmhi · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's bad enough when MMO's and Steam made it possible to see your playtime. :)

      It's worse when you treat it like a high score.

      "Ha, 5,000 hours in Diablo II! Suck on that, friends I no longer have!"

      -sobs quietly-

  3. No by Anrego · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not generally driven by efficiency, but happiness.

    I guess theoretically the data could be used to increase happiness, but I'd rather use my tried and true method of:
    - doing things that I know make me happy
    - investigating things I suspect will make me happy
    - avoiding things which will not make me happy
    - maintaining balance in the necessary evils and mitigating negative aspects (career properly balanced between enough money to be happy and job that while I don't dance out of bed in the morning, I generally enjoy).

    That said, different things make people happy. Some people are efficiency junkies. Some people are financial junkies (everyone knows at least one obsessive day trader who doesn't make much money, and knows it, but still spends every free moment playing in the stock market).

  4. Re:No by forkfail · · Score: 4, Funny

    I wouldn't sweat the whole ending posts mid paragraph thing. Sometimes I

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    Check your premises.
  5. Memory pruning by DEFFENDER · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Part of a healthy mind is the ability to forget unimportant or no longer relevant information in favor of more recent and accurate things. If i tracked myself I wouldn't be able to forget the unimportant or push aside the less desirable. I would be governed by old data and held to means and modes of things that may not reflect current realities.

    This seems more like punishment than an aid.

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    Careful what you say around me.. I will assume you mean it.
  6. Re:Any studies yet that ... by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Generally at the beginning, when one starts voluntarily aggregating it.

    It's one thing to write a journal, it's another to maintain data when not required to. The stuff I keep organized are either all required (taxes and other mandated record keeping) or things that are part of collections that I don't want to buy in redundancy (movies, books, music), or things that need records to ensure reliability and functionality (auto and house maintenance).

    Pictures we take are usually sorted just by date, and we occasionally browse through them, like a normal photo album. The only major exception to that is when we were house-hunting, and those pictures were functional records. Most of those house photos have been archived or deleted, unless we saw something cool that we'd want to do to our house.

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    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  7. Nope by rinoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's the deal -- it's interesting as a sample. You might extrapolate a lot from his data. For a better sample tools just aren't there, except are they? A smartphone knows everything about your habits. I have been tracking any walk, jog, cycle, hike, or paddle I take with an app on my smartphone for about two years. Guess what I found out? I don't care enough to do anything with the data. I'm fit, I'm healthy and happy, I'm not an obsessed athlete. I get the idea and the nerdgasm of data, but I it doesn't help me enjoy life more.

  8. General health by mrjb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I find general health worth tracking. For a while, as part of my new year's resolution, I had a spreadsheet to track my body weight and blood pressure as well as to keep a log of everything I ate and drank and the amount I had exercised. I also had columns where I'd score my subjective well-being and stress levels, and one for general comments. Some interesting findings were that, unfortunately, exercise had a positive effect on my blood pressure. I also found that my stress levels strongly correlated with my alcohol intake the night before. Nothing like some first hand experience to learn something. Later on I found out that the hormone cortisol is responsible for those stress levels and yes, released when taking alcohol. I'd hardly call what I did solid science, but it is nice to find out when solid science confirms your own feeble efforts.

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    Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
  9. Re:No by ColdWetDog · · Score: 5, Funny

    Burma Shave.

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    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  10. For important stuff ... by PPH · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... Slashdot does it for me.

    Modded

    1. Off Topic: 57 times this month
    2. Troll: 23 times this month
    3. Flamebait: 86 times this month
    4. Informative: 3 times this month

    Sorry about that last one, folks. I'll try to do better next time.

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