21 Oct 2014
By Belle
Troubling design decisions in Apple's new Health app and more: Quantified Self weekly links
Products
iHealth's suite of products include wireless scales, fitness trackers, and blood pressure monitors.
Software
(OFFTIME)
Android
(OFFTIME) blocks distractions and calls to help you spend more quality time offline and unplugged. You can create different profiles for different times, and decide who can still call you while you're unwinding, relaxing, or focusing on work. (OFFTIME) also creates reports to show you how you use your phone.
News and articles
Apple’s Health app: Where’s the power?
A look at the troubling design decisions of Apple's new Health app:
The design of things – pretty much all things – reflects assumptions about what kind of people are going to be using the things, and how those people are going to use them. That means that design isn’t neutral. Design is a picture of inequality, of systems of power and domination both subtle and not. Apple didn’t consider what people with eating disorders might be dealing with; that’s ableism. Apple didn’t consider what menstruating women might need to do with a health app; that’s sexism.
- Data-driven weight loss
- Will wearables in the office make work more productive?
- Amazon's eyeing wearables and automated homes next
- Export your data to get more from your fitness tracker
Image credits: PacDigital, (OFFTIME), The Society Pages
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