

Cycling app of the week: Sweatcoin

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I'll counter that by saying the Bryton 750se I have drives me nuts at times. Inconsistantly picks up on routes created on Komoot and the app re-syncs every few seconds when trying to set up the device and sends me back to the home screen. The most infuriating one is that I turned live track on. Once. It now won't turn off and repeatedly flags up the live track is starting, and then disconnecting every few seconds whilst riding. I haven't timed it but it wouldn't suprise me if 10-20% of the time the the screen is covered with an error message. That's been about 6 weeks now. Other than that it's great :/
RE: Police launch road safety operation... by clamping down on cyclists using footbridge Meanwhile in Glasgow, Police Scotland are riding their motorbikes over the pedestrian and cyclists only bridge. https://x.com/FietserGlasgow/status/2065106152917012523?s=20
@Paul J Van Schip certainly seems a bit of a dick, but he's a European and multiple World Champion on the track, pretty sure you don't get there without having some talent in your legs.
Poor Vincent cannot get over the simple fact that given the choice people prefer dedicated cycling spaces, rather than pretending to be cars like vehicular cyclists.
What is the point of the fancy air sensor if it can't account for changing weather conditions?? If all you care about is a delayed approximation of aerodynamic watts in steady conditions, you don't need any special sensors for that. Just your speed on a decently flat course is enough to approximate rolling resistance and drivetrain losses. And the rest must be aero. If you assume a less aero body position at the same watts, your speed will drop while rolling resistance also drops, which means approximated aero watts goes up. And that's enough to demonstrate what you've shown in your testing protocol ("I sat upright and the number went up a little while later").
Your correction is accurate - it's almost always been "the (lack of) thought that (doesn't) count". "Massive" - less than a billion a year spent on active travel (trying to catch up / building a network across the entire country) Not massive - 6 billion every year (2026-2030) spent on road *maintenance* of existing "already built, goes everywhere, very convenient" road network for inactive travel Ultimately the reason "cycle infra" is *needed* is those unbelievably colossal amounts spent every year (and for more than a century now) on making mass motoring not just viable but apparently the "best choice" for most journeys. As the Dutch and others have shown, the majority of people *are* prepared to cycle and even mix with very light, slow local motor traffic *if* cycling is also made safe and convenient for the whole of their journey (including secure parking at both ends). (The history of the financial drivers of the current situation are a complex topic but note that while people complain about "crumbling roads" and underfunded motor infra - with some reason - by us continuing the fuel duty escalator freeze (for example) we're actually helping motorists pay *even less* for that activity / subsidising more of the cost of driving than ever.)
yes, but people will still object - which was my point.
So ' Priority of Road Users' and 1.5 metre clearance at 30mph has been been reduced to 'sharing'? NCN route 2 here in South Hams is an absolute scream with white vans, tractors and total idiots who refuse,or are totally incapable,to reverse on high Devon banked lanes ...means you have to get off and pedal back to a passing place....could be at that all day...so I don't bother...
@MaxiMinimalist Agreed. The big problem I see now is today's parents grew up being driven to their schools, and therefore, see private motor vehicles as the only viable form of transport. The vast majority of UK infant and primary schools have a catchment area that is within easy walking distance from home to school. Yet, the traffic caused by pupils being driven to/from school is astonishing. Banishing the "School Run" should be a priority for all schools.
When I was a kid (that was during the previous millenium when phones were connected to a plug in the wall), I rode my bicycle to school, music academy, sport grounds, parties even during the winter. The government didn't have to spend, correct that, didn't have to think of spending massive amounts of money to build cycling specific infrastructures. Over the past 3 or 4 decades, cars have grown bigger, taller, safer (for their drivers) and faster. Meanwhile, motorists have become abusive, aggressive, hypersensitive to people moving on two wheels, aka cyclists. Spending billions upon billions on new infrastructure won't address the crux of the matter. Sadly.
8 thoughts on “Cycling app of the week: Sweatcoin”
Not compatable with IPhone 5C
Not compatable with IPhone 5C…
Sevenfold wrote:
Better get used to that! Won’t be long before most apps are incompatible with 5C and earlier thanks to apple dropping 32 bit support.
Not wishing to be too cynical
Not wishing to be too cynical, but… What’s the business model here? Are they selling on contact details? (Haven’t read T&Cs or privacy policy, admittedly).
Not sure it would work for me in any case, as I prefer to keep my phone in my saddle bag (gut feeling is it’s safer there).
ricardito wrote:
They don’t sell contact details, but I do believe they profit from passing on search data and user profiles (things like your age, exercise habits etc) as info like this is useful to big retailers regarding what kind of ads they should serve to you – it’s no more intrusive than most social media platforms really. They will also take a fee from the brands/companies running promotions on Sweatcoin.
I downloaded the app to give
I downloaded the app to give it a try and walked approx 3,000 steps according to the app, however it converted only 722 into Sweatcoin steps and you need 1000 sweatcoin steps for each Sweatcoin. The app info says that it converts on average 65% of recorded steps into Sweatcoin steps so you’ll have to do a lot of walking to earn the daily max of 5 Sweatcoins(on the free version) which equates to 5000 converted steps.
I think I’ll leave it on my phone as it’s not taking up any real space (58mb) and it works in the background.
To good to be true ?
Let me get this straight. I let a private corporation access my location and whereabouts at anytime (app always running in the background) for profits and I get in return access to a little “sweat deal”.
Thanks but no thanks.
When it looks to good to be true, it probably is !
Krazyfrenchkanuck wrote:
The cynic in me suggests you already do. Unless you’re Edward Snowden. Or my Dad, and he’s dead. Are you Edward Snowden?
Not sure it’s for cycling.
Not sure it’s for cycling. Think it’s just steps so walking and running.
I tried it this morning on my walk and logged 9,366 steps and 6.53 coins so will take a while to build up. Will persevere for a while unless the battery drain looks like being too much.