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looking for a good app to track weight loss

It would be great if it would also track measurements. I purchased body monitor because it does everything I'm looking for and had good reviews but its not working. :(

I use Weigh-In de Luxe. It tracks weight, you can enter measurements, set Goals, the table screen does an awesome job of laying out your progress as does the Chart screen.
 
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While tracking weight loss is fine, I'd say you're better off with a tool that lets you track things such as track times, weight lifted, and reps.

I'd say the biggest fallacy with people trying to improve their bodies for a New Year's resolution is tracking weight. Weight is a little more tricky to work with since your body is going to fight off any weight loss in an attempt to preserve its current mass. Thus, I'd say measure how fast it takes you to run a mile, how many pushups you can do, how many pull-ups you can do, how many squats you can do, or how many planks you can do. It's easier to see improvement in those areas from week to week and losing weight doesn't always translate to getting healthy and getting healthy doesn't necessarily mean you're going to lose weight. I'd rather stay the same weight if it means I'm losing fat and gaining muscle mass than to lose weight at the expense of losing muscle and fat.
 
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While tracking weight loss is fine, I'd say you're better off with a tool that lets you track things such as track times, weight lifted, and reps.

I'd say the biggest fallacy with people trying to improve their bodies for a New Year's resolution is tracking weight. Weight is a little more tricky to work with since your body is going to fight off any weight loss in an attempt to preserve its current mass. Thus, I'd say measure how fast it takes you to run a mile, how many pushups you can do, how many pull-ups you can do, how many squats you can do, or how many planks you can do. It's easier to see improvement in those areas from week to week and losing weight doesn't always translate to getting healthy and getting healthy doesn't necessarily mean you're going to lose weight. I'd rather stay the same weight if it means I'm losing fat and gaining muscle mass than to lose weight at the expense of losing muscle and fat.

I'm a 40ish female, so push-ups and pull-ups aren't as important to me as what the scale says and what size pants I wear. However, I understand what you're saying. We have ordered power 90 so strength training will be a big part of this. We haven't received it yet, but I think it's supposed to build our conditioning up gradually. I also have a gym membership I'm going to
start using more. I have to admit I would much rather do cardio than lift but I know my body needs it at my age.

The weigh-in deluxe app also tracks measurements, but not as many as the body monitor did. :(. Can you recommend a good app to go along with this that would track workouts? Again, the first app I tried had a place to keep notes. I was thinking of using a real calendar to track that sort of info but am open to suggestions.
 
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I have Cardio Trainer. Kinda pricey, but it tracks workouts and everything. Has some add ons for helping with diet, recording weight, and that kinda thing. I like it when I'm riding my bike. GPS tracks my position, calculates average speed, distance, shows a map, and estimates calories burned.

Alas I'm still fat, but slowly doing better :p
 
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I'm a 40ish female, so push-ups and pull-ups aren't as important to me as what the scale says and what size pants I wear. However, I understand what you're saying. We have ordered power 90 so strength training will be a big part of this. We haven't received it yet, but I think it's supposed to build our conditioning up gradually. I also have a gym membership I'm going to
start using more. I have to admit I would much rather do cardio than lift but I know my body needs it at my age.

The weigh-in deluxe app also tracks measurements, but not as many as the body monitor did. :(. Can you recommend a good app to go along with this that would track workouts? Again, the first app I tried had a place to keep notes. I was thinking of using a real calendar to track that sort of info but am open to suggestions.


I was just using pushups/pullups as an example. You're probably better off keeping track of your progress (how many reps, how much you run etc). Are you also keeping track of calories? Good luck and remember it's a lifestyle change and not a temporary thing.
 
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Are you also keeping track of calories? Good luck and remember it's a lifestyle change and not a temporary thing.

Yes, a change back to the way I ate and worked out before working full time while going to grad school which led to a major weight gain. :(:eek:. No, I never count calories, just make healthy choices and watch portion sizes, along with lots of exercise...gotta make time for that again!
 
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Yes, a change back to the way I ate and worked out before working full time while going to grad school which led to a major weight gain. :(:eek:. No, I never count calories, just make healthy choices and watch portion sizes, along with lots of exercise...gotta make time for that again!

I'd say consider counting calories. There's a story on CNN about a nutritionist professor who goes on a Twinkie diet (all snack cakes) and all he eats are snack cake junkfood type items but limits his caloric intake to less than 1800 calories a day. He wound up losing 27 lbs on nothing but Twinkies and little debbie snack cakes and other junk food.
Twinkie diet helps nutrition professor lose 27 pounds - CNN.com

Twinkies. Nutty bars. Powdered donuts.
For 10 weeks, Mark Haub, a professor of human nutrition at Kansas State University, ate one of these sugary cakelets every three hours, instead of meals. To add variety in his steady stream of Hostess and Little Debbie snacks, Haub munched on Doritos chips, sugary cereals and Oreos, too.
His premise: That in weight loss, pure calorie counting is what matters most -- not the nutritional value of the food.
The premise held up: On his "convenience store diet," he shed 27 pounds in two months.
For a class project, Haub limited himself to less than 1,800 calories a day. A man of Haub's pre-dieting size usually consumes about 2,600 calories daily. So he followed a basic principle of weight loss: He consumed significantly fewer calories than he burned.
His body mass index went from 28.8, considered overweight, to 24.9, which is normal. He now weighs 174 pounds.
But you might expect other indicators of health would have suffered. Not so.
Haub's "bad" cholesterol, or LDL, dropped 20 percent and his "good" cholesterol, or HDL, increased by 20 percent. He reduced the level of triglycerides, which are a form of fat, by 39 percent.
"That's where the head scratching comes," Haub said. "What does that mean? Does that mean I'm healthier? Or does it mean how we define health from a biology standpoint, that we're missing something?"
Despite his temporary success, Haub does not recommend replicating his snack-centric diet.
"I'm not geared to say this is a good thing to do," he said. "I'm stuck in the middle. I guess that's the frustrating part. I can't give a concrete answer. There's not enough information to do that."
Two-thirds of his total intake came from junk food. He also took a multivitamin pill and drank a protein shake daily. And he ate vegetables, typically a can of green beans or three to four celery stalks.
Families who live in food deserts have limited access to fresh fruits and vegetables, so they often rely on the kind of food Haub was eating.
"These foods are consumed by lots of people," he said. "It may be an issue of portion size and moderation rather than total removal. I just think it's unrealistic to expect people to totally drop these foods for vegetables and fruits. It may be healthy, but not realistic."
Haub's body fat dropped from 33.4 to 24.9 percent. This posed the question: What matters more for weight loss, the quantity or quality of calories?
His success is probably a result of caloric reduction, said Dawn Jackson Blatner, a dietitian in Chicago, Illinois.
"It's a great reminder for weight loss that calories count," she said. "Is that the bottom line to being healthy? That's another story."
Blatner, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association, said she's not surprised to hear Haub's health markers improved even when he loaded up on processed snack cakes.
Being overweight is the central problem that leads to complications like high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol, she said.
How well are you managing your diabetes?
"When you lose weight, regardless of how you're doing it -- even if it's with packaged foods, generally you will see these markers improve when weight loss has improved," she said.
Before jumping on the Ding Dong bandwagon, Blatner warned of health concerns.
"There are things we can't measure," said Blatner, questioning how the lack of fruits and vegetables could affect long-term health. "How much does that affect the risk for cancer? We can't measure how diet changes affect our health."
On August 25, Haub, 41, started his cake diet focusing on portion control.
"I'm eating to the point of need and pushing the plate or wrapper away," he said.
He intended the trial to last a month as a teaching tool for his class. As he lost weight, Haub continued the diet until he reached a normal body mass index.
Before his Twinkie diet, he tried to eat a healthy diet that included whole grains, dietary fiber, berries and bananas, vegetables and occasional treats like pizza.
"There seems to be a disconnect between eating healthy and being healthy," Haub said. "It may not be the same. I was eating healthier, but I wasn't healthy. I was eating too much."
He maintained the same level of moderate physical activity as before going on the diet. (Haub does not have any ties to the snack cake companies.)
To avoid setting a bad example for his kids, Haub ate vegetables in front of his family. Away from the dinner table, he usually unwrapped his meals.
Study: U.S. obesity rate will hit 42 percent
Haub monitored his body composition, blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose, and updated his progress on his Facebook page, Professor Haub's diet experiment.
To curb calories, he avoided meat, whole grains and fruits. Once he started adding meat into the diet four weeks ago, his cholesterol level increased.
Haub plans to add about 300 calories to his daily intake now that he's done with the diet. But he's not ditching snack cakes altogether. Despite his weight loss, Haub feels ambivalence.
"I wish I could say the outcomes are unhealthy. I wish I could say it's healthy. I'm not confident enough in doing that. That frustrates a lot of people. One side says it's irresponsible. It is unhealthy, but the data doesn't say that."
 
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