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Life Logging - Is It Worth The Effort? (Part 4)

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Some app developers claim you don’t need a $118 wristband to measure sleep patterns, but I’d beg to disagree. The free - and critically acclaimed - SleepBot app for iOS and Android can also track your bedtime contortions, using the accelerometer inside the phone. However, to achieve this feat, the iPhone needs to be placed in the bed alongside you, with the screen on, and therefore plugged into the wall to stop the battery running out.

Sleepbot is an Android app that helps you figure out what's going on while you're sleeping.

Sleepbot is an Android app that helps you figure out what's going on while you're sleeping.

Not only would my iPhone charging cable not reach the bed from the nearest socket, but the thought of rolling over in the night and strangling myself on an iPhone cable would stop me from sleeping in the first place.

SleepBot does have a less demanding noise-detection mode, which doesn’t require the phone to be plugged in: it records any loud noises during the night, and then switches on the motion detection for the final 30 minutes before your alarm is due to sound, to find the “optimal time” to wake you.

All this left me with was an audio recording of lots of snoring, and an alarm call that sounded 20 minutes before I’d normally wake up, without any explanation as to why. The one “useful” thing it revealed was that the overnight noise peaks had no correlation to the times Fitbit claimed I was restless, completely undermining my long-term argument that my partner’s snoring keeps me awake.

Work

Any home-working freelancer will tell you that half the battle is convincing your other half that you’re not sat on the sofa all day watching Cash in the Attic. RescueTime was the app I hoped would provide the nose-to-grindstone evidence I required to maintain the domestic upper hand. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

This is no criticism of RescueTime. Once registered and paid up - it’s $9 per month (around $8.5) to access the Premium reporting features, although there’s a free Lite version - RescueTime installs a small applet that sits quietly in the background, logging everything you’re doing on the computer. I normally start work at 8am, take an hour for lunch, and finish around 6pm, so I was pretty confident of hitting my modest goal of six hours of “productive” time per day. In four weeks of testing, I hit it twice.

Rescue Time is an original concept to manage your time efficiently by analyzing the time you spend on your computer.

Rescue Time is an original concept to manage your time efficiently
by analyzing the time you spend on your computer.

Part of the problem is that RescueTime and I disagree on what counts as “productive” use of my time. Outlook, for example, was labelled as “distracting”, even though part of my work involves answering queries from editors, sending pitches and handling emailed queries from my photography business. Likewise, most of the tech and photography websites I visit to keep abreast of the latest news - including the PC Pro website - were earmarked as “very distracting”. RescueTime does allow you to recategorise such apps and sites, but even I couldn’t justify choosing the “productive” dropdown for my second-biggest time thief: Twitter.

I sit here all day with TweetDeck running on my secondary screen, kidding myself that it isn’t really a distraction. RescueTime proved otherwise. It monitors the active window, and second only to Microsoft Word - in which I’m working 25% of the time, according to RescueTime -is TweetDeck, with 11%, or 11hrs 27mins over the month. More than a full working day.

As a Tweetdeck user, here are 5 columns set up in Tweetdeck which increase the networking value Twitter provides: “Conversations”

As a Tweetdeck user, here are 5 columns set up in Tweetdeck
which increase the networking value Twitter provides: “Conversations”

It was, to be honest, a much-needed wake-up call (and certainly a much more useful one than the actual wake-up call from SleepBot). Now, I find myself frequently engaging RescueTime’s (Premium) FocusTime mode, which blocks access to all those “distracting” sites and apps, so that I’m not tempted to divert attention from work whenever I see a Twitter alert flash up.

 

 

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