All day long, I’ll happily use wristbands to record my steps, heartbeat, pulse, weight, food (calories in), additional exercise (calories out) and even water consumption
Persistent binge-drinking criminals are to be fitted with an electronic tag capable of working out when they have had more than a permitted level of grog, which then alerts a police or parole officer via the internet
Most mornings I begin life-logging as I get up. I sync my mobile phone to my purple plastic Vivofit, and download all the data from the previous night about how well – or badly – I slept: patches of light sleep, fragments of deep sleep, moments when the car alarm next door woke me up completely. Great lumps of quantifiable ammunition for when I want to moan later about how tired I am.
They’re going to be collecting personal data in Croydon, too. But there, it’s part of an initiative to cut anti-social behaviour. Persistent binge-drinking criminals in the borough are to be fitted with an electronic tag, capable of working out when they have had more than a permitted level of grog, which then alerts a police or parole officer, via the internet.
They’re going to be collecting personal data in Croydon, too. But there, it’s part of an initiative to cut anti-social behaviour. Persistent binge-drinking criminals in the borough are to be fitted with an electronic tag, capable of working out when they have had more than a permitted level of grog, which then alerts a police or parole officer, via the internet.





