Dailymile lets you track your workouts such as letting you see how much distance you've covered whether you're running, walking, cycling, to name a few. It also has an embedded map that helps you track your route. It also follow the curves and bends of the mapped roads as you create your route.
The progress you've made is displayed in variety of ways - showing you a bar chart, showing data organized by dates, displaying averages, your total miles and time and other entertaining stuff such as how much donuts you have burned, how much gas saved, and how many TV's you've powered.
I told you that if you also like spending time on Facebook or Twitter, you'll like this. Why? Because it offers a bunch of features for social networking such as status update in Facebook, alerts when there are new posts. Because of its social features, Dailymile can boost your workout by providing you motivation.
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Google is doing some fall cleaning as well as sweeping out a lot of old experimental projects and social features, including the failed social attempt that was Google Buzz. In a blog post today, Google VP of Product, Bradley Horowitz, essentially explained that success requires focus as well as thought on what we work on and exactly what we don’t work on as well as therefore their decision to discontinue many products.
Back in July, Google had announced that it was shutting down Google Labs as well as integrating a few of its projects into more successful products whilst axing other people. Today appears to be the finalization of that clean out with Google Labs completely shutting down later today. Horowitz additionally confirmed that Code Look, Jaiku, iGoogle’s social features, and the University Research Program for Google Look will all shutdown on January 15, 2012.
Google Buzz will get the cut in a few weeks to focus on the much more successful Google+ social network. During yesterday’s Q3 earnings call, it was touted that the social platform has already reached over 40 million users. Horowitz reveals that the business has learned a lot from their mistakes with Google Buzz as well as with its closing, the company can focus on delivering “anything truly awesome” for Google+.
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