Daily iPhone App: The Eatery
Crowdsourcing, the act of getting input from a large number of people quickly using social networking tools, is being used frequently for everything from recommendations on what restaurant are good to choosing cover art for a book. Now a new iPhone app, The Eatery (free) wants you to use the power of crowdsourcing to help you forge healthier eating habits.
The idea of The Eatery is simple. Snap a picture of what you're eating, and then slide the picture to the appropriate point on a scale from fat to fit. That gives the app / service an idea of how you personally envision the relative healthiness of what you're eating. You can also designate where you're eating the meal -- at a restaurant or at home. Next, the photo is sent out anonymously to a feed where others using the app can rate the healthiness of your food. Within a day, you receive feedback on just how correct -- or delusional -- you are about how well you eat.
The fun part of the app comes in rating other people's meals. This morning, for instance, I was glancing through the feed looking at meals and found one that was horrendous -- large servings of fried food that could stop your heart a mile away. With a touch, I slid the image to the fat end of the scale, and hopefully the person who posted this will receive a lot of feedback of this type, gently reminding him/her that they need to make better choices when it comes to food.
The company behind The Eatery is Massive Health, a start-up that hopes to fight chronic diseases through analysis of the data gathered through apps like this. Earlier in the year, the company raised US$2.25 million in funding from an impressive group of investors who believe that Massive Health has the right idea -- using smartphones as sensors to gather health information that can be stored in the cloud.
As an example of what Massive Health can do with the data, they used some early results from The Eatery to compile maps of San Francisco and New York showing areas that trend more healthy or unhealthy. What good are the maps? Perhaps they'll show public health officials where in major metropolitan areas they need to focus their attention on encouraging good healthy eating habits.
In the meantime, The Eatery is a fun way to get personal feedback on your own eating habits, anonymously "scold" others for their bad habits, and contribute to a data-gathering project.
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A new iPhone app, The Eatery (free) wants you to use the power of crowdsourcing to help you forge healthier eating habits
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I am now using the app for one week and I agree with Josh; the crowd is biased as well: http://foodintakecontrol.blogspot.com/2012/01/my-top-3-of-free-apps-that-support-you.html
January 02 2012 at 11:10 AM Report abuse Permalink +1 rate up rate down ReplyI've been using The Eatery for 2 weeks now, and while the interface is beautiful and the concept is brilliant, there is a fatal flaw to crowdsourcing opinions on healthy eating– America is fat. And we don't know what is healthy and what isn't. People are rating a good majority of uploaded meals based on what they want to eat, not what is healthy. Seeing a bowl of quinoa and tuna rated at 55% makes me cringe. Seeing black coffee rated as my most unhealthy meal of the week is mind-boggling. I am hoping that it eventually makes the turnaround and has a better user base, otherwise the percentages/ratings will mean nothing.
November 14 2011 at 10:39 AM Report abuse Permalink +2 rate up rate down ReplyI've used The Eatery for about two weeks. At first, I loved the idea. It actually changed the way I ate as I would catch myself about to snack on something unhealthy but then put it down knowing it would lower my health rating. But after a few days, I noticed a few flaws. First, it is entirely subjective. If something looks unhealthy or a person just does not like it, they mark it as unhealthy. Some people hate carbs. So no matter how healthy your sandwich is, if they see bread, it gets a low score. I also think some people are just intentionally having fun by messing up someones ratings. I would have carrots voted as unhealthy and bean burritos as healthy. The last major issue I had with the Eatery is that the portion sizes do not seem to effect any of the evaluation. One snack size candy has just as much weight in your overall score as does having a salad for dinner.
I'm not sure if they plan to address some of the issues or if is even possible. Like I said at the beginning, at first I really liked this app and actually agree with the creators intended purpose: that simply being aware of what and how your eat can play a big role in changing your eating patterns. I hope they continue to make improvements and tweak the algorithms.
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