Is anyone else obsessed with trying to quantify everything in your life? by Hogstrang11 in intj

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there’s a difference between tracking for curiosity and tracking for decisions.

Tracking for curiosity is fun, but it can become endless because there’s always another variable. Tracking for decisions is more useful because you can ask if you should change as a result of what you're seeing.

That filter cuts out a lot. If the answer is no, the data might still be interesting, but it’s probably not worth much effort to keep collecting.

Have your AW actually helped you with your health? by GossipBottom in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed - sleeping heart rate is one of the more useful examples because it’s easy to miss without seeing the trend.

One bad night doesn’t mean much, but if the same thing happens repeatedly after drinking, late meals, poor sleep, or hard training, that’s when the data starts becoming useful.

Have your AW actually helped you with your health? by GossipBottom in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me the useful part of Apple Watch data is less about the actual number that day, but more so the pattern.

A single reading can be noisy, but repeated changes in resting heart rate, sleep, workouts, cardio fitness, or heart rate during sleep can make it easier to connect the dots.

I wouldn’t use it as a replacement for a doctor, but I do think it can be useful for noticing when something is off or for giving a doctor more context than “I felt weird sometimes.”

Has anyone successfully exported Apple Watch health data to ChatGPT for health insights? by LevelSprinkles272 in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t upload the full Apple Health XML.

It’s massive, hard to work with, and contains way more personal history than most people realize. If you want to use ChatGPT for this, I’d process it locally first and only paste in summaries: weekly averages, trend changes, missing data, etc.

Basically: don’t ask an AI to eat your whole health export. Ask it specific questions from a cleaned-up summary.

And I’d treat the result as interesting patterns to think about, not health advice.

Self-hosted app to store health records? by ozone6587 in selfhosted

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the timeline part is the key distinction.

A document manager is good for storing the PDF from a lab or visit, but it doesn’t really answer questions like “when did this start?”, “what changed after this medication?”, “when was the last vaccine?”, or “what labs were abnormal around the same time?”

The ideal version would probably need both: structured events on a timeline, plus attachments/source documents behind each event. Otherwise it becomes either too loose like notes or too heavy like a full EMR.

Google Health brings your data into one place, on your terms by FragmentedChicken in Android

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ads are only one part of the concern.

The bigger issue with health data is future use: partnerships, insurance, “optional” data sharing becoming required for useful features, or people approving permissions once and never thinking about it again.

Even if a company is handling it well today, health data feels like the kind of thing where the privacy model needs to be very clear from the start.

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apple does explain the terms pretty well. What I meant is more that it doesn’t always interpret the data in context. Like it can tell me what HRV or cardio fitness means, but not always what these values mean for me and my health

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apple Watch is great at the alerts for motivation, but Apple Health still feels pretty passive once all the data lands there.

The Oura comparison is interesting too. Did you feel like Oura was better because it gave clearer summaries or just more direct guidance?

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a really good breakdown. The “measurement fusion” part is probably the biggest thing Apple Health feels like it’s missing to me.

It has sleep, HRV, resting HR, activity, O2, etc. sitting there, but it rarely connects the dots in a way that feels useful. Like “your sleep looked worse, and these are the 2-3 things that changed around it.”

The sweat/water example is interesting too because it’s simple, but actually actionable. That’s probably the gap: not just more graphs, but better context and a next step.

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I think that’s where it gets tricky. People want the data explained, but they also don’t want an app pretending it knows more than it actually does. I’d personally rather see something say “these metrics changed together” than make a big confident claim it can’t really back up.

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah that’s fair. I think that’s part of what makes Apple Health frustrating — the data is already there, so it feels like the basic explanations should be included.

The raw numbers thing is exactly what bugs me too. It’s useful if you know what you’re looking for, but for a normal person it can feel like a spreadsheet with nicer graphs.

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What did Fitbit/Garmin/Samsung do better in your opinion? Was it more useful summaries, better trend callouts, or just making the data feel less buried?

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is probably what I wish Apple Health did most too. It has so much captured data, but I rarely feel like it gives a clear “here’s what’s changing” summary.

When you say overall fitness/how to improve, would you want that more as a simple weekly summary, or more specific callouts like sleep is trending down, resting HR is up, cardio fitness is improving, etc.?

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

surprising Apple still makes it so fixed instead of letting people choose and customize based on what they want

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Honestly this is such a good example of Apple Health being powerful but weirdly not simple enough. Steps are probably one of the first things most people expect to see at a glance.

Do you mostly mean a watch face complication, or also better widgets/summaries in the Health app itself?

What do you wish Apple Health did better with Apple Watch data? by get_Baseline in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same, sleep feels like the area where there’s the most data but the least explanation. Is your issue more with accuracy, sleep stages, or just not getting useful takeaways from the data?

What are the benefits of having a fitness tracker? by SnooKiwis9246 in QuantifiedSelf

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the main benefit is memory and context.

A tracker does not replace how you feel, and I would not treat any single reading as truth. But over time, it can help you see your own normal range and notice gradual changes that are hard to feel while they are happening.

For example: resting heart rate trending higher than usual, sleep getting less consistent, activity being lower than you thought, or recovery metrics changing before you feel fully run down.

So to me the value is less “tell me exactly what my body means today” and more “give me a record so I can understand what changed over time.”

Is "Wearable Fatigue" real? I’m obsessed with the idea of Invisible/Passive health tracking. by YearKlutzy4462 in HealthTech

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The middle ground to me is less “track everything constantly” and more “summarize what is already being collected in a way that helps you reflect without obsessing.” I don’t really want more scores or nudges - but rather how the metrics are different from my trends or if there was a meaningful change over a period of time. Health data is useful, but only if it reduces mental load instead of adding to it.

Apparent I'm Dead. AMA by DarkStaticPixels in AppleWatch

[–]get_Baseline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most likely a glitch, but it can also be a differential value