![]() That way I can have 230 grams later and just enter 2.3 portions. Unless I misunderstand you, I solve this in MyFitnessPal by first creating a recipe with all ingredients, including water, then selecting the number of portions so that each portion is (close to) 100 grams. I do want to explore ways to help the project. But compared to the FDA database (for generic foods) and Nutritionix, it was way behind. This is a single click away.įor the record: I did look at using Open Food Facts as the backing database a couple of years ago. Even FDA/Nutritionix items can be wrong/outdated. You're not the product, we sell a product to you.Īnother commenter mentioned corrections: this is built into Joy. Tracking works all the way down to the micronutrient level, like potassium, vitamins. All the food is either from a professionally curated database (Nutritionix) or custom foods you enter. Also, there are no community-entered foods. Low carb and intermittent fasting is also very easy to use with this app. Works just as well for people who want to gain or maintain weight. It was designed to be opened for as little as possible each day. Once you learn the ropes, it's an order of magnitude faster to add entries. High level benefits vs MFP and the other household names: Another shameless plug for my team's app. Great to see a lot of ideas and competition in this space. If this is something that interesting, it presents a lot of possibilities - etch an "invisible barcode" on our food, that I can fish out my phone and track every detail about the food. I'm not sure of any information or links, though. ![]() I walked out happy, being able to talk to an interesting person. He was confident that it could be done but will likely be too costly for food items. So, I asked him if the machine do it for food. Any attempt to alter the data will result in, of course, corrupted/frauded data. ![]() With this, a standard Smartphone app can point to the medicine (tablets, etc.) and be able to track all the info on it. He was part of a Startup sometime back that did some optical etching on medicines. I let him talk most of the time, interrupting him with "my usual dumb questions." When they ended their meeting, I asked the guy if I can take some more of his extra time to talk "interesting tech." He was elated, and we spent an additional hour or so just talking. I could not help myself overhear them for 30+ minutes. There was a 50-ish guy at the adjacent table, explaining cryptography to a bunch of young 20-30 odds (perhaps first-time entrepreneurs). I was once at a Coffee place, reading a book.
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