China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Technology helps you step into healthier lifestyle and benefit society

- By JIANG YIJING

The birth of the app in February 2015 came from Wang’s own weight loss experience.

The 29-year-old recalls that during his college years he managed to lose some 20 kilograms in about eight months. But that didn’t happen in the gym. As a student who couldn’t afford expensive sessions, Wang searched for exercise videos and became familiar with each workout.

“I wanted to help people like me find videos and lose weight more

Spring, and its sense of rejuvenati­on, has arrived. Time again for the outdoors, walking or more robust exercise, as people abandon their winter hibernatio­n.

Walking certainly seems to be growing in popularity. Chinese people walked, on average, 6,303 steps per day over the past year, according to one report by internet company Tencent. The number of steps has risen for three consecutiv­e years since 2016, and marks the first time that the average exceeded 6,000 steps per day, an indicator of its benefit and appeal, the report said.

Since the dawn of smartphone­s, technology has made it easier to count the steps.

If you feel like hitting your stride, then the following are some popular apps to help you put your best foot forward.

This app focuses on helping people become better runners. Users can create and join running groups and make new friends.

Setting targets is a popular function. Users can choose from a variety of activities to set goals and those who achieve them may win prizes.

It also offers handy tips on how to avoid injury, with input from coaches sharing their knowledge.

This app can track your performanc­e whether running, walking, riding or hiking. It has an active social easily,” says Wang. Due to sedentary habits from a modern lifestyle, many young Chinese find themselves putting on weight when working behind a desk. However, keeping up regular exercise is not an easy thing and many people will find any convenient excuse to quit. Encouragin­g people to use the app consistent­ly became a challenge for Wang. One of his solutions is to let app users set targets and show their progress on the app’s social platform. “I gained five kilograms after graduation, and always want to lose weight,” says Du Qian, a 32-year-old project manager at an advertisin­g company in Shanghai. She is active on the app’s social platform and posts every time she finishes a workout. “Though it gives you star ratings after exercise, people’s ‘likes’ satisfy me more. I get a sense of fulfillmen­t receiving attention, especially when it’s from strangers.” platform where people can share photos and videos, and it offers running programs. Users can also launch their own activities, inviting people in the same city to join them. For users who wish to engage in a variety of activities, the app provides other workout programs focused on building abdominal strength and thigh muscles.

This platform includes an integrated feature called WeChat Sports, which ranks your steps and those taken by friends each day. It also allows people to “like” the performanc­e of their friends, and the number of daily likes people receive is visible all day long.

Users can choose at most 10 friends to follow and see their daily activities, though the friends follow will not be informed.

WeChat also has charity programs to help vulnerable groups, such as left-behind children. Users can “donate steps” which enterprise­s convert to actual amounts of they money that gets donated to charity programs.

The popular mobile payment app has a charity-oriented activity called Ant Forest, where users’ steps are

This app, providing online health services, such as medical consultati­on, can also count steps, and these can be converted into virtual coins the next day. With enough virtual coins, users can buy health-related products from its online store at discounted prices. In some cases, users only need to pay a small courier fee to get items such as chocolate candies, Band-Aids and tissues.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States