Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Friday, 1 August 2014

Rootn Tootn: The Second Time Around

I have been meaning to post this entry for a while, but since it is now World Breastfeeding Week, I decided I should stop procrastinating.


Back when Junior was born, S developed an iPhone app called Rootn Tootn, which was designed to help mums (particularly, me!) track feeds, nappy changes, sleep, etc. Junior's breastfeeds were longgggg and it was hard for me to spot any patterns, so having a way to record start and finish times made it easier to know when to begin the next feed. You can read about my experience with Junior here.


When Juniorette was born, I started using Rootn Tootn from her very first feeds in the hospital. (Note to pregnant mums: this app should be part of everyone's must-have hospital bag items. Download it and put it on your home screen before your baby comes so you'll be ready to go!)


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Rootn Tootn allows you to set as many reminders as you want, and you can format them in the settings. The term reminders doesn't encompass every use case. Some things might be an event, like a nappy change. Some events might not need a timer to remind you when it's time for the next one. Some events might not have a start/finish time. Regardless, the settings allow you to choose whether you want a duration timer or not, and whether you need a reminder or not.


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I have seven timers on my screen, although I have not used all of them yet (Juniorette is now 16 weeks old). I decided to separate timers for Right Side and Left Side, although some women may prefer to time each feed (both sides) as one event. I also have an event for formula, since we are combination-feeding Juniorette (more on that in a different post). I thought it would be useful to track events like wet and soiled nappies - we had trouble with Junior's, ahem, output, but Juniorette has been much more regular. Still, I mark nappies when I remember. Eventually, I plan to use Rootn Tootn as a sleep trainer, tracking her naps and overnight sleep.


One of my favourite features of Rootn Tootn is the ability to see graphs and averages at a glance.


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Unlike Junior's marathon 60- and 90-minute feeds, Juniorette's breastfeeds tend to vary between 5 and 15 minutes on a side. I can also track the number of bottle-feeds she does in a day; currently the average is 4 or 5. (I don't always set it when she drinks a partial bottle).


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You may notice in the screen shots that Rootn Tootn is reminding me that I should have breastfed Juniorette several hours ago. Don't worry - she was fed. Laziness in using the app each time now that she is 16 weeks old (sorry, S!) combined with better understanding of her patterns precisely due to using the app when she was first born shows that Rootn Tootn accomplished its goal: tracking feeds has helped me know when and how long to feed Juniorette. It's similar to how I use my Fitbit: I don't always hit my daily target but the repetition of tracking has helped me recognise patterns. If your baby feeds regularly like Juniorette, but unlike Junior, you might only need Rootn Tootn for a few weeks or months until you establish your routine.


Here is what S has to say about the need for reminders:
Rootn Tootn is not designed as a substitute for paying attention to your child’s needs. The reminders should absolutely not be the only cue you use to decide whether or not to feed (or change a diaper/nappy, provide medication or whatever other reminders you set). I would expect that, in normal use, you would only occasionally see a reminder.


One last feature of the app that might be under-appreciated is the ability to use a photo from your camera roll or photostream as the background image. I chose a photo of Juniorette wearing a dark onesie in order to contrast with the timers better.


Rootn Tootn is a free app in the iTunes Store, but the in-app purchase features give it the full functionality needed to establish your baby's feeding, changing, and sleep patterns in the early days. While it was developed primarily as a breastfeeding aid for women, it can be used to time anything by anyone: medication, exercise, cooking timers, etc. Rootn Tootn is regularly updated with user feedback. What features would you like to see?

Sunday, 6 June 2010

New York, New York

At the end of March, my aunt sent an email announcing that my cousin was engaged. Barely two weeks later, the date was set for the end of May, and we all decided to go for an impromptu celebration/mini reunion in New York. S and I booked tickets on BA, joking that we hoped they wouldn't be on strike. Predictably, the joke was on us: BA announced strikes and our flight to New York was cancelled (annoyingly, our flight back from New York was still scheduled to fly. Why couldn't it have been the other way around?!) After our non-trip to Istanbul in April, we were beginning to think that we might never fly out of the UK again. But in the end we managed to cancel the BA reservations and book new tickets on American via Boston.


At Heathrow, we were informed at check-in that they could not assign us seats until we reached the gate. At the gate, we were asked to wait while a woman typed furiously into her computer, shouted names and repeatedly sighed that there just weren't any seats available, particularly together. 'Did 35A and B get here yet? I'm giving them 5 more minutes.' They came. More furious typing. Finally, we were the last people waiting to board the plane. Still no seats. More furious typing. At long last, she gave us two seats together - directly behind two empty seats! The mysteries of airline travel are no closer to being solved.


More drama: I went to put my iPhone into 'Flight' mode and it froze. I couldn't even turn it off. It wouldn't respond to any touches or buttons, and I couldn't reset it. At best, I wouldn't have any music or games to entertain me. At worst, the radio signal would conflict with the flight gear and we would tumble out of the sky. Hours passed and the battery got lower and lower. I started planning my trip to the Apple store - would the New York Geniuses be able to help my UK phone?


In Boston, we found a power point and free wi-fi. Since I had my MacBook with me, I was able to sync it to iTunes and it came back to life. Crisis averted. Maybe that was the turning point, because the rest of the trip was smooth from there. We landed at LaGuardia, found our rental car, drove to Tarrytown, and arrived at the hotel at the exact same minute as my parents and my sister/brother-in-law, who had flown to JFK from San Francisco. After brief greetings at the rehearsal dinner, we sank into the expansive depths of our hotel bed...


Thursday morning we took the train into Manhattan. My sister had made an appointment at Devachan, the mecca of curly hair salons. We wandered around SoHo while she was pampered (and found an Apple store where we were able to play with an iPad - it's smaller than I had expected.) Racing back to Tarrytown for the wedding, we changed our clothes and headed to The Castle.


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Friday morning we returned the cars and moved to the Distrikt Hotel near Times Square. The weather had cooled off since our arrival (when it was in the low 90s/around 30C) and it was threatening to rain. That didn't stop us from walking through Central Park, bumping into a friend on the way!


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Late lunch at Sarabeth's on Amsterdam, featuring a bucket of iced mocha.


On Saturday morning, we walked across the Brooklyn Bridge and indulged in the most amazing ice cream sandwiches at Jacques Torres chocolates (even if they use Comic Sans on their labels, patooie!).


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City Hall behind us, where we got married in 2006


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On Sunday, we split into smaller groups: A & D went to a Yankees game, S took a walk with his camera, and my mom accompanied me on a frenzied shopping trip. I found some makeup at Sephora (I'm still sad that they no longer have stores in the UK), got my bracelet polished at Stuart Moore, and tried on every pair of shoes at Macy's before reluctantly accepting that my Cinderella moment was not to be. Sigh!


But like all good fairy tales, this one came to an end not long after midnight. We left the hotel as the sun was rising for our 6:45 flight to Boston; then on to Heathrow where the BA planes were still sitting motionless at their gates. American might not have been our airline of choice, but it got us there and back. Now, where next?!

Saturday, 7 November 2009

new camera

been testing my new camera. here are some of the initial results.


tempura hand roll, macro
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wimbledon common, 'foliage' setting and auto
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bob, 'kids & pets' setting, continuous, and video
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s, zoom and red eye reduction (sorry about the flash!)
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self-portrait using the vari-angle lens
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overall, i'm quite pleased. looking forward to our vienna trip later this month!

Monday, 31 August 2009

www.cut URL shortener for iPhone

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Have you downloaded S's newest iPhone app yet? www.cut (pronounced 'dub cut') shortens URLs so that you can save characters when tweeting, for example.


Read about it here and download it from the iTunes App Store here!


logo by yours truly

Sunday, 22 February 2009

my new iToy

i bought myself an expensive birthday present:


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it's sooo nice! i'm having fun playing with it and downloading apps. of course, two of the first apps i downloaded were yummy and yummy browser, developed by the talented, s. if you use delicious.com to bookmark links and have an iphone or ipod touch, i highly recommend it. spread the word!


the iphone joins my long history of apple products going back to the mid-80s. i took the family macplus to college and wrote my senior thesis on it. i dragged a performa all the way to japan so that i could use the kanji kit. i sold the performa to a friend and bought my first mac laptop, a powerbook 1400 (the kind with the customisable cover), with the japanese OS. i donated it to the school where i taught japanese and replaced it with the beloved key lime ibook. s likes to call it a 'toilet seat' but i know it was a clam shell. i got a white 14" ibook before i moved to london and carried it to the british library to write my master's dissertation. my in-laws now use it and i have a black macbook.


in the meantime, i bought a 3rd gen ipod (40GB) which was stolen in the brussels train station on my way to zurich. that was one of the longest train rides of my life. i got a 20GB ipod instead, after having realised that i would never really use 40GB, until... s bought me a black video ipod when we got married. we got matching silver ipod shuffles for the gym. and now i have an iphone 3G.


s also has an impressive apple history. is it any wonder that macs and ipods helped bring us together?


you're welcome, steve jobs.