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Device or computer?

As you may have noticed, I am fascinated by performance.  I’m also an avid cyclist and techno geek.  The recent start of the Tour de France has turned my thoughts to the technology of bikes and their accessories.  As with most technology, the latest models promise to be faster, lighter, and better.

One accessory of particular interest to me is the bike “computer.”  When I first started serious riding six years ago, bike computers were pretty minimal devices.  They were generally a small LCD display that connected via wires to two sensors.  One sensor counted how quickly a magnet on the pedal passed by to determine the cyclist’s cadence (pedal strokes per minute).  The other sensor counted how quickly a magnet on one of the wheels passed by. Knowing the circumference of the wheel, it calculated the cyclist’s speed and distance traveled.  Sure there had to be a processor of some sort in those bike computers, but I always refused to call it a bike computer. Speedometer/odometer seemed more accurate to me.

Now, however, I have on my bike a Garmin Edge 500 (https://buy.garmin.com/shop/shop.do?cID=160&pID=36728).  It is a small device—less than 2 inches by 3 inches—that attaches to my handle bars and determines my speed and distance via a built-in GPS. It determines altitude by detecting changes in barometric pressure and temperature by a built-in thermometer.  It communicates wirelessly with my heart rate monitor.  It can also talk wirelessly to other devices, like a cadence sensor or a power meter that measures the power applied to the pedals.  The LCD screen is customizable and allows me to display the information I most care about while riding.  The Edge 500 collects all of the data and can upload it via a computer to the Garmin Connect Web site.

By any definition of computer, the Edge 500 seems to qualify.  I still don’t call it a computer, however. Calling it a speedometer/odometer would be silly.  I tend to refer to it as my Garmin.  The line between computer and device is definitely getting blurrier.

We are all surrounded by more and more computing devices, whether they are desktops, notebooks, tablets, smart phones, or bike computers.  On some of those, performance is critical while on others, fast enough is all we care about.  On which devices do you think performance is important?  Even as we start the work on HDXPRT 2012, we are constantly examining other areas and types of devices that need benchmarks.  Let us know your thoughts!

Bill

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