
Excited to finally give Revolut a try. I’ve been an N26 customer for more than two years and am pretty happy with it, but I guess it can’t hurt to test some alternatives.

The Sense is still one of my all-time favourite product designs. It reminds me a lot of the Beijing National Stadium by Herzog & de Meuron.
Unfortunately, the Sense never delivered on any of its other promises: The app UI wasn’t great, the personalised sleep insights & recommendations didn’t feel right and they never released the API they promised in their Kickstarter campaign. A few months ago the company announced it was shutting down. The email with instructions on how to export your data? I’m still waiting for it. My Sense is now nothing but an expensive paperweight.

There seems to be an interesting trend with quantified self devices: They either look great but don’t perform well (see Sense, Jawbone Up, Vessyl), or they perform well but lack good design (see Garmin, Zeo, Fitbit).
Fitness trackers in particular will need both great design and additional functionalities beyond step tracking to stay relevant, which is why the latest Fitbit release was so disappointing: The Ionic is not exactly a stylish piece of fashion. The form follows function approach would be okay if the watch had any ground-breaking new tracking capabilities, but that doesn’t seem to be the case either.
The winner seems to be the Apple watch, which both looks nice (I really like the Nike+ version) and offers pretty decent fitness tracking. Then on the other hand: No proper sleep tracking since the battery doesn’t even last 24 hours …
I’ll keep waiting for a device that gets both form and function right.
Fred Wilson published a blog post last week in which he argues that “low-priced subscription offering[s] that remove ads” are a good monetization model for free apps.
I tend to disagree.
The best subscription offerings add value in form of extra functionalities or content. “Remove ads”-subscriptions don’t add value – they remove a disadvantage. Adding something positive is a better sales pitch than removing something negative.
Additionally, most users don’t mind ads. Music apps are the only exception that I can think of since audio ads are more intrusive, but even these companies don’t use ad removal as their only subscription benefit. Instead they list it together with premium features that add value such as offline listening, multi-device support or exclusive content (see Soundcloud, Pandora).
That being said, I do agree that it can make sense to offer a no-ads subscription tier as an irrelevant alternative (or decoy price) alongside other subscription packages, to positively influence the price/value perception of more lucrative subscription offers.
Summary
Read 1 book (-66% MoM) and 31 long-form articles (+3%).
Listened to 546 songs (+53%), 2 audiobooks (+100%) and 7 podcasts (+133%).
Watched 2 movies (+100%), 7 soccer matches (+500%) and 25 TV episodes (+108%).
Books
Shoe Dog (Phil Knight)
░░░░░░░░░░░░░░▓ Progress: 95-100%
Homo Deus (Yuval Noah Harari)
▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓░░ Progress: 0-90%
Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)
▓░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ Progress: 0-4%
Recommended Articles
How Two Brothers Turned Seven Lines of Code Into a $9.2 Billion Startup (Bloomberg)
How Peter Thiel’s Secretive Data Company Pushed Into Policing (Backchannel)
Where is the Web Going? (Nir Eyal)
Uber’s New CEO (Stratechery)
Where should you fear private internet censorship the most? (Marginal Revolution)
Recommended Podcasts
From 4Chan to Charlottesville (The Ezra Klein Show)
Music
Top Artists: Arcade Fire, James McAlister, Philip Glass, Hans Zimmer, Radiohead
Favorite Song: Hans Zimmer – Supermarine
Distance: 1704km
Duration: 2:50h
CO2 Emissions: 0.32t
Airline: Aerlingus
Activity: Abstract

One of my new year’s resolutions this year is to meditate at least five times per week (71%). I had been using Headspace on and off before, but finally wanted to make meditation a real habit. I usually meditate for 15-20 minutes once I arrive at the office, which explains gaps on weekends and when I’m traveling. So far I’ve meditated 155 times and missed 75 days resulting in a success rate of 67% (4pp below target). The graph above represents the last 225 days.
Distance: 1740km
Duration: 3:00h
CO2 Emissions: 0.29t
Airline: Ryanair
Activity: House of Cards
Summary
Read 3 books and 30 long-form articles.
Listened to 358 songs, 1 audiobook and 3 podcasts.
Watched 1 movie, 1 soccer match and 12 TV episodes.
Books
A Wild Sheep Case (Haruki Murakami)
░░░░░░░░░░▓▓▓▓▓ Progress: 65-100%
The Underground Railroad (Colson Whitehead)
░▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ Progress: 5-100%
Annihilation (Southern Reach, #1) (Jeff VanderMeer)
▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ Progress: 0-100%
Shoe Dog (Phil Knight)
▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓░ Progress: 0-95%
Recommended Articles
Matchmaker, Matchmaker, Make Me A Spreadsheet (FiveThirtyEight)
Most coworking spaces don’t make money; here’s how they can adapt to survive the future (Levels.io)
Silicon Valley’s First Founder Was Its Worst (Backchannel)
Marc Andreessen answers questions from Stripe Atlas founders (Stripe)
Trump’s Russian Laundromat (New Republic)
The Next Disney Will Come from China and Its Name Is Tencent (Backchannel)
Successful Solo Founders (Rosie Haft, Medium)
The Inside Story Of SoundCloud’s Collapse (Buzzfeed)
Recommended Podcasts
Silicon Valley should think like Spider-Man (Reid Hoffman) (Recode Decode)
Music
Top Artists: Radiohead, Phoenix, Zoot Woman, 2raumwohnung, James McAlister
Favourite Song: Radiohead – Man of War
Distance: 1640km
Duration: 2:50h
CO2 Emissions: 0.27t
Airline: Aer Lingus
Activity: Sleep