Skip to main content

MIT’s app promises to count calories and help you lose weight

Weight loss feat image
There are plenty of apps that claim to help you lose weight, but researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are currently developing one such app that claims to lower the barrier of entry in regards to such a task, reports BGR.

Recently shown off as a web-based prototype at the International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, the app keeps track of caloric intake by allowing people to verbally describe the meal they either ate or are thinking of eating. The app then pings an online database managed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in order to retrieve relevant nutritional data pertaining to the indicated meal.

Recommended Videos

The nutritional data is then shown alongside images of the meal, as well as a pull-down menu that lets users refine any descriptions, such as the quantity of food. Such refinements can also be done with via voice, with formality seemingly not taken into account. For example, if you say you had a bowl of oatmeal, bananas, and a glass of orange juice, and refine it to say you had half a banana, the change pertaining to the data will be made everything else is left untouched.

According to the researchers behind the app, the biggest barrier of entry for apps that log meals is how tedious it can be to do so, making it more difficult for people to really stick with it. As a result, dieters lose interest in counting their calories and possibly lose interest in losing weight as well.

There’s no word on when the app will be released, though it looks helpful not only for those looking to lose weight, but also maintain currently weight. Even so, according to the National Institutes of Health, if you want to lose weight, you might want to take your genetics into account when developing a nutritional plan.

Williams Pelegrin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
Guess how much Apple has paid App Store developers — you won’t even be close
Apple's App Store.

Since Apple launched the App Store in 2008, the tech giant has paid out an astonishing $320 billion to developers.

The data was revealed on Tuesday in Apple’s annual analysis of how the company's various services performed over the past year.

Read more
Sunbird looks like the iMessage for Android app you’ve been waiting for
Sunbird Android app screenshots.

The idea of iMessage for Android sounds like a pipe dream, and for the most part, it is. Apps like AirMessage and Bleeper do make it possible to get iMessage on your Android phone today, but they often require complicated networking and Wi-Fi port forwarding, plus a Mac or iPhone to run in the background 24/7.

These apps technically work, but they're not things the average user can comfortably and confidently rely on. A new app — called Sunbird — now promises to change that.
iMessage on Android, now simplified

Read more
You’ll soon be able to use WhatsApp on more than one phone
Two phones on a table next to each other. One is showing the WhatsApp logo, and the other is running the WhatsApp application.

WhatsApp, one of the most used messaging services in Europe and parts of Asia, is about to close a major flaw. As spotted by the sleuths over on WABetainfo, the company is planning an update that will allow the use of a secondary device -- including another phone or tablet. Currently, WhatsApp only allows phone users to link their account via its web or desktop clients.

The new feature is dubbed companion mode. Once it rolls out, you'll have a workflow that's quite similar to setting up WhatsApp Web or WhatsApp on the desktop. Rather than entering a number, you'll be able to scan a QR code with your main phone to log in to your existing WhatsApp account.

Read more