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If you WFH or have sedentary job - would you find this useful? (honest thoughts pls)

133 replies

sittingtoomuch · 28/01/2026 14:19

Hiya – I’d really appreciate some honest views on an app idea.

During Covid, when I was WFH much more, I realised I was sitting for very long stretches. With all the talk about sitting being “the new smoking”, I started thinking how useful it would be to have something that simply reminds you to stand up and move a bit during the day.

As I went further down the research rabbit hole, I was genuinely surprised by the science around very short bursts of activity – aka “exercise snacks” – things like 1-2 minutes of more vigorous movement, which seem to improve health markers across the board and potentially support health and quality of life later on.

This really struck a chord with me personally, as my dad died suddenly at 60, largely because he didn’t look after his own health (ironically, he was a GP).

So the idea I’m working on is an app aimed at people with sedentary jobs or who work from home (or who care about your future health). It gives gentle nudges during the day for:

short bursts of vigorous exercise (e.g. jumping jacks, squats)
mobility and strength moves (e.g. wall sits, planks)
breathing exercises (e.g. box breathing)
mindful moments (e.g. a short nature break or pause)

Everything is backed by science/research, and you choose how long the movements last (30 seconds to 2 minutes), which ones you do, and how often you’re prompted. You can snooze if you’re busy, and there’s light encouragement like streaks rather than pressure.

My genuine questions are:
is this something you’d find useful?
would you ever pay a small monthly amount if you felt it genuinely helped your future health?

Just trying to work out whether this is actually useful or a nice idea that wouldn’t get used in real life 🤔

OP posts:
99pwithaflake · 30/01/2026 17:05

sittingtoomuch · 29/01/2026 09:33

@99pwithaflake People don’t need another app shouting instructions (when they’re not open to hearing them)… they need something that feels like a friend, encouraging them to keep going and reminding them why (this is only going to appeal to people who care about the why - some folks may never get there). That’s the crux of it. It’s not for everyone, and that’s ok.

But your app with the constant pop-ups is going to feel like an app shouting instructions at them...

VillaOfReducedCircumstances · 30/01/2026 17:41

I’d quite like this.

sittingtoomuch · 30/01/2026 17:46

If this problem had already been fully solved, I suspect we wouldn’t still be debating it.

OP posts:

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about this subject:

TwentyFourHoursToTulsa · 30/01/2026 17:52

sittingtoomuch · 30/01/2026 17:46

If this problem had already been fully solved, I suspect we wouldn’t still be debating it.

OK OP, I'll bite. What can your app do that I can't tell ChatGPT or Claude to do?

"Find out what physical movements I should be making each day, at what intervals. Level is midrange. Send me a message at the times we have discussed would be most convenient for me. These may differ each day, find a way to make that work for me"

sittingtoomuch · 30/01/2026 18:17

TwentyFourHoursToTulsa · 30/01/2026 17:52

OK OP, I'll bite. What can your app do that I can't tell ChatGPT or Claude to do?

"Find out what physical movements I should be making each day, at what intervals. Level is midrange. Send me a message at the times we have discussed would be most convenient for me. These may differ each day, find a way to make that work for me"

@TwentyFourHoursToTulsa You could also use AI to write your own cookbook. Jamie seems to be doing alright.

OP posts:
TwentyFourHoursToTulsa · 31/01/2026 15:49

Plenty of people use AI to look at pictures of the contents of their fridge and get suggestions of what to cook.

Apps are becoming redundant. It's probably time for your DH to pivot his career. And as for marketing...

sittingtoomuch · 31/01/2026 20:14

TwentyFourHoursToTulsa · 31/01/2026 15:49

Plenty of people use AI to look at pictures of the contents of their fridge and get suggestions of what to cook.

Apps are becoming redundant. It's probably time for your DH to pivot his career. And as for marketing...

@TwentyFourHoursToTulsa Ah well you’re in luck then. His fallback is professional Christmas lights untangler. AI doesn’t fancy that gig.

OP posts:
Whyherewego · 31/01/2026 20:16

My issue is that my meetings run on into one another and an app would irritate me to be honest

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