Motivational Media with a Physical Interface
2008 December 03

If you’re at MassArt, you have to stop by the Wentworth gym (just across Huntington Ave.) and check this out: Expresso Fitness has created a stationary bike with moving handlebars, a shifter, and, yes, a 3D graphics engine. And it is awesome.
By providing you with an on-screen avatar and over 50 courses to choose from, the Expresso system prevents your brain from acknowledging the painful, boring, physical fact that you’re really just sitting in one place and pedaling for 30-60 minutes. You’re distracted from any physical sensations when you realize that there are other people on the course with you (a gender-balanced and racially diverse crowd, as it turns out), and, as in a video game, you are motivated to beat them, to do better. So you start passing your fellow cyclists, even though you know that they’re not real, and they don’t care. You can literally ride right through them, and they won’t even blink. Keep an eye on your pacer — he’s really the one to beat, as you’re pedaling through Muir Woods, or an Aztec ruin, or even up in space.
If fake bicyclists aren’t enough to motivate you, maybe real ones will. Like an old-school arcade, Expresso tracks each rider’s performance, presenting a sort of high score list at the end of each ride. Did you beat Tommy M.? Ouch, looks like Jane S. tore through your best time! If you provide the bike with your email address, it will notify you when other, real people beat your times. And of course you can log on to the website at any time (from home, not while on the bike) to track your progress, miles pedaled, calories burned, and so on. Since your motions are being recorded, you can also race yourself — your “ghost” — and improve your mad (stationary bike) skillz.
This Internet-connected bike isn’t just monitoring you, though: it’s recording everyone’s rides, aggregating the data, and generating some interesting factoids. That’s how Expresso knows that people riding its bikes pedaled 1.4 million virtual miles, burning 44 million calories in September, as reported in the company newsletter.
For a long time, gymnasia have been decidedly low-tech places: think medicine balls, stretching mats, and free weights. But with tools like Wii Fit and Expresso bikes, our workouts are going digital.
