Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes I believe these threads are some type of advertising. There is nothing amazing about the peloton app. There are better apps or even workout on you tube for free. I have tried the strength training classes and yoga and I get bored with both of them. I also like variety on my workouts so I know that I will get bored doing mainly spinning as cardio.
I, and obviously thousands of others, disagree with you. I’ve used Les Mills for spinning. They have such limited content compared to the peloton app. Peloton has a huuuuuuuge amount of content to access.
Right. It may just be that this is a high-quality product that most customers like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes I believe these threads are some type of advertising. There is nothing amazing about the peloton app. There are better apps or even workout on you tube for free. I have tried the strength training classes and yoga and I get bored with both of them. I also like variety on my workouts so I know that I will get bored doing mainly spinning as cardio.
I, and obviously thousands of others, disagree with you. I’ve used Les Mills for spinning. They have such limited content compared to the peloton app. Peloton has a huuuuuuuge amount of content to access.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gotta ask - is it really the software that is the big seller? And not so much the bike itself (although it seems that is a pretty decent exercise bike).
There are a ton of options out there for an exercise bike, no? BUt paying a premium for Peloton gets you all the fancy bells & whistles of the software for your stats, videos, access to a variety of instructors, and other options, no?
A home exercise bike is nothing new. We all agree on the pros of having it in our room/basement/wherever for anytime exercise. So that in itself is nothing novel, but the software capabilities are a new trend and that has become a huge selling point.
It’s not only the software capabilities. It’s the fact that the bike allows you to track cadence and resistance. My understanding is most exercise bikes have a resistance knob, but there’s no way to precisely measure what your resistance is.
During a Peloton spin class, the instructor will give you cadence and resistance instructions. They’ll say something like “we’re going to warm up with a cadence of 80-100 and a resistance of 25-35.” Of course you can deviate from those markers, but it allows there to actually be structure to the class, as opposed to guessing as to where you’re supposed to be. Then the cadence and resistance are combined to form output, which is what tracks you on the leaderboard. More cadence + resistance = more output. A higher output = a higher place on the leaderboard.
So while you can use the bike with just the app, you can’t really get the most out of the classes unless you can actually control your cadence and resistance precisely.
The resistance doesn’t exactly line up with the peloton on other bikes, but you can guess at it. You can buy a cadence monitor (wahoo makes one) for $40ish to attach to any bike. peloton has an output number that’s harder to figure out, but apparently you can also buy special pedals that measure that. You can get 95% of the peloton experience using a cheaper bike.
The real peloton let’s you do live classes and be in the leaderboard and it also allows you to set up profiles for each user (my family shares the peloton app and you can’t do this - all our workouts are lumped together). The app is cheaper at 12.99 even if you purchase the bike. There is still a $40ish fee per month with the peloton bike.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gotta ask - is it really the software that is the big seller? And not so much the bike itself (although it seems that is a pretty decent exercise bike).
There are a ton of options out there for an exercise bike, no? BUt paying a premium for Peloton gets you all the fancy bells & whistles of the software for your stats, videos, access to a variety of instructors, and other options, no?
A home exercise bike is nothing new. We all agree on the pros of having it in our room/basement/wherever for anytime exercise. So that in itself is nothing novel, but the software capabilities are a new trend and that has become a huge selling point.
It’s not only the software capabilities. It’s the fact that the bike allows you to track cadence and resistance. My understanding is most exercise bikes have a resistance knob, but there’s no way to precisely measure what your resistance is.
During a Peloton spin class, the instructor will give you cadence and resistance instructions. They’ll say something like “we’re going to warm up with a cadence of 80-100 and a resistance of 25-35.” Of course you can deviate from those markers, but it allows there to actually be structure to the class, as opposed to guessing as to where you’re supposed to be. Then the cadence and resistance are combined to form output, which is what tracks you on the leaderboard. More cadence + resistance = more output. A higher output = a higher place on the leaderboard.
So while you can use the bike with just the app, you can’t really get the most out of the classes unless you can actually control your cadence and resistance precisely.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes I believe these threads are some type of advertising. There is nothing amazing about the peloton app. There are better apps or even workout on you tube for free. I have tried the strength training classes and yoga and I get bored with both of them. I also like variety on my workouts so I know that I will get bored doing mainly spinning as cardio.
Anonymous wrote:Not interested in the bike (and can’t afford it), but curious about the non-bike options. Is just the app worth it? And what approx cost? Also I am not on Facebook or Twitter.... still with it?
Anonymous wrote:Another convert who didn't use to spin. It's the instructors, the variety, the community, the feeling it inspires. I know it sounds cultish but it's hard to explain until you get into it.
Anonymous wrote:Not interested in the bike (and can’t afford it), but curious about the non-bike options. Is just the app worth it? And what approx cost? Also I am not on Facebook or Twitter.... still with it?
Anonymous wrote:Not interested in the bike (and can’t afford it), but curious about the non-bike options. Is just the app worth it? And what approx cost? Also I am not on Facebook or Twitter.... still with it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another convert who didn't use to spin. It's the instructors, the variety, the community, the feeling it inspires. I know it sounds cultish but it's hard to explain until you get into it.
Agree with this - it just seems so DOABLE, too. It's right there, you can get a good workout in during a thirty minute block of time and be right back at your desk. I also find that the instructors distract me from realizing I am actually working out, and I am much more likely to keep up with the instructions on cadence/resistance.
Anonymous wrote:Another convert who didn't use to spin. It's the instructors, the variety, the community, the feeling it inspires. I know it sounds cultish but it's hard to explain until you get into it.
Anonymous wrote:Another convert who didn't use to spin. It's the instructors, the variety, the community, the feeling it inspires. I know it sounds cultish but it's hard to explain until you get into it.