![]() Given the huge number of ways to analyze and view your data, and the user-friendly interface, I find it hard to beat, and have no intentions of switching to anything else anytime soon! Given that it’s completely free, there’s no harm in downloading the program and giving it a try. So, if you’re looking for a great application for downloading data from your Gamin Forerunner, I highly recommend SportTracks. ![]() There are also plug-ins that allow you to upload your data to a variety of on-line training logs (e.g., Strands and Buckeye Outdoors) which is handy if, like me, you use both a desktop and on-line training site (my prefered training website, dailymile, is also working on a plug-in for SportTracks so that we can upload our Garmin data). The users of SportTracks have developed a number of useful plug-ins that are available via the SportTracks website, several of which I use (e.g., the elevation correction plugin). That about summarizes the major features that I use in SportTracks, but there are lots of other things you can do with it as well. HR, and about 20 other options – lots to play with. In addition to mileage, you can also view avg. On the “Activity Reports” screen you can view stats like mileage by month (as above), week, year and so forth. For an example of a familiar blown up image, check out the picture below (Epcot Center from the Disney Marathon): You can even blow up the image within the program and get data on run segments by selecting parts of your track on the map (e.g, see the red dots on the image above). Like the graphs that SportTracks produces, the maps can be exported as image files and shared on-line. While this is not unique to SportTracks, the interface works well and there are a number of different types of maps to choose from (satellite, street, topo, hybrid, and a number of others). In both of the above images, you can see another SportTracks feature in the bottom right window – the ability to view your runs/rides on a map. Like many things with SportTracks, the interface is highly customizable. Splits can alos be viewed in a graphical format if that’s what you prefer. You get lots of data about each split, and the display is nice and clean. As an example, the image above shows my split times for the Disney Marathon, which I ran in January of this year. ![]() One of the features I use frequently in SportTracks (as mentioned above) is the ability to view my split times (again, these can be set to any distance that you’d like). ![]() pace, calories burned, elevation change, weather, and so on (lots of options to customize here). For each workout, you can set the category (i.e., treadmill run, race, cycle, etc.), location, distance, time, avg. On the top you have the “Daily Activity” panel, which shows your daily mileage totals, as well as totals for the current week, previous week, current month, and previous month. The screen capture below shows that basic interface using data from a 4-mile race that I ran yesterday. I think you get the picture – SportTracks will spit out just about any kind of data that you can mine from your GPS waypoints – pretty amazing stuff! If you want to record mileage on each pair of shoes you wear, SportTracks will do that too. If you want to export your GPS track to Google Earth, SportTracks will do it. If you want to look at your run mapped out on a satellite, street, or hybrid map, SportTracks will do it. If you want to look at an elevation profile for your recent run and see how your pace changed with elevation, SportTracks will do it. If you want to look at mile splits, SportTracks will do it (or any other distance split from quarter mile to 10K, or even custom splits). What SportTracks offers is a user-friendly interface and the ability to suck about as much data out of your Garmin as you could possibly want. There’s nothing I like more than sitting in front of a table of numbers, and being able to sift through those numbers for meaningful patterns. So why do I like SportTracks so much? Quite simply, I’m an absolute data junkie, both in my personal and professional life. I have been using SportTracks for over 2 years, and have been extremely happy with it. SportTracks is a free desktop program (i.e., not an on-line interface) for the PC that you can use to download your Garmin data, and it allows you to look at the data in a huge variety of ways. I made a decision early on based upon research done on-line to use a program called SportTracks instead of the software that comes packaged with the Garmin devices. I’m a huge fan of the Garmin Forerunner GPS watches (see my review of the Garmin Forerunner 205/305 here), and I get a lot of questions about how I access and manage data collected by these devices.
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