View Poll Results: How do you plan to use Strava going forward?
I'm going to use it for free
81
41.33%
I'm going to start paying
19
9.69%
I'm going to continue to pay
81
41.33%
I'm going to stop using it
15
7.65%
Voters: 196. You may not vote on this poll
Poll: your relationship to Strava going forward
#26
Arizona Dessert
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: AZ
Posts: 15,029
Bikes: Cannondale SuperSix, Lemond Poprad. Retired: Jamis Sputnik, Centurion LeMans Fixed, Diamond Back ascent ex
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I prefer all in phone as I carry it anyway and don't want extra electronics to loose and keep track of everytime I stop, etc. I also use for running, walking, hiking and don't want to carry more for those activities either.
#27
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Central Io-way
Posts: 2,738
Bikes: LeMond Zurich, Giant Talon 29er
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I think I'll start paying. Honestly haven't looked into the other apps much, Strava has been fine. I'm kind of a data nerd so some of the advanced tracking would be nice, the social aspect is cool too. Now that it's one price of $5/month that seems worthwhile for what I get out of it. Though honestly I could still use the free version and not notice probably.
#28
I'm doing it wrong.
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 4,875
Bikes: Rivendell Appaloosa, Rivendell Frank Jones Sr., Trek Fuel EX9, Kona Jake the Snake CR, Niner Sir9
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When I used Strava (think I stopped about two years ago) I paid for premium because I really dug the personal heat maps, route planner, and finding other people's routes. I never gave segments much of a thought, to be honest...but it was clear that when you were riding in a group a segment was coming up because people would absolutely destroy a good paceline or pack of cyclists just to hammer the segment.
I no longer record rides, but if I went back to doing it I would probably go with ridewithgps or something without the social functioning of strava.
I no longer record rides, but if I went back to doing it I would probably go with ridewithgps or something without the social functioning of strava.
#29
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sacramento, California, USA
Posts: 40,863
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
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I was using TP and GC before Strava came along, so I have mostly used free Strava for the social aspect. But the data analysis doesn't add anything for me. Nor does the Beacon app since my family is all on Apple and so my wife just uses Find My Friends.
Still, I will definitely do the free trial. The local racing community is all involved in a social distancing TT series that relies on Strava segment leaderboards. My understanding is that unless I crack the top-10 all time, I won't be able to see myself on the leaderboard. And that's no fun.
I do like the heatmap and route sharing, so that will also add some value.
Still, I will definitely do the free trial. The local racing community is all involved in a social distancing TT series that relies on Strava segment leaderboards. My understanding is that unless I crack the top-10 all time, I won't be able to see myself on the leaderboard. And that's no fun.
I do like the heatmap and route sharing, so that will also add some value.
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#30
Senior Member
My wife worries about me too. If you have a smartphone, google maps and many other apps already let you share your location with selected contacts. When I had my crash on a bike path last year, she had just checked my location and saw I wasn't moving in a location I normally wouldn't stop in. The persons that found me called her using the ICE contacts I'd set up on my phone and told her what they knew and that help was already on the way. So she didn't have to call 911, though she was about to. Location sharing with Google Maps gives gps coordinates so you can inform any emergency response people that need to know. As well it gives a link that sets up a route that will take someone directly to that location if needed.
Since my wreck, I use a helmet with Specialized's ANGI, haven't had any false alerts yet, hopefully I won't have to find out if it works for real crashes. One in sixty-one years is enough for me.
As for the poll, there wasn't a place to say I've used both, but like RWGPS better.
Since my wreck, I use a helmet with Specialized's ANGI, haven't had any false alerts yet, hopefully I won't have to find out if it works for real crashes. One in sixty-one years is enough for me.
As for the poll, there wasn't a place to say I've used both, but like RWGPS better.
#31
Senior Member
I use the free Strava for the social aspect. My main log is SportTracks (which I pay for), followed by RideWithGPS and Golden Cheetah. SportTracks has a better goal system and gear tracking but lacks the social connection depth of Strava. I use a Wahoo Bolt which provides the Live Track service and uploads to several websites. I prefer to not use my phone as a bike computer and don't want to pay for more than one online service.
#32
Senior Member
Thread Starter
You already have something that works well for you so not much reason to shell out hundreds of dollars to basically wind up in the same place. But since we're talking about data and recording anyway, I wanted to put that out there because it's really an underappreciated solution.
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#33
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Missouri
Posts: 2,726
Bikes: Giant Propel, Cannondale SuperX, Univega Alpina Ultima
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Since there's a thread going on about whether Strava's latest pricing structure will save the world or cause WW3, I thought it would be interesting to make a poll. I always thought Strava is the segment leaderboards and everything else was fluff, but that's because I hang out here. So do you, which means the changes probably affect you more than your neighbor who thinks doing five miles on a bike is an amazing feat of endurance.
Also because it's on topic, here are some other training log book and analysis options:Golden Cheetah is the most in depth, and free, but has the steepest learning curve. Garmin's Connect is free whether you use their hardware or not, and pretty feature rich but much less social than Strava. It's not convenient to use without their hardware though. I haven't used RwGPS as a log book, and the other two charge $, like Strava.
Also because it's on topic, here are some other training log book and analysis options:Golden Cheetah is the most in depth, and free, but has the steepest learning curve. Garmin's Connect is free whether you use their hardware or not, and pretty feature rich but much less social than Strava. It's not convenient to use without their hardware though. I haven't used RwGPS as a log book, and the other two charge $, like Strava.
__________________
Formerly fastest rider in the grupetto, currently slowest guy in the peloton
Formerly fastest rider in the grupetto, currently slowest guy in the peloton
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#35
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Mostly I gathered a short list because in the other Strava thread, several people asked what alternatives exist. For people who don't value the social interaction, some are definitely worth looking into.
For what it's worth, I'm going to continue using Strava (for free) to check the global heatmap for ride ideas, and in return I'm going to continue giving them data that will contribute to that feature. I don't want Strava to go out of business. I just like talking about bike stuff.
#36
Me duelen las nalgas
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Texas
Posts: 13,515
Bikes: Centurion Ironman, Trek 5900, Univega Via Carisma, Globe Carmel
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I just subscribed a few minutes ago. I'm already seeing data I didn't know was provided to subscribers. Seems good.
When I drank beer I paid way more than $5 a month -- probably closer to $50 a month, especially after I got pickier and drank mostly local craft beer. Alas, an auto-immune disorder that killed my thyroid also started causing bad reactions to alcohol. One beer, and I'd get hangover symptoms within an hour -- painful sinus congestion, swollen eyes, headaches, body aches, the works. Hated to give it up but it just wasn't enjoyable to risk even a single beer. Heck, a friend even owns a local brewery that makes incredibly tasty beers and ales.
So $5 a month for Strava won't cost nearly as much as my vices, all of which I've given up, between quitting smoking 20 years ago, and now beer.
And the social networking aspect and friendly rivalry motivates me. So it's worth a few bucks a month for me.
Sure, I wish Strava would incorporate some of the goodies provided by Elevate, Velo Viewer, the wind effects browser extension that seems to be in limbo now. Maybe if enough folks will ante up a few bucks a month Strava can afford to put some programmers on those projects.
When I drank beer I paid way more than $5 a month -- probably closer to $50 a month, especially after I got pickier and drank mostly local craft beer. Alas, an auto-immune disorder that killed my thyroid also started causing bad reactions to alcohol. One beer, and I'd get hangover symptoms within an hour -- painful sinus congestion, swollen eyes, headaches, body aches, the works. Hated to give it up but it just wasn't enjoyable to risk even a single beer. Heck, a friend even owns a local brewery that makes incredibly tasty beers and ales.
So $5 a month for Strava won't cost nearly as much as my vices, all of which I've given up, between quitting smoking 20 years ago, and now beer.
And the social networking aspect and friendly rivalry motivates me. So it's worth a few bucks a month for me.
Sure, I wish Strava would incorporate some of the goodies provided by Elevate, Velo Viewer, the wind effects browser extension that seems to be in limbo now. Maybe if enough folks will ante up a few bucks a month Strava can afford to put some programmers on those projects.
#37
Me duelen las nalgas
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Texas
Posts: 13,515
Bikes: Centurion Ironman, Trek 5900, Univega Via Carisma, Globe Carmel
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I used Cyclemeter on my iPhone and Wahoo Fitness for iPhone and Android. Much more reliable, less battery drain.
I've had a bike computer since January but still use my phone with Wahoo Fitness as a backup, or to compare data.
But I doubt I'd ever use the Strava app to log a ride unless they returned to supporting sensors and improved reliability. Unlikely to be a priority with so many "serious" riders using bike computers now. You can get reliable basic GPS computers for under $100 now.
#38
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 4,075
Bikes: Trek Domane SL6 Gen 3, Soma Fog Cutter, Focus Mares AL, Detroit Bikes Sparrow FG, Volae Team, Nimbus MUni
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Strava lets me see what people around the world that I've ridden with are doing. That's still free, and not available elsewhere.
It lets me see where local friends are riding, so I can try their routes if they do something interesting. That's still free, and also not available elsewhere.
I find segments useful to track my fitness, to provide motivation to achieve goals. They've made it less useful, but the free part is still useful I think. Connect will let me do the same.
I pay for RWGPS because I like its route creation tools. Don't see myself paying for another service.
It lets me see where local friends are riding, so I can try their routes if they do something interesting. That's still free, and also not available elsewhere.
I find segments useful to track my fitness, to provide motivation to achieve goals. They've made it less useful, but the free part is still useful I think. Connect will let me do the same.
I pay for RWGPS because I like its route creation tools. Don't see myself paying for another service.
#39
Senior Member
I just subscribed a few minutes ago. I'm already seeing data I didn't know was provided to subscribers. Seems good.
When I drank beer I paid way more than $5 a month -- probably closer to $50 a month, especially after I got pickier and drank mostly local craft beer. Alas, an auto-immune disorder that killed my thyroid also started causing bad reactions to alcohol. One beer, and I'd get hangover symptoms within an hour -- painful sinus congestion, swollen eyes, headaches, body aches, the works. Hated to give it up but it just wasn't enjoyable to risk even a single beer. Heck, a friend even owns a local brewery that makes incredibly tasty beers and ales.
So $5 a month for Strava won't cost nearly as much as my vices, all of which I've given up, between quitting smoking 20 years ago, and now beer.
And the social networking aspect and friendly rivalry motivates me. So it's worth a few bucks a month for me.
Sure, I wish Strava would incorporate some of the goodies provided by Elevate, Velo Viewer, the wind effects browser extension that seems to be in limbo now. Maybe if enough folks will ante up a few bucks a month Strava can afford to put some programmers on those projects.
When I drank beer I paid way more than $5 a month -- probably closer to $50 a month, especially after I got pickier and drank mostly local craft beer. Alas, an auto-immune disorder that killed my thyroid also started causing bad reactions to alcohol. One beer, and I'd get hangover symptoms within an hour -- painful sinus congestion, swollen eyes, headaches, body aches, the works. Hated to give it up but it just wasn't enjoyable to risk even a single beer. Heck, a friend even owns a local brewery that makes incredibly tasty beers and ales.
So $5 a month for Strava won't cost nearly as much as my vices, all of which I've given up, between quitting smoking 20 years ago, and now beer.
And the social networking aspect and friendly rivalry motivates me. So it's worth a few bucks a month for me.
Sure, I wish Strava would incorporate some of the goodies provided by Elevate, Velo Viewer, the wind effects browser extension that seems to be in limbo now. Maybe if enough folks will ante up a few bucks a month Strava can afford to put some programmers on those projects.
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#40
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Silver Spring, MD
Posts: 1,439
Bikes: Yes please
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In case people are thinking of uploading their existing activities to another platform, I believe golden cheetah has some options under “share”.
Looks like it can “sync” your activities from Strava, but can only “upload” to rwgps. Someone that may have used the function may know better, but from the wording, I’m guessing “sync” means it can download activities..
Looks like it can “sync” your activities from Strava, but can only “upload” to rwgps. Someone that may have used the function may know better, but from the wording, I’m guessing “sync” means it can download activities..
#41
vespertine member
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Land of Angora, Turkey
Posts: 2,476
Bikes: Yes
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I'll probably continue to use the free version, primarily for the social aspect. I liked the training log and ability to compare past efforts, but do not find the service to be worth $60/year. I do, however, like seeing where riders I've met in the real and virtual world are riding.
I currently have a RWGPS subscription (primarily for audible navigation), and might migrate my data there.
I currently have a RWGPS subscription (primarily for audible navigation), and might migrate my data there.
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#42
Sunshine
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Des Moines, IA
Posts: 17,035
Bikes: '18 class built steel roadbike, '19 Fairlight Secan, '88 Schwinn Premis , Black Mountain Cycles Monstercross V4, '89 Novara Trionfo
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Two very specific situations and rarely occurring.
#43
Last night I got home from my ride, and for the first time couldn't get the full leaderboard information to see how my new PRs stacked up. Approximately ninety seconds later, I was a Strava premium member, with no qualms whatsoever. It would be hard for me to overstate how much I love nerding out about that data and watching my position improve over time on all my favorite segments. Strava is a big part of what motivated me to get more and more serious with cycling, and I'm happy to cough up five bucks a month for that.
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#44
Canadian eh?
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Toronto
Posts: 2,135
Bikes: 2020 Specialized Roubaix Expert
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Last night I got home from my ride, and for the first time couldn't get the full leaderboard information to see how my new PRs stacked up. Approximately ninety seconds later, I was a Strava premium member, with no qualms whatsoever. It would be hard for me to overstate how much I love nerding out about that data and watching my position improve over time on all my favorite segments. Strava is a big part of what motivated me to get more and more serious with cycling, and I'm happy to cough up five bucks a month for that.
#45
Arizona Dessert
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: AZ
Posts: 15,029
Bikes: Cannondale SuperSix, Lemond Poprad. Retired: Jamis Sputnik, Centurion LeMans Fixed, Diamond Back ascent ex
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I agree it is worth $5/mo
But I am struggling with principle however. Strava in their app feed advertised the bluetooth Wahoo TICKR heart rate monitor. I clicked on the advertisement and compared prices elsewhere and ordered it thru the Strava provided link thru (they probably got a tiny percentage of the sale). Then only a few months later I got a notice from Strava telling me that their app no longer supported BT devices. I was pissed of course, but moved to Wahoo app and 'vowed' I would never pay again. Strava provided me a full refund of the $59.99 yearly fee as I had just renewed about a month prior. I moved on and was happy.
Now can I now go back to paying Strava and not feel self loathing?
But I am struggling with principle however. Strava in their app feed advertised the bluetooth Wahoo TICKR heart rate monitor. I clicked on the advertisement and compared prices elsewhere and ordered it thru the Strava provided link thru (they probably got a tiny percentage of the sale). Then only a few months later I got a notice from Strava telling me that their app no longer supported BT devices. I was pissed of course, but moved to Wahoo app and 'vowed' I would never pay again. Strava provided me a full refund of the $59.99 yearly fee as I had just renewed about a month prior. I moved on and was happy.
Now can I now go back to paying Strava and not feel self loathing?
#46
If you're nerding out over the data, try https://veloviewer.com/ out. It'll tap into Strava seamlessly.
#47
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Minneapolis
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I'm still on the fence. I do sort of like the leaderboards. The Elevate (formerly stravistix) extension does give me some very general info about a particular effort compared to my PR, but I'll miss having a more detailed view of my efforts over time.
As I've posted elsewhere, for me, Strava is mainly social media, and I don't see any other app that has as broad membership. I'd say 80% of my riding cohort is on Strava. I like knowing what they are up to. People here kind of laugh at being interested in "collecting kudos", and I see the point, but I find the social dimension of Strava to be richer than that - maintaining contact and being supportive. This has been particularly true during the pandemic. I'm not out riding with my friends, but I'm glad to see that they are getting out - or alternatively, I can be concerned when dedicated riders seem not to be getting out.
As I've posted elsewhere, for me, Strava is mainly social media, and I don't see any other app that has as broad membership. I'd say 80% of my riding cohort is on Strava. I like knowing what they are up to. People here kind of laugh at being interested in "collecting kudos", and I see the point, but I find the social dimension of Strava to be richer than that - maintaining contact and being supportive. This has been particularly true during the pandemic. I'm not out riding with my friends, but I'm glad to see that they are getting out - or alternatively, I can be concerned when dedicated riders seem not to be getting out.
Last edited by MinnMan; 05-21-20 at 06:31 PM.
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#50
Me duelen las nalgas
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Texas
Posts: 13,515
Bikes: Centurion Ironman, Trek 5900, Univega Via Carisma, Globe Carmel
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It's easier to demonstrate than explain. I'd say just give it a try.
Now, until this month, I'd have said just give the free version a try. And it's still good. But the recent change has hidden a lot of features that used to be free -- the leader boards, which I checked daily to compare my results with other folks whom I know are comparable to me in age, weight and fitness, or stronger and faster.
I'd suggest starting out with the free version for a week or so, then go for the 60-day free premium trial. You'll quickly see the differences. And the 60-day free trial is absolutely free. Yes, you do need to specify a payment method -- I used Google pay. But you can cancel any time. Strava has a good reputation for business practices so I wouldn't worry about them billing us for services we don't want or cancelled.
When I started cycling in 2015, I was a long way from my athletic prime in my teens and 20s in the 1970s. I used to be very competitive and fit. I rode bikes, raced occasionally (I was never any good at it but I had fun), played racquetball during the 1970s SoCal heyday, and was an amateur boxer. I was about as fit as a very middle-of-the-pack guy could be. I was never going to be a champion in any sport but I was solidly in that demographic of amateur athletes who fill up the photos of models for every sporting product, ever. I was the target marketing demographic.
Fast forward to 2000... my weight had ballooned from 150 to 205 in the early 2000s after decades of work and family life. Then in 2001 my car was t-boned at highway speed, breaking my neck and back. I could hardly do more than limp around with a cane for a decade. I changed my diet and cut out a lot of sugar and junk carbs, which got my weight down to 175.
- By 2014 I was able to get off the cane for long walks.
- In summer 2015 I bought a 35 lb comfort hybrid just to try bike riding again. It was painful. I had to stop every 400 yards to gasp for breath and huff my asthma inhaler (useless - turned out I needed a totally different type of asthma and nasal inhaler steroid). It took me a month just to ride 3 miles continuously without stopping. Another month to ride 10 miles with lots of stops. After three months I could ride a 20 mile round trip... in 12 hours. That's how badly out of shape I was.
- Early 2016, I meet some great folks for casual group rides. I struggled to keep up with a 10-12 mph pace, but they were very encouraging. Some of them mention Strava. I'm curious so I signed up for the free service.
- Summer 2016, as a one year anniversary of resuming cycling, I treat myself to a lighter weight hybrid, a good used early 1990s Univega that weighs around 30 lbs. I get a bit more goal oriented toward personal fitness.
- Summer 2017, I buy myself an old school steel road bike, my first in 30+ years. Now I'm getting more interested in how my fitness is progressing. Strava's free version leader board shows me how I compare with friends from those casual group rides, as well as some seriously strong local amateurs and pros. This rekindles my old latent competitive streak.
- In 2018 I was hit by a car, breaking and dislocating my shoulder, and coincidentally diagnosed with thyroid cancer. That was a long recovery period. Strava helped keep me motivated, and in touch with friends whom I saw less often in person.
- In 2019 I bought a good used carbon fiber road bike from a friend. That's a gateway drug to insufferable competitiveness.
Annnndddd it's all downhill from there. Now I'm chasing KOMs (never getting any KOM worth having -- my sole KOM is on a route nobody rides other than some neighbors on single speed cruisers), and actually cracking the top ten against some pretty strong riders.
At 62 my window of opportunity for improving is rapidly closing. I figure I have about 3-5 years, tops, to get stronger and faster. After that my fitness will decline no matter how hard I try, unless I use PEDs. It took a long time just to rebuild my base fitness. I figured it would take a few months. Nope. It took a few years. That's how it goes with an aging body.
So Strava serves my immediate needs for something to motivate me.
But, to be honest, I'll probably lose interest after age 65. By then the window of opportunity to get stronger and faster will close. I'll just be holding position for as long as possible. It'll be difficult to maintain the same level of motivation knowing that it's not going to result in any improvements.
So eventually I won't pay much attention to the leader boards, KOMs, PRs, etc. I'll probably switch to an endurance or touring geometry road bike, and ride my old Univega hybrid more often. And that's fine too.
But for now, that's why I find Strava useful. It's my virtual Staff Sergeant Munden, our Marine Corps fitness DI in Hospital Corps field training school, the guy who'd do almost anything legal to motivate us Navy squids to get into proper shape. He'd bark stuff like "Pain is beautiful, bud! If it doesn't hurt, you're doing it wrong!"
Last edited by canklecat; 05-21-20 at 06:57 PM.