I’ve been bombarded recently with adds for the Muscle Booster app. Just a minute’s research revealed that this is just a subscription renewal scam, but the app looks perfect for my needs.

I’m over 50, in pretty bad shape, and looking to make some changes, so a chair workout plan seems ideal, and the (possibly fake) app they show in the ads looks perfect.

Is there a non-scam chair workout app I can use?

    • @PlantJam
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      311 days ago

      I second youtube videos. There’s a ton of content available that’s basically just advertising for the creator’s app/book/website, but the videos themselves are often plenty to get started and figure out if you like that style of content or not.

    • HossenfefferOP
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      211 days ago

      Thanks, I’ll take a look. I liked the idea of an app since it could track progress, so there may be something I can use there.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 days ago

      Have you any studies that prove the usefulness? What I heard is that the evidence is rather flimsy and that, as a HIIT exercise, starting with it might lead to injury.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 days ago

        There’s a couple of things to be said.

        1. The evidence for most exercise programs is pretty flimsy. They all have problems with sample size -it’s hard to find people that will take up exercise that haven’t been already doing it, and here the evidence shows that it works about as well as you would expect another effective exercise program to do, rather than better.

        2. It’s not HIIT. There’s no real on and off, it’s just 7 minutes of fairly consistent intensity. It’s also not that intense compared to say playing sport as a hobby. If you’re worried about injuries, you want probably want to avoid impacting movements, and ballistic movement, and there’s very little of that here. Probably the worst bit is the jumping jacks, which are still likely to be lower impact than going for a run.