An app for Ronin

An app for Ronin

The last company I worked for offered all employees a health benefits package that came with an app. By completing physical and mental exercises each day recorded by the app, you could earn coins and those coins could be turned into vouchers at retailers such as Amazon and John Lewis, essentially gamifying physical and mental fitness.

When you left the company the app still worked but the coins were not worth as much. Still, the offer of free money, however little, in return for activity remained alluring despite many of my colleagues that also left uninstalling the app.

Those of us that kept on using it were added to a public leaderboard, consisting of hundreds of individuals that had formerly worked at other companies. All of us are now Ronin, masterless, completing the activities partly out of habit, and partly for the free money.

When working for my last employer I was always in the top 5 on the company leaderboard but against many many more people I struggled to stay in the top 20, yet the challenge that represented only made me more determined. The more activities I completed the more coin I raked in.

Until it all came to an abrupt end. After ten months of no longer being attached to a company the app announced that my coins could no longer be traded for vouchers unless I joined another participating employer. I could still play without reward, and out of nothing but sheer habit I continued for a few more weeks until an app update resulted in my login details being requested, and as the email address belonged to my former employer I was true Ronin: on my own.

A Shazam for languages

I’m addicted to Shazam. The app is installed on my mobile and when I’m out and about and hear a song I like but don’t recognise, I Shazam it. As long as I have a signal I’ve soon presented with the song title and artist details.

As I travel more, enjoying cosy nooks in cafes and bars nursing a beverage as I write, I tend to overhear snippets of conversations in foreign tongues. I try to guess the country of origin but I’m never sure if I’m correct. This got me thinking about a shazam for languages. Unsure of a language being spoken? Just open an app and it will tell you. Maybe even including the dialect or region. Would that be useful to anyone? Beyond satisfying a curiosity of mine that is.

It doesn’t need to interpret what is being said. I’m not asking for a universal translator. Besides, that would technically be eavesdropping. No, I’m just interested in knowing what languages are being spoken around me.

It’s just a thought.