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Many of my choices are oninle, which makes them widely compatible. I'm also using a power meter for cycling and a Garmin Forerunner for running, so that may influence what I do.TrainingPeaks is my go-to application because it tracks swims, runs and rides, including calories burnt and TSS, and the Performance Management chart includes all three disciplines. The analysis you can do is top notch. My favourite is putting two ride plots on the screen, one on zoom and one not and then highlighting the intervals on the side. The editor is decent too. You just need to know to cut to get rid of what you don't want.Disclaimer: SRAM/Quarq work closely with TrainingPeaks on some promotions and I've been fortunate to get some one-on-one training.Golden Cheetah for desktop analysis. I use 2.1 and 3.0. I dig the Critical Power (Mean Maximal Power) chart and Metrics. I look at the 5, 10, 20 and 60 minute histories after every ride. The latest build of 3.0 has NP, IF and TSS, and shows the summary data for your intervals/laps on the same screen as the ride plot, which is really nice. Golden Cheetah is good to have at events and on planes.MyFitnessPal for calorie counting. The iPhone and iPad versions are super. I lose weight twice as fast as their calculations for weight loss so that's something to watch out for.Strava for monitoring on-the-road (and on-the-mountain) performance. It's nice to see improvement not just in power numbers when you're not racing. I do field tests on local segments and look at overall time, average power vs. time and power-to-weight. Road bikes, TT bikes, position on the bike and aerodynamic and lightweight components are tested this way.Garmin connect is useful for getting files from athletes when they don't use TrainingPeaks and to export files in a widely usable format. Troy@Quarq http://kbbbuine.com [url=http://iwojqwkfoov.com]iwojqwkfoov[/url] [link=http://ptxwjg.com]ptxwjg[/link]