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February 3, 2009 2:42 PM PST

Menstrual calendar apps...for men

by Elinor Mills

Seems like every day brings news of a new iPhone app that makes the device all that more indispensable. Take for instance, PMS Buddy, which lets men keep track of the menstrual cycles of the women in their lives.

PMS Buddy, due to launch for the iPhone this week, has been available as a free service for nine months. The site's tagline is "Saving relationships, one month at a time."

"It has exploded. We've passed 150,000 registered users," Jordan Eisenberg, founder and chief executive of PMS Buddy, said in a phone interview on Tuesday. The app also is available on Facebook where it has about 20,000 users, he added.

PMS Buddy offers a free PMS reminder service and will launch an iPhone app this week.

(Credit: PMS Buddy)

The idea for the service started as a joke when Eisenberg and a group of friends, including several women, were drinking at a happy hour and talking about relationships. "From there the conversation transgressed, or digressed, whatever it is, into PMS," he said.

The group reached a consensus that "Women don't appreciate it when you come home and maybe things are a little tense and the man says 'Hey, do you have PMS?'" Eisenberg said.

One man said he avoids confrontations by tracking his wife's menstrual cycle on a daily planner. "So we said, 'Wouldn't that be funny to automate it and make it available to the masses,'" Eisenberg added.

No doubt, there are some people who won't appreciate the humor of such a service, particularly given the history of societal denigration of women because of their monthly hormonal changes. But, as far as menstrual tracking services for men go, PMS Buddy handles things a bit more delicately than some.

Take the competing app PMSTracker. "Tired of your wife/girlfriend/sister/mom/secretary biting your head off unexpectedly once a month?" the app summary on iTunes asks prospective buyers. Another one, called uPMS, markets itself as "an application for all guys out there suffering the monthly Psychotic Mood Shifts from their better halves."

Another winner is IAmAMan, an app for "your private life planning." Like PMSTracker, it lets men track cycles of multiple females, but has the additional handy feature of offering passwords for each female so that if one of them "accidentally bumps into this application and makes you enter the password--she will be the only one to appear on the list." Good thinking!

And then there is the PMS Meter iPhone app, which is purely for entertainment purposes and features "hilarious sound effects" and an "animated scanning sequence."

Probably the most diplomatic of the lot is the MyMate app. "Being aware of what your women are going through and knowing where they are in their cycle is essential in being a more caring and understanding man; in short it will help you become a better mate!"

MyMate also offers the ability for men to keep track of a woman's favorite color, song, perfume, likes and gift ideas, and it stores special event dates and her clothing size in "convenient European conversion."

Eisenberg dismissed the critics of the PMS tracking service, saying that he has received 3,000 e-mails from men and women around the globe telling him how useful PMS Buddy is.

"There are a lot of people out there that think we've been misogynistic, but we tell them it's a free country and if you don't like it don't use the Web site," he said. "We think it has an altruistic side to it. It helps people."

Eisenberg, whose other venture is selling shirt collar stays packaged in a credit card size holder called a Collar Card, said his wife is very supportive of PMS Buddy.

"I get a reminder, a heads up via e-mail, and I'll cut her some slack and not let things escalate when I get home if she is not in the best mood," he said.

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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by Perry_Clease February 3, 2009 2:56 PM PST
This is not a necessary app, we usually get an "alert" directly from her a few days before the event. Not that it matters to me these days, my wife is post-menopausal. :)
Reply to this comment
by IgnatiusTheKing February 3, 2009 3:44 PM PST
My wife's cycle is on my iPhone's calendar. As a repeating event. I get an alert one week before the event. I tread lightly from receipt of the alarm until the madness is over.
Reply to this comment
by Dylan_Wisor February 3, 2009 3:46 PM PST
To be honest, you have the observational skills of a child if you need outside help to track her "moments".
Reply to this comment
by Inconnux February 3, 2009 3:56 PM PST
lol this is the funniest article I have read in ages...
Reply to this comment
by sondosia February 3, 2009 4:07 PM PST
Wow. And to think men still get angry when women assert that they're jerks...
Reply to this comment
by TheDruce February 3, 2009 4:14 PM PST
Sexism for the iPhone. I don't know whether to be offended or to laugh my *ss off.

I think I'll choose the latter.
Reply to this comment
by rp69 February 3, 2009 5:08 PM PST
Sheer genius!
Reply to this comment
by karpenterskids February 3, 2009 6:24 PM PST
OH
MY
GOD
!!!!


This is the best invention since...sliced bread! :0


And the timing's just as good...I was talking with my girlfriend late last night about how to treat her when she's PMS'ing...when she sees I've added this on Facebook, she'll CRACK UP! :D
Reply to this comment
by Perry_Clease February 3, 2009 7:18 PM PST
"I was talking with my girlfriend late last night about how to treat her when she's PMS'ing"

The best thing to do during that "period" is to spend as much time as possible at Moe's Tavern. Otherwise do what they did back in the Old Testament days, put her in a special hut and make sure she has a bath before letting her back into the house.
by karpenterskids February 3, 2009 8:13 PM PST
hahaha...while I'm not a drinker, doing it the old-fashioned Biblical way DOES sound like a good idea! :]]


I believe that for an entire WEEK after her period, though, the woman was considered unclean.
Not sure if she was allowed around her husband during that time or not, though...
by Jack K1 February 3, 2009 7:34 PM PST
Yeesh. I don't need to buy an app to do something I've been doing for 20 years on paper. But the real trick to bliss is marrying a woman who *doesn't* go psychotic each month. I did, and it's heaven!
Reply to this comment
by awilensky February 4, 2009 9:59 AM PST
The world is just catching up to the orthodox Jewish world, where the practice of family purity virtually requires husbands to know their wife's menstrual calendar. Look it up, Gentiles!
Reply to this comment
by jaxstephens February 6, 2009 11:42 AM PST
Uh, yeah.
by Bowen88 February 4, 2009 12:16 PM PST
Figures that someone somewhere would come up with an "official" app like this eventually. Never needed anything like this when I was single with a few different "friends" at the same time.

However, I've been tracking my wife with Outlook, which syncs with my iPhone, for quite some time now. She'll actually ask me when she's due next, and I'll always make something nice for her.

I don't think I would get this app, but I'll let her know it's available so we can have a good laugh. Good to know I'm not the only one!
Reply to this comment
by Rod Roddy February 4, 2009 12:35 PM PST
***! I can't believe someone got paid to make this app.
Reply to this comment
by ramfisher65 February 5, 2009 2:23 AM PST
now all we need is a program for menopause ...that'd help consideribly.
Reply to this comment
by someguynamedbob February 5, 2009 6:29 AM PST
wow
Reply to this comment
by PaulTwo February 6, 2009 3:43 PM PST
I don't need an iPhone app to let me know that my woman is PMS'ing. I can tell by how ****** she is.
Reply to this comment
by blusky08 February 7, 2009 8:19 AM PST
This isn't even remotely funny. It's just sad and lame.
Yet another sign of how juvenile, low class and retarded our culture has become.

With the masses so easily distracted by such drivel it's no wonder they are slowly becoming enslaved by big government.
Reply to this comment
by rnaoncfixd February 7, 2009 11:13 AM PST
You're the reason we can't have nice things.
by tipoo_ February 8, 2009 12:58 PM PST
jeez, someone wasn't programed with a sence of humor...
by scottcunning February 8, 2009 3:58 PM PST
Quit PMSing
by tipoo_ February 8, 2009 12:57 PM PST
using it, its a real life saver!
Reply to this comment
by Rick Cavaretti February 8, 2009 7:01 PM PST
Could have used the IAmAMan tracker in college. Would have come in handy when I was juggling women.
Reply to this comment
by vin_striker February 8, 2009 7:12 PM PST
lol, very nice...
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