Fitbit Air screenless fitness tracker launches on 27 May
Updated
Updated · PCMag · May 8
Fitbit Air screenless fitness tracker launches on 27 May
11 articles · Updated · PCMag · May 8
Priced at $99, Fitbit's first new tracker in years offers seven-day battery life, Android and iOS support, and basic health data without a subscription.
A $9.99 monthly or $99.99 annual Premium plan adds Google Health Coach, while the band tracks heart rate, sleep, stress, SpO2 and can detect atrial fibrillation.
The device puts Fitbit against Whoop's screenless model, undercutting its $239 yearly membership, though Whoop currently leads on battery life and has already been tested.
With new AFib detection, are fitness trackers creating a health-conscious generation or a wave of medical anxiety?
As Google's AI coach accesses our health data, are we trading privacy for personalized fitness advice?