A new smartwatch that you never have to plug in.
The post Forget Batteries. The Lunar Smartwatch Runs on Solar. appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>When I buy a gadget, I expect it to work as advertised. This sets me up for a lot of disappointment. Inaccurate GPS trackers, counterintuitive interfaces, and鈥攎ost frustrating of all鈥�batteries that die well before they鈥檙e supposed to leave me forlorn.
Thus听it was with much trepidation that I decided to try the 听($299). The solar-powered activity monitor launched on last September with a simple promise: never worry about battery life again. But could a small startup crack the all-day-use problems that still plague giants like Apple and Samsung?
In bright, sunshiny New Mexico, where I live, the answer is yes.
The watch needs only an hour of daily light exposure to go on working forever鈥攁nd the company says artificial indoor light works just as well as the sun. Now, don鈥檛 expect the Lunar to replace your training watch just yet. There鈥檚 no heart-rate monitor, and in place of a display, a pair of hands tick around a face behind a transparent solar panel. Vibrations alert you to texts and calls on your synced phone, while an LED array flashes when you hit activity targets. But for the convenience of never having to charge again, I鈥檒l take it.
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]]>The company behind one of our favorite products just launched its Health Tag, a tiny tracker designed to stick with you 24/7
The post The Spire Health Tag Will Make Wearables Invisible appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>The wearable space has a problem: people just don鈥檛 like using activity monitors. They鈥檙e fun and cool at the start, but they end up in drawers collecting dust.
That鈥檚 why听the San Francisco-based听Spire wants to make them disappear. , a thumb-sized sensor that attaches to your clothing with adhesive and measures everything from breathing to heart-rate to sleep quality.听The tags are sold in packs of three, eight, or fifteen: stick them to the clothing you wear most often, and forget about it.
Like the Apple Watch and most other high-end fitness trackers, the tag has an optical heart-rate sensor (read: it doesn鈥檛 require an additional chest strap monitor) to measure heart rate and heart-rate variability. And like the Stone, Spire鈥檚 first product, it uses proprietary sensors and algorithms to monitor your breathing. Most of all, it鈥檚 designed to be stupidly听easy to use: simply attach it听to your clothing (bra or boxers, ideally) once, and that鈥檚 it. The battery lasts for 1.5 years, the adhesive about two years, and the device itself is washer and dryer safe.听
The tag links up to an intriguing-sounding app built around your health and wellness goals. If you鈥檝e ever used the meditation app Headspace, you鈥檒l understand the vibe. Pick an outcome鈥攂etter sleep, staying active, reducing tension鈥攁nd the Health Tag will create a tailored training program to help you achieve it by suggesting an exercise or breathing routine.
Because the device is听on 24/7, it can monitor activities like exercise and sleep over the long-term to provide actionable takeaways. It鈥檒l spit out readings and advice like, 鈥淚t took you 26 percent longer than usual to fall asleep last night. Got time for a quick breathing exercise before bed tonight?鈥�
To be clear, I haven鈥檛 yet gotten my hands on the Health Tag and can鈥檛 confirm the company鈥檚 claims. But I had the chance to speak with Spire CEO and co-founder Jonathan Palley before the product launched. 鈥淲e are taking wearables to next generation,鈥� he told me. The Health Tag 鈥渏ust makes the device disappear. It鈥檚 no longer about the device itself but what the device does. You don鈥檛 have to remember anything.鈥�
As an avid consumer of wearables, I鈥檓 genuinely excited about the Health Tag鈥檚 promise. If this product works as advertised, it will rightfully shift the focus on outcomes鈥攚hat tech can do for you.
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]]>A software update brings phone-free music experience to the Watch
The post Music Streaming Comes to the Apple Watch appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>There鈥檚 no point in feigning objectivity. I love the Apple Watch鈥攕o much so that I鈥檝e bought four of them and have worn one almost daily since it was first released in 2015. With watchOS 4.1, Apple has made an even more compelling device. Within the month, Apple Music users with the LTE-enabled Series 3 will be able to stream music without a phone over their cellular network. It鈥檚 a relatively minor update, but one that will nonetheless have a noticeable impact on my daily use of the Watch.
I鈥檝e been testing the Apple Watch Series 3 for about a month and a half. As was my experience with the original Watch, I鈥檝e liked its fitness-related features best. But ever since I bought AirPods, music has moved into a close second. Until now, I鈥檝e been able to listen to music stored locally on the Watch. It was an easy process that entailed me pre-selecting playlists on my听iPhone, which then听synced听to the Watch.听
With watchOS 4.1 and streaming, which I've been using over the last few days, the music experience has changed substantially. There are now听two apps that handle audio, so long as you have a decent cell signal:
This new setup may sound a bit confusing, and it can take getting used to when you鈥檙e navigating the Watch鈥檚 touchscreen.听While Music loads quickly, Radio can take a moment longer to start playing a song, and jumping between the two apps听can sometimes feel slow.听In practice, I鈥檝e found myself using Siri most of the time to select and play music. In those instances, the Watch just worked, and I didn't worry about which app I was using.听
So how good is Siri? It鈥檚 worked well, and it鈥檚 capable of parsing complex tasks, like knowing to play SZA when I asked for some 鈥渞omance-inducing hip-hop.鈥� That said, it isn鈥檛 flawless. While writing this piece, I asked Siri to play something by The Stars, and ended up getting the Moby song 鈥淭he Stars,鈥� on Apple Music. I tried again, asking for music from the band The Stars, which pulled up the album Vangelis, through Radio. At this point, I realized I needed听to drop the听and requested music from Stars, and got what I wanted on Radio.
Such, I suppose, are the minor frustrations of having an intelligent DJ on your wrist.
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]]>The new Watch is a more sophisticated fitness tracker than its predecessor, with an updated operating system, upgraded hardware, and cellular connectivity. But is it enough to win over athletes?
The post Testing the Apple Watch Series 3 appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>To really understand why the Apple Watch Series 3 matters, you have to recall a bit of recent tech history: the announcement of the first Apple Watch in 2014 was a very big deal. For the first time, a leading technology company was plunging headfirst into the smartwatch space. While reviews of the Watch were mixed, . And the product . Because the Watch had fitness-tracking capabilities, many analysts predicted that it would mark the the end of brands like Garmin and Fitbit.听
Instead, the opposite happened: the Apple Watch made entire wearables market better. Sales of smartwatches and trackers . Garmin introduced the Forerunner 225. Fitbit听launched the Blaze. Meanwhile, software developers like Strava made wearable-friendly apps.
A similar scenario played out in 2016, with the release of the Watch Series 2. Apple added听health and fitness capabilities, but once again the competition responded with their own upgrades, most notably improving build quality, continuing to roll out optical heart rate monitoring, and adding smartwatch features.听
After a week of testing the $399 Watch 3听on an abbreviated fitness circuit鈥攂ike rides, long walks, navigating cities鈥擨 can safely say that Apple will听once again听have an outsized impact on the smartwatch industry. The Series 3 isn鈥檛 perfect, but at least in the short-term, it鈥檚 going to make every other smartwatch on the market feel obsolete.听
In our preview of the Series 3, we declared it a watch that athletes will want. This earned us scorn from some Facebook readers who were underwhelmed by the Watch鈥檚 battery life and insisted听that it should not be categorized as a high-performance fitness tracker.听
They鈥檙e right. But Apple has never presented the Watch as the most sophisticated fitness tracker on the market. The first version was a smartwatch with some solid fitness-tracking features. In version two, it became a bona听fide fitness tracker with strong smartwatch capabilities. Version three is a stellar fitness tool, and hands听down the best smartwatch available for iPhone owners.听
By design, the Watch is not supposed to be the perfect gift for your Ironman-obsessed sister-in-law. There are some great high-end, sport-specific products that already do things like sync with SRM power meters. Instead, it鈥檚 meant for the much larger number of us who want a device to track our hikes and rides but that can handle听smartwatch functions like streaming music and responding to texts. This review is written with those readers in mind. If, like some of my 国产吃瓜黑料 colleagues, you demand a tracker that holds a charge for five days and has tactile buttons for workouts, feel free to stop reading here. 听
The Series 3 looks and feels just like any other Apple Watch, and it's compatible with all your old bands. Complete听details are on Apple鈥檚 website. And you鈥檒l find them thoughtfully dissected and explained on sites like The Verge. For our purposes,听there are two main considerations:听
Cellular connectivity. That鈥檚 the big headline. You can now (actually, coming next month), stream music from your Watch, make calls (directly on the Watch or by using Apple鈥檚 AirPod earbuds), receive texts, and let friends and family track your location without your iPhone. This all happens seamlessly from your current phone number. And it works better than advertised: the calls are crisp and the Watch is responsive. I expected that I鈥檇 find myself missing my phone. I rarely did.
(Note: Other reviewers with the Watch's cellular connectivity. In our experience, a few texts did fail to send on the Metro and Siri听wasn't talking back. But calling worked just fine in D.C. and Santa Fe.)
Beyond the cellular upgrade, there鈥檚 the addition of a barometric altimeter. This tool helps the watch accurately measure elevation gain. There isn鈥檛 much else to say beyond: it works, and that鈥檚 something that will make athletes happy. You can now ride and run without your phone and get accurate climbing data.
What about GPS and the heart rate monitor? Given the plus its performance throughout the test, we听won't be听touching on those听previously reviewed feature. We will however briefly praise the new Sport Loop. It's comfortable, looks fun, and it allows you to wear the Watch more tightly around the wrist. That snug fit helps the optical heart rate sensor perform at its best.
The biggest fitness upgrades come courtesy of watchOS4, the new operating system available to all Watch owners. This is a radically simplified interface that puts your health at the center of the experience. Practically speaking, it means you get a refreshed Workout app, plus some exciting new heart-rate monitoring features:
The above upgrades are significant enough to warrant a software update.
For this review, I went on a handful rides and spent several days trekking around Washington, D.C. on a trip. I didn鈥檛 get a chance to test the Watch in the pool or on a trail. For our long-term test, we鈥檒l be putting the Watch through a more thorough battery of workouts.听
I got the watch at about 4:45 p.m. on Tuesday, September 12. I jumped in a car with 国产吃瓜黑料 executive editor Michael Roberts at about 6听p.m. While he drove away from the Apple Park to escape traffic, I set up the Watch, gossiped about coworkers, and ate an energy bar. By 7:30 p.m., I was ready to ride. And while my original Watch died partway through the excursion, the Series 3 kept its charge.
During our hour-long听ride, I simultaneously tracked my activity through the Workout app and on a secondary phone (that wasn鈥檛 paired with the new Watch) using Strava. I didn鈥檛 listen to music or text my friends while riding, but the Watch鈥檚 new hardware was a difference maker. It made me feel that I would have been comfortable exploring without a phone. And it allowed me to track an elevation gain of 1,200听feet. These seem like small things, but a product like this is about small advances and upgrades.
On my second ride, back in Santa Fe, the Watch showed an incorrect elevation gain recording, likely the result of a thunderstorm that blew in while I was out. The drastic change in air pressure would have have affected any barometric altimeter. As expected, it was an issue I didn鈥檛 experience on any other rides or walks.
Choosing between using Strava and Workout is a common Watch experience, and one that predates the Series 3. You need to think听about how you鈥檙e tracking your workouts and storing your data or you鈥檒l end up with a听confusing training log. There are also real tradeoffs to be made depending on what app you use.
Let鈥檚 start with the Apple ecosystem. For those new to Watch, it works something like this: on the Watch you record your workouts in Workout and track your overall activity (hours of the day with standing, overall movement, and minutes spent exercising) in Activity; on the phone, all your data is presented in Health with workouts specifically appearing in Activity. That makes Health your default training log. If you鈥檙e new to training or activity tracking鈥攐r if you鈥檙e comfortable storing everything in Health鈥攖his isn鈥檛 an issue. Your data is all in one place.听
For people with years of data stored in apps like Training Peaks, or for folks who want a robust desktop interface for reviewing their stats, it鈥檚 a bit problematic. Apple doesn't have a web听app听or any desktop interface for viewing Health data (and because of the company's privacy stance, there likely isn't听one on the horizon). And while exporting your data is听doable, it isn鈥檛 convenient鈥攁 sizable drawback for a device designed to make health and wellness easy. Practically speaking, it means that听if you want to record everything through Workout鈥攂ecause you prefer the interface or just like keeping everything within Apple鈥攁nd then have that data automatically export and sync to, say,听Strava, you're out of luck.听How big of a deal is this? For 国产吃瓜黑料 readers, it hasn鈥檛 been a frequently voiced concern. And for me, it just means that I should eventually pick one primary platform.听
Overall, the Watch鈥攆rom a sensor and software perspective鈥攁ccomplishes听what I currently need from a fitness tracker on the bike. It shows me distance and duration in real time. And if I'm using Strava, it uploads my ride听when I鈥檓 done.听It has replaced my Garmin computer in almost every situation (save for ultra-endurance death rides). But the Watch form factor is not the ideal tool for cyclists. To view any of the stats, I have to raise my wrist from the handlebars. And to adjust music or fiddle with settings, I have to take both hands off the bars. To be clear, these are criticisms of all watches. But they鈥檙e more pronounced with the Watch. Some watches have an always-on screen that make the glancing easier. And other brands come with handlebar attachments. Runners I鈥檝e spoken with have expressed skepticism about the lack of buttons and the screen鈥檚 ability to respond in rain and through sweat. This is a valid concern, but one I haven鈥檛 really noticed on the bike (except while wearing long-finger gloves). The touchscreen always鈥攅ven in light rain鈥攈as worked fine for me. I've also found it to be visible under bright sunlight.
(As someone who once fancied himself a decent cyclist, the most Watch-specific issue is that it doesn鈥檛 currently sync with ANT+ devices, such as power meters. That pertains to a small subset of cyclists, but if you don鈥檛 leave home without your power meter,听the Watch will not be your all-in-one fitness tracker.)
I underestimated just how impactful the Watch鈥檚 cellular connectivity would be. On short rides, it gives me the comfort to go without my phone. If something were to happen, I鈥檓 confident that I could call for help. When paired with the AirPods, the call quality was clear. Likewise, being able to quickly send a text was a surprisingly important feature. Running late? Instead of leaving someone on the other end worrying, I could quickly shoot a message. While I didn鈥檛 test the GPS mapping functionality on the bike, I did use it to get home from a concert after my phone died. And I听could see it helping me navigate听a new city while on a run or ride.听
There are听legitimate听reasons to stay within Apple鈥檚 ecosystem. On the Watch, their apps tend to just work a little bit better, at least right now. The biggest example of this for me is the integration of Music and Workout. When I ride on quiet roads, I like to keep one earbud in to listen to music and the other dangling so that I can better hear approaching cars. My AirPods plus Watch have replaced a full suite of devices I used to ride with: a phone for connectivity, wired headphones, and a Watch for fitness tracking. In Workout, it鈥檚 simple to change the song or volume: just swipe and then use the controls as usual. You stay within Workout the entire time. It鈥檚 not so easy in Strava. You have to exit out of the app, open Music, make the change, and move back in. Again, it鈥檚 a seemingly minor complaint. But when you鈥檙e in the middle of a run or ride, those inconveniences matter鈥攂oth in terms of pacing and also keeping your attention on traffic. Again, pay attention to the apps you use and how you like to use them. Spotify offers an app for AndroidWear but doesn鈥檛 have one yet for the Watch (though there is one coming).
Everyone wants to know about battery life. The problem with measuring battery life is that usage can vary dramatically between people. To provide the most accurate possible assessment, I conducted a variety of tests:听
If you鈥檝e owned a Watch previously, there isn鈥檛 much new here. Using more features drains the battery more quickly. Expect this Watch to last about as long as the old one, so long as you鈥檙e not constantly calling or texting people. If you鈥檙e new to the Watch, though, some听explanation: for most workouts longer than two hours, I use an external heart-rate monitor and disable the optical HRM. That helps preserve battery.听
What do I make of the above? For 95 percent of my use cases, the Watch will have enough battery to make me a happy user. Long rides? Check. Long hikes? Check. Ironman triathletes won鈥檛 be in luck, but they may want another device specifically tailored to triathlons anyway.听
In-house, we鈥檝e devised a holy grail test for fitness trackers: riding to a campsite, camping out, going for a short hike, and then riding back home. The Watch should theoretically be able to hold a charge for that (something I鈥檒l confirm in the long-term review). More than any other aspect of the Watch, this is one that I am eager to continue testing.
If you already own an Apple Watch, the new software will dramatically transform your device. The changes to Workout and Activity are subtle, but they reveal so much about Apple鈥檚 understanding of health and wellness.
When I interviewed Jay Blahnik, Apple's director of fitness for health technologies, in 2015, he synthesized Apple鈥檚 wellness stance as follows: there are three key trackable elements to activity, including standing, all-day movement, and exercise. The Watch is designed to measure all three鈥攁nd to nudge you into making smarter choices. To track each element, the Activity app features three rings, one for each of the above elements. Your daily goal is to close all three rings.听
In recent years, Apple has added sleep, nutrition, and mindfulness to their health mix. While the Watch now has a built-in Breathe app to encourage mindfulness, sleep and nutrition are notoriously difficult to track and absent from the Apple native app ecosystem (save for third-party apps). Many studies and anecdotes have .听And calorie counting requires user active user participation: you have to actually input what you鈥檙e eating.听
This understanding of health is surprisingly hack-free and accurate. That鈥檚 where the latest version of watchOS comes in. The device is slowly but steadily gaining the ability to influence behavior. Until now, Apple largely accomplished this through the ring interface. But with smarter Activity coaching, Apple is taking a big step forward.听In the morning, the Watch will prompt you to stay more active by identifying a streak you鈥檙e on and urging you to keep it up.听If it can鈥檛 find something forward-looking, the app will pick out one good thing you did the day before and urge you to do it again. The smarter coaching shows itself in two other situations. If you鈥檝e closed your ring on a run, the app will give you an in-the-moment notification. This brings the reward a lot closer to the action. And, perhaps most importantly, if you鈥檙e not on track to close your rings, the app will prompt you to get up and go walk at a brisk pace. It鈥檒l also tell you the exact amount of time you need to move to hit your goal. Apple picked walking because it鈥檚 something almost anyone can do in almost any situation. (It sends the notification early enough in the day that you can take action. There鈥檚 another notification if you鈥檙e a hair away from hitting your goals.)听
I admit that the above doesn鈥檛 sound particularly impactful. Will a notification actually make anyone healthier? In my experience, the answer is yes. While I know some Watch owners who never took to the rings and don鈥檛 find them motivating, I鈥檝e had the opposite experience. The Watch helped me become the healthiest version of myself, in a time period when it was most difficult to stay fit. And on the flip听side, when a broken band kept my Watch out of commission听for over a month, I found myself gaining weight, moving less, and ignoring my body. Coupled with the , I firmly believe that the Watch can have a significant impact鈥攊f your personality is primed to respond to its prompts. For this population, I think the new notifications will be a significant step forward. They鈥檙e gentle enough to not be annoying,听but also actionable enough to change the trajectory of a day. Their impact is something I plan to track carefully over the next few months of long-term testing.
It bears mentioning that while Activity is the epicenter of change in watchOS4, the Workout app is also much improved. You can move from workout to workout seamlessly (say, if you鈥檙e transitioning from running to biking). And the app itself is just much cleaner and easier to use.听
It鈥檚 too early to say how helpful and influential Apple鈥檚 foray into sophisticated heart-rate monitoring will be. But I get the sense that it鈥檚 about to turn a large subset of Watch users into biohackers.
Historically, the Watch did essentially one user-facing thing with heart rate: it provided an average following workouts. That was it, and it was a lot less sophisticated an output than what most other apps and watches provided. With watchOS4, Apple has opened up so much more data. For the purposes of this review, I鈥檒l segment it into two buckets: performance and health data.听
Let鈥檚 start with performance. Measures like heart-rate variability, resting heart rate, and recovery heart rate have long been used by athletes across an entire spectrum of sports. When in serious training, I鈥檝e found recovery heart rate and resting heart rate to be surprisingly effective tools. In combination, the two measures have predicted common colds and helped me tailor my training load (in conjunction with measuring training stress score through Training Peaks). I鈥檝e also found the measurements to be helpful for athletes I鈥檝e coached, particularly in convincing them to listen to their bodies (people tend to trust a heart-based number more than perceived exertion). While I never before had access to Apple鈥檚 walking heart rate average, I did have my own version of it. I鈥檇 start each indoor workout with a 10 minute interval at 200 watts, or a brisk pace. Tracking my average heart rate during this interval and then measuring the recovery period afterward was the single most effective metric I had in training. And it鈥檚 something that Apple is trying to replicate with walking heart rate.听
When it comes to evaluating these metrics, it鈥檚 worth keeping a few things in mind: there isn鈥檛 consensus on their use, but plenty of people find them helpful. That may be why Apple has chosen to steer clear of providing actionable insights from the stats. If your resting heart rate has risen for a week and your heart rate isn鈥檛 recovering like it used to, the Watch won鈥檛 tell you to take a preemptive sick day. But there鈥檚 nothing stopping an app-maker from using that data to provide such insights. While I鈥檝e criticized fitness-trackers for the lack of useful recommendations in the past (), I think Apple made the right move. This type of biometric data is too likely too personal to provide population-level takeaways from. I鈥檇 prefer for a third-party app that specializes in this type of analysis take the lead. This is better for the Watch鈥檚 credibility and for users.
Given the above, the following may come as a bit of a surprise: I鈥檓 very excited to see where Apple goes with听its Heart Study and the elevated heart rate notification system. The former is a study designed to help spot things like irregular heart rhythms. The latter is something you can start using now. If you opt into the monitoring, Apple will notify you if your heart rate听goes above a set threshold of 100 to 150 beats per minute during a period in which you've been inactive for 10 or more minutes. This is designed to help you flag potential health issues like panic attacks and tachycardia. In a team meeting post-keynote, a handful of听国产吃瓜黑料 editors听debated the merits of such a system. Would it create a wave of false positives leading to needless and expensive testing? Would people simply ignore it?听
The exercise and health sources I reached out to about the technology were cautiously optimistic about the functionality, but were hesitant to go on record without using the device or speaking with Apple. In my experience with the Watch, I had one notification. After looking at the surrounding data, I concluded that it was an odd mix up versus听something to听call my doctor about. Given that the warning is opt-in and relatively muted, it鈥檚 hard to imagine the technology leading to a series of false positives and needless interventions.
Will the Watch allow听you to go all day without your phone? If you use your iPhone largely as a phone, the Watch is a perfectly good all-day replacement; if you use your iPhone as a smartphone, you will want to use something more powerful than the Watch at some point during the day. Essentially, the Watch does things like responding to quick texts, placing calls, and surfacing urgent email really well. In many ways, it works better than the phone. Many users set up the Watch to screen out all but the most crucial notifications. This brings the important into greater relief. Because the only folks who can reach me on my watch are immediate family and my boss (and his boss), I jump when it buzzes. Since anyone can reach me on my phone, I don鈥檛 pay as much attention to the notifications. But for most everything else, the phone is unsurprisingly a better device.听
When the Series 3 was announced, we put together a brief post with our initial thoughts. Essentially, we tried to locate the product鈥檚 audience by saying: it鈥檚 good for the health and wellness set, really good for the fitness set, and OK for the hard-core athlete set. We stand by that overview. This Watch is a device that most readers could benefit from. If you鈥檙e still using an original Watch or are looking to buy your first wearable, the Series 3 is the tool Apple always wanted to build: a fitness tool with smartphone capabilities too useful to take off.
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]]>Over two years after introducing the Watch, Apple has finally made it the ultimate fitness wearable
The post Apple Makes a Watch Athletes Will Want appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>When Apple CEO Tim Cook introduced the Watch in 2014, our first big question was: What is this thing? A productivity tool? A phone replacement? A fad? We gave it our Gear of the Year award despite not having clear answers.
Fast forward over two years, and Apple has has clearly settled on a vision. The cellular connectivity and barometric听altimeter听in the third iteration of the Watch coupled with the suite of fitness-centric features added in 2016 cements it as the wearable to beat in the mass-market health and wellness space. This is a monumental change for a product that was once derided as too complicated and .听
The fitness devices we test are typically designed for one of three audiences: people interested in getting a little more exercise (the step-counting crowd), consumers who dabble with data (they maybe use Strava but don鈥檛 export activities), and serious athletes who depend on tech tools to perform at a high level (SRM power meter owners, we're talking about you). The first edition of the Watch did a really good job catering to the first group. It could prod you to move more and sit less. , which is no small feat. But it lacked GPS and some of the specific measurement abilities鈥攕ay, power output for cyclists鈥攖hat ambitious competitors require.
Some of that changed in 2016 with the introduction of GPS in the Apple Watch 2, . Easy to use and attractive, it performed as well as most activity monitors on the market. But the watch still had major shortcomings: it didn鈥檛 measure elevation gain for outdoor workouts and restricted access to your workout data.
The newest Watch will soon听start winning over serious athletes. While it听lacks the听long-rumored glucose-monitoring abilities, watchOS4 packs听a handful听of crucial software updates for the fitness-minded: automatic resting heart rate measuring and recovery heart rate tracking.听These two features are true game-changers for athletes looking to modify their training in real-time. Notice your resting heart rate rising or that听it's taking longer for your heart rate to recover to rest post-run? You now have the information to update your training on the fly.听Apple is also launching a heart study with Stanford Medicine to help users potentially spot听atrial fibrillation, a surprisingly common condition in athletes. (The Watch will also now update users when their heart rate is elevated when not exercising. This could be crucial for spotting emerging health issues.) These updates come on top of a rebuilt Workout app that features high-intensity interval tracking.
The biggest open question marks for endurance athletes about the new Watch are battery and data sharing. On longer rides鈥攐ver five hours鈥攐r when I forget to bring an external battery pack while听camping and hiking, my generation one听Watch will often die. Most athletes aren't training for ultra-length events, but taking even a half-day hike on a partially charged Watch can kill the battery. Sure, you could turn off the heart-rate monitor to conserve battery, but you're going to want that data. (Another option is to wear a chest heart-rate strap instead of using the watch鈥檚 monitor, but most hikers I know aren't exactly dying to do that.) If Apple has figured out how to substantially lengthen the Watch's run-time, or if LTE has the opposite effect, its utility will be unfortunately limited for many endurance athletes. (For now, Apple claims 18-hour battery life in real-world conditions.)
Then there鈥檚 the data. While most GPS fitness trackers allow you to export your data to听third-parties,听Apple has resisted opening up the Watch鈥檚 Workout app.听Start a ride in Workout, and you won鈥檛 be able to export听that data to Strava. (Strava can however record data directly.) For the average user or even casual athlete, that鈥檚 not a huge problem. But for anyone serious about training, it鈥檚 a major drawback. Use the Workout app and your data is walled off鈥�. That said, Apple seemed to tease听new data access for skiing and snowboarding apps. Let's hope it's a first step toward more data sharing.
That said, the LTE connectivity is a game-changer for bikers and runners. It's obvious, but being able to reach someone in an emergency could save your life. As a cyclist, I usually ride with my phone and bring along a SPOT emergency transmitter on more remote routes (hey, I live in New Mexico). Despite knowing how to fix pretty much anything on my bike that could break, I end up calling a friend or my girlfriend for an evac at least once a year. But many runners don't run with their phones. Holding onto one for 20-mile training runs isn't all that pleasant. If you're a runner who'd like some peace of mind, a cyclist who wants to leave the phone at home but still be able to call for help, or want to stream music while you're training without your watch, LTE makes a real difference.
The new Watch isn't for everyone. It costs $399 (with cellular connectivity). And in many instances, even for athletes, a smartphone or sport-specific watch is a suitable if less convenient alternative. But it鈥檚 a far more capable and appealing fitness tool than听the first two editions. In many ways, it鈥檚 the realization of the original promise of the device: a wearable that you鈥檒l want to wear all day long. For the majority of us, it鈥檚 the only sport watch you鈥檒l ever need.
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]]>One of the leading labs in health and food science is under fire for shoddy research. The implications for the science community and journalists who report on the field are vast. But how much does the research matter for the average person?
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]]>We need to stop overthinking wellness.
Stories like 鈥溾€� or the 鈥溾€� are fun to write and even more enjoyable to read. But they distract all of us from the fundamentals to living a healthy life. That鈥檚 why news of a scandal at the Cornell University Food and Brand Lab may actually be a good thing, the shock we all need to return to the basics. In a piece published this week,听Science of Us听. 国产吃瓜黑料, along with most major health and wellness publications, has reported on the lab鈥檚 made-for-web-headline-writing studies, like 鈥�How to Navigate the Maze of Temptation That Is Your Local Grocery Store鈥� and 鈥�Eat the Same Breakfast Every Day.鈥�
My first reaction was to write a piece declaring that everything we know about fitness is a lie. That鈥檇 certainly get some traffic. Instead, the Cornell scandal led me to some soul searching. Wellness is fairly straightforward in theory, if not practice. We don鈥檛 need catchy headlines or complicated formulas to stay healthy. There鈥檚 a reason Michael Pollan : 鈥淓at food. Not too much. Mostly plants.鈥� That thinking isn鈥檛 reserved for food science alone. In an email, Michael Joyner, a physiologist at the Mayo Clinic, told me that we overcomplicate everything when it comes to health. He then pointed me to , a researcher who, the Times reported, 鈥済ave mathematical proof to the notion that people can live longer and healthier by changing habits like smoking, diet and sleep.鈥� Breslow identified seven key factors to living a healthy life:
Do not smoke; drink in moderation; sleep seven to eight hours; exercise at least moderately; eat regular meals; maintain a moderate weight; eat breakfast.
There鈥檚 no arguing against Breslow鈥檚 habits for a healthy life. The difficulty is in figuring out how to live by them. As always, the devil is in the details. I know鈥擨鈥檒l ride for five hours on the mountain bike but follow it up with several margaritas and a large slice of key lime pie.听If you only have time to ride on the weekends or can鈥檛 afford to buy healthy ingredients for meals, Breslow's guidelines become less attainable. But for the average 国产吃瓜黑料 reader, things really are shockingly simple:
Over the last half-decade, I鈥檝e written and edited hundreds of stories on health and fitness for multiple publications. No matter the study or advice we discuss in the newsroom, we almost always come back to the same conclusion: this stuff isn鈥檛 all that complicated, it鈥檚 just really hard.
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]]>The newest crop of wearables听are cleverer than ever. Spire The Spire won鈥檛 measure heart rate or really anything beyond the number of steps you鈥檝e taken. But it will analyze your breathing, providing a constant record of your stress levels. When the pebble-size sensor notices you鈥檝e gone awhile听without taking a deep breath, it vibrates and prompts … Continued
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]]>The newest crop of wearables听are cleverer than ever.
The Spire won鈥檛 measure heart rate or really anything beyond the number of steps you鈥檝e taken. But it will analyze your breathing, providing a constant record of your stress levels. When the pebble-size sensor notices you鈥檝e gone awhile听without taking a deep breath, it vibrates and prompts you to open the app. From there, it walks you through either a breathing or meditation exercise.
Price $99.95
The M600 is a souped-up Apple Watch for athletes. It鈥檚 got built-in GPS, can put together training plans, and, because it runs on Android Wear, will work with more than 4,000 apps, including Strava and Runtastic. And it boasts productivity听enhancers like calendar notifications and call handling.听
Price $330
A smartwatch and fitness-tracker hybrid, the Charge 2 can do everything from automatically detect when you start a workout to estimate VO2 max. But it鈥檚 meant to be a daily driver, with a clean, customizable design (other bands easily swap听in for a different look) and the ability to display phone notifications. Plus, it can go five days between charges.听
Price $150
Wearables often don鈥檛 play well with one another. Just try getting your Fitbit scale to talk to your Apple Watch. The result of these squabbles: we鈥檙e deprived of big-picture health insights. Enter the HealthBox, which consists of a scale, heart-rate strap, and activity monitor. The devices all sync to one app, called UA Record, which can pull data from almost any tracker.听
Price $300
The UP3鈥檚 hardware is nice enough鈥攖he slim band tracks heart rate and movement and sleep patterns. But what really sets this tracker apart is its app. Think of it as a health coach that lives in your pocket, analyzing your data and providing personalized takeaways such as when to drink more water.听
Price $130
This is the fitness tracker you put on and never take off. It鈥檚 comfortable, stylish, and subtle, displaying just three metrics on its screen: time, progress toward your step goal, and inactivity. Best for those who don鈥檛 want to drown in a deluge of data.听
Price $150 and up
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]]>Our online editor was sent a summer鈥檚 worth of coffee to share with the office. On National Coffee Day, he finally owns up to why it never made the rounds.
The post An Ode to the Best Cold-Brewed Coffee on the Planet appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>I have a confession to make: I was sent two boxes of 听in July to share with the office and I didn鈥檛 tell a soul. All summer, I鈥檝e kept my stash a secret. I鈥檝e successfully hoarded all 36 servings of the stuff.听
It鈥檚 not because I鈥檓 a coffee snob. I鈥檇 almost just as happily be drinking servings of Allsups gas station brew (look 鈥榚m up, they鈥檙e a New Mexico thing). Sometimes, and especially when you鈥檙e editing stories until midnight, coffee is coffee.
It鈥檚 not because I鈥檓 selfish, either. I don鈥檛 hoard gear鈥攗nless we鈥檙e talking about the Cannondale Slate that online associate gear editor Jakob Schiller 鈥渓oaned鈥� me back in May (it鈥檚 safely stashed in my bedroom). I hardly ever review products for the site or magazine. I want other folks here to have the opportunity to test out the latest and greatest. Usually.
My psychologist, I鈥檓 guessing, would probably have a very convincing explanation for why I failed to share even a drop of coffee from the 32-serving , which was clearly created for conference rooms. But I haven鈥檛 brought it up with him.
To be entirely honest, I would never have brought this up if Chameleon Cold Brew鈥檚 public relations firm hadn鈥檛 reminded me of National Coffee Day (September 29). I re-evaluated. I finally admitted to myself that at this point, I think I can even detect the claimed notes of cocoa and toffee. So here I am: admitting to several million readers鈥攁long with a soon-to-be-very-angry office鈥攖hat I hoarded the best coffee I鈥檝e ever tasted.
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]]>Sponsored by Senators Mike Lee and Orrin Hatch, the Human-Powered Travel in Wilderness Areas Act would give local land managers the discretion to allow mountain bikers into wilderness areas
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]]>On Wednesday, July 13, Senators Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) that, if passed, would reverse the nationwide ban on mountain biking in wilderness areas in favor of local decision making and permit the use of 鈥渟mall-scale motorized equipment or method of mechanical transport鈥� in the maintenance of wilderness trails. It鈥檚 a big deal.
Mountain bikers are banned from all wilderness areas. And local land managers (think: the officials in charge of U.S.听Forest Service, National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, or Fish and Wildlife Service headed lands), don't have the ability to grant exemptions. So bikes are banned. Period.听
This bill aims to give these on-the-ground officials the right to permit mountain biking. Practically speaking, managers would have two years to determine if bikes are allowed. If they fail to make a decision听within the time frame, bikes would automatically be permitted.听
The bill would also听allow the use of motorized tools and mechanical transport (think: chainsaws and wheelbarrows) in the听maintenance of wilderness trails, something that is not currently allowed.
If you鈥檙e a mountain biker, the appeal is obvious: access to miles of previously off-limits singletrack. It鈥檚 certainly appealing. According to a , 96 percent of cyclists believe that at least some wilderness areas听should be open to bikes. Even if you're not a diehard cyclist, you may think that giving local land managers more discretion on this topic is a good idea, too. After all, what works in quiet Santa Fe, New Mexico, may not work in busy Boulder, Colorado.
Not everyone has such a favorable view of the legislation. There are fears that the bill could create a rift between cyclists and the environmental movement with the inadvertent effect of empowering pro-extraction interests. 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Grayson Schaffer when 275,000 acres among听the Boulder and White Cloud Mountains were signed into federal wilderness:
Most dangerous of all is that the fragile coalition of recreation interests that鈥檚 critical to wilderness advocacy will have to spend time and political capital shoring up its own ranks instead of actually fighting for conservation. If hikers and bikers are at each other鈥檚 throats, the only interest group that will benefit is the one that would prefer extraction and development.
听
These fears are undoubtedly exacerbated by the bill鈥檚 sponsors: two Republican senators with (Lee and Hatch both have a lifetime score of 10 percent, compared to a Senate average of 45 percent.). Recent headlines circulating about the new Republican platform probably aren't听alleviating these concerns: “.”
And many outdoor advocates, including Schaffer, believe that mountain bikes鈥攏ot to mention motorized tools鈥攈ave no place in wilderness. In February, opposing the effort to introduce bikes into wilderness areas. 听(If you're looking for a primer on the听meaning of wilderness, Kenneth Brower's “Leave Wilderness Alone” is a good place to start.)
Or听you may simply believe that mountain bikers don't belong on trails, regardless of wilderness听designation.听
It鈥檚 complicated. When the 1964 Wilderness Act was signed, it stipulated that “there shall be no temporary road, no use of motor vehicles, motorized equipment or motorboats, no landing of aircraft, no other form of mechanical transport…” At the time, mountain biking as we know it didn鈥檛 exist and mechanical transport was defined to mean a cart, sled, or any other vehicle “powered by a non-living power source.鈥� As the sport began to emerge, the Forest Service updated its rules, with the most influential change coming in 1984, when the agency banned the “possessing or using a hang glider or bicycle.鈥� Note, however, that听wheelbarrows did exist in 1964.
Because lots of great trails are on wilderness land. But it鈥檚 more nuanced than that. When new wilderness areas are designated, cyclists lose access to trails they鈥檝e long enjoyed鈥攁nd often helped maintain, build, and protect (see听Schaffer's above piece). That鈥檚 frustrating, especially if you're someone who believes in the importance of wilderness and also loves to ride a bike. Cyclists are also frustrated by the arguments used to听exclude them听from wilderness areas. Critics claim cycling is damaging to trails, all about speed vs. the enjoyment of the outdoors, and is simply an activity that doesn鈥檛 belong in the slower-paced world of wilderness. In turn, cyclists cite studies showing the sport to be low-impact (and far less damaging than horseback riding) and argue that everyone should have the right to enjoy wilderness.
You can thank (or blame) the , a new cycling access group started with the stated goal of battling 鈥渘eedless access restrictions.鈥� The organization was formed after a five-year campaign to reopen the Pacific Crest Trail to mountain bikers failed. Since then, they鈥檝e raised more than $120,000 and have put that money toward lobbying for this bill.
We suggest starting with these stories. Then write to Congress!
听听 听鈥⑻� 听The New Golden Rule of Playing 国产吃瓜黑料: Place First
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]]>Step one: toss those saggy sweats.
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]]>Step one: toss those saggy sweats.听
Your gym bag should be organized, well 颅appointed, and just big enough for everything you need. This 23-liter duffel delivers, and it includes an internal zip pocket to hold the small stuff.听
Price $130
Ten Thousand eschews loud and gimmicky in favor of . The proof is in the detailing, like the sleek underarm vents and tailored fit.听
Price $48
The well-rounded sound and bounce-颅limiting ear hooks helped motivate us through grueling weight sessions. And six hours of battery life kept them bumping long after we鈥檇 left the gym.
Price $200
Two years ago, Brooks resurrected its classic Chariot running shoe. Now the company expands the offering with designs inspired by iconic skylines. (Favorites: New York and Sydney.) The Chariot isn鈥檛 a burly, overbuilt trainer. We even found ourselves wearing it to the office and on recovery days.
Price $90
Who says workout pants have to wear like听a badly pitched tent? The Balboa is made from stretchy French terry cotton and fits like a pair of relaxed slacks.听
Price $84
You won鈥檛 find a better burn for the time or money than jumping rope. This beauty comes with weighted handles and precision bearings for smoother rotation.听
Price $20
The soft poly-Lycra blend in the Evolution resists wrinkles, silver-treated threads reduce body odor, and the cut is athletic but not skintight.听
Price $88
These merino-wool unders wick sweat, are plenty breathable, and fight stink. And that鈥檚 all you need, really.听
Price $50
It packs down to the size of a softball听and offers plenty of protection when you need it, thanks to a durable water-resistant coating, an oversize hood, and wrist cuffs.
Price $189
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