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Seoul
1 Level
109 Review
157 Karma

Review on πŸ•°οΈ Amazfit Bip U Pro Smartwatch with Alexa, GPS Tracker, 60+ Sports Modes, Heart Rate Sleep Monitor, 5 ATM Waterproof for iPhone & Android (Black) by Michael Baek ᠌

Revainrating 3 out of 5

In general, its pretty good, an equal number of pros and cons.

The watch is lovely and comfortable to wear, and it features some lovely additional screen designs. It has a metal strap made in China, and it shines in general. However, it is not suitable for thin asthenics. Many advantages: The advantage of any fitness watch over a bracelet is that you do not need to look at your phone in order to view the graph of your heart rate, stress, or other data; instead, it scrolls naturally. Having this drawback: The fact that I am unable to establish friends with them may be due to characteristics that are unique to me. The pulse overestimates the true value and, on occasion, puts out peak numbers that are beyond comprehension in the area of 120. Because of this, having a high PAI will catch up with you even if you have spent the entire day lazing about on the couch. Because of this watch, I had to get a halter installed on my chest at the cardiologist's office. The Holter readings show no abnormalities at all (I have vegetovascular dystonia, I am a thin asthenic, respectively, pronounced respiratory arrhythmia as a variant of the norm for a healthy poorly trained person and no special episodes of tachycardia, so I suppose he catches shortened RRs on inspiration, misses the lengthening on expiration, but extrapolates to the total heart rate) It is unsettling to observe tachycardia for no apparent reason, despite the fact that this may be an indication of a very hyper-super sensor. I wore my old Honor on my other hand. Sometimes the pulse difference is up to +5 in the direction of overestimation for the Amazfit. In addition, there are no consistent peak pulse jumps that the Amazfit gives out on the Honor. When you are calmly reading a book, your amazfit may quickly and simply adjust your heart rate to 120 beats per minute. Your heart rate is typically under your control, but when you run, there is always some measurement error, and you have no idea what it really is. They mentioned that the thin ones might have a loose fit, but even when I make an effort to pull it tighter, it doesn't make a difference. The phases of sleep are measured quite inaccurately. My position on stress measures has not changed, and while I do believe there is something to this, I do not believe it goes much farther than the vague assertion that "there is."

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