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Review on Smart bracelet Samsung Galaxy Fit2, black by Janis Bike ᠌

Revainrating 4 out of 5

Reliable product for all occasions, quality on par.

I've had Samsung phones for quite some time, but I've also wanted a bracelet from the same business for quite some time. But, the price was always out of my price range, so I was forced to settle for Chinese substitutes. I made a beeline for the closest retail outlet as soon as I heard that Samsung had released a bracelet at a price point suited for Chinese customers. I can tell that I am happy with it after using it for a little more than 25 months. Although it has been greatly enhanced, the functionality is comparable to that of the identical Xiaomi device. shows several stages of sleep, such as fixed sleep and daytime sleep, the level of stress, and a real-time pulse reading (i. E. the readings on the screen are constantly ated, more than once a minute) A feature that is particularly frustrating is the inability to sync steps from sHealth to the bracelet or change sHealth so that it just counts steps from the bracelet and ignores signals from the phone itself. However, the application will continue to compute the steps-based goals for all of the user's steps, and the bracelet will continue to do so in accordance with the signals it receives. In sHealth, you can change the display from "all steps" to "steps solely from the bracelet." Then a few more times, I came across a terrible bug: after the workout, when the bracelet is in rest mode, the pulse readings start to double and stay that way for a while (I checked at such moments directly with the sensor of the galaxy s7 phone, and I just checked the pulse with my hand - exactly twice the difference). Those. He informs you that your pulse rate is 181 beats per minute as you settle in and take a seat. If you tried it out once, approximately 90 are displayed all at once. You can measure with your phone at this time, and even with a tonometer. The bracelet will stop acting in this way after a few minutes, but the statistics will still show concerning numbers. My initial hypothesis was that the strap might be either too loose or too tight. No, I wore it in a variety of different ways, but the behavior you describe does happen occasionally with the bracelet. Apart for the fact that this only happens after exercise, when the pulse rate is higher, I was unable to discern any patterns to follow. The earlier Gear Fit2 model looks to still have this issue, according to several reviews I recently read.

Pros
  • Price, lightness, great screen, no need to remove it from the strap to charge, continuous heart rate measurement, very long battery life, ability to mark messages and other notifications on your phone as read from the bracelet, synchronization to Samsung Health, which, in my opinion, is the best app of its kind currently on the market.
Cons
  • Sometimes tripling your heart rate after an exercise, which can be scary; only having the "do not disturb" mode available for sleep mode configuration; not being able to sync step counts from Samsung Health with the bracelet or the app on your phone;