Which New Activity Tracker Is Right for You?

You can buy an inexpensive pedometer to gauge your steps, but a slew of new self-tracking devices are available that do so much more.

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If you want to achieve and maintain a healthy weight, you have to be physically active. In fact, the surgeon general recommends getting at least 30 minutes of moderately intense activity a day in addition to your usual daily activities. Another way to make sure you’re exercising enough is to chalk up at least 10,000 steps a day — that’s about five miles of walking or running.

You can buy an inexpensive pedometer to gauge your steps, but a slew of new self-tracking devices are available that do so much more, calculating things such as how many calories you’ve burned or how well you’re sleeping at night. Here’s what the best of the next-gen devices have the offer.

The Basis B1 Band: Best for people who wear watches

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Basis

Given the ubiquity of the smartphone, many people no longer wear a watch. If you do, however, the Basis B1 Band is a great choice. Not only does the display default to show you the time in large, easy-to-read numbers, it’s a sleek, modern-looking device that actually looks like a watch, unlike some of the others I tested.

You can see some of these metrics by tapping small metal buttons on the watch face, and a bar under the time shows your progress toward meeting your activity goal. But for more detailed charts that reflect how your activity and sleep stack up over time, you can visit a Web dashboard after you connect your Basis via USB to your computer and upload your data. You can also sync your device with an Android or iOS app that will pull data from it up to the Web as well as let you see detailed metrics on your phone.

I found it particularly interesting to see some of these numbers regarding sleep. It made me wonder why I sweat more or less or have a higher or lower heart rate during certain parts of the night. Dreaming, perhaps?

In addition to offering you hard data about your nocturnal movements and metabolism, the Basis tracks habits or goals such as waking up or going to bed at the same time every day, torching more calories or getting up from your chair to move around for a certain amount of time during the work day. As you do better meeting such goals, the Basis lets you unlock more of them, so you’re constantly in improvement mode.

One nice little feature I appreciate about the Basis is that the device’s back light engages automatically when you turn your wrist to look at the time. Both sides of the wristband detach, although charging and syncing work better when they’re attached to the unit.

You can wear the Basis in the rain and shower, but the device is not made for swimming.

Price: $199 at basis.com

The SYNC Burn Fitness Band: Best for people who hate charging

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Sync

The one consistently annoying thing about smart activity trackers is that most of them need to be charged every few days. Not the new SYNC Burn Fitness Band. Its maker says the device will stay charged for a year. When it finally dies, all you’ll need to do is pick up another CR2032 battery from wherever you normally buy batteries.

What I like about the SYNC Burn is you can set it to always show steps, calories burned or distance traveled. If your goal is to walk 10,000 steps a day, you can just look at the watch to see your progress without having to push any buttons. If you’re more concerned with calories, you can set it to always show your burn number. The time and date are always at the top of the display so that the Sync Burn works as a watch, as well.

To improve the accuracy of how the SYNC Burn calculates caloric burn, push and hold a button on the bottom of the device throughout the day to measure your heart rate.

A button on the bottom right syncs the device data to the MapMyFitness app running on an iPhone 4S or iPhone 5. You can scroll back to check your activity metrics up to seven days in the past.

To turn on the backlight ,you have to press both buttons on the side of the device simultaneously. The watch straps are removable and reversible, so you can choose to wear all black, all red or both.

In short, this device’s best attributes are its long-lasting battery and how it keeps the activity metrics you care most about front and center. The SYNC Burn does not track sleep and while you can swim with it on you shouldn’t push any buttons on the unit when doing so or diving below 98 feet.

Price: $130 at Best Buy

The Fitbit Flex: Best for logging overall health facts

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Fitbit

The Fitbit Flex is a small black rectangular motion sensor that you wear inside a rubber wristband. The sensor needs to be charged with a USB cable every five days or so, which is why it’s removable from the wristband.

To begin tracking activities, you need to set up your Fitbit account either on Fitbit.com or within the Fitbit mobile app for iOS or Android and input things like your age, height and weight as well as various activity or caloric burn goals. With its simple and beautiful tile interface, you can easily see how you’re progressing toward your goals.

For people truly embracing a healthy lifestyle, the Fitbit Flex’s web and mobile apps let you keep track of a variety of metrics. If you log what you eat, the Flex will add up how many calories you’ve consumed and tell you how many calories you can eat for the rest of the day based on how many you’ve burned. You can also log how much water you’ve drunk as well as your current weight, heart rate, blood pressure and blood glucose levels. And if you own a Wi-Fi-enabled scale such as a Fitbit Aria or a Withings scale, your weight will upload to the Fitbit platform automatically.

If you tap the band several times before you fall asleep and again when you wake up, information about your sleep will show up in your Fitbit account. The web or mobile app will tell you what time you went to bed, how long it took you to fall asleep, how many times you woke up, how long you were in bed and how long you actually slept, as well as a percentage score indicating the efficiency of your sleep.

As for wearing the device, I often forgot I had it on. I like how it looks; it reminds me of a classy, high-tech version of the rubber bracelets people wear, minus any wording.

Unlike the other activity trackers I tested, the Fitbit Flex does not tell you the time. Even so, it does have a silent alarm function you can set with the web app or the mobile app (only if your device is Bluetooth 4.0-enabled for the latter). When the alarm goes off, the wristband vibrates until you tap it several times.

While you get plenty of information about your activity using the Web app or mobile app, the only activity data you can glean from the Fitbit Flex itself is how you’re progressing toward your goal, which it shows you by turning on one to five LED lights after you tap it twice. It also lights up, flashes and vibrates when you hit your activity goal.

The thing I appreciated most about the Fitbit Flex is you don’t have to manually sync it with Fitbit.com or with the Fitbit app on your smartphone. If you keep the device’s tiny wireless sync dongle plugged into a USB port on your computer, every time you come within 20 feet of it, the data from the Fitbit Flex is uploaded to your account.

The Fitbit Flex comes with two wristbands, one for smaller wrists and one for larger ones. At first I found it rather difficult to snap the wristband closed, but after doing so several times, the holes in it were more forgiving to the clasp. While the sensor is water resistant and can withstand a dunk in water up to 10 meters deep, Fitbit says it’s not designed for swimming.

Price: $100 at Amazon and fitbit.com

The Misfit Shine: Best for iPhone users who swim

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Misfit

The Misfit Shine is a quarter-sized, futuristic-looking device you can wear on your clothing, on a sport or leather band on your wrist or as a necklace. It’s a beautiful device made by Misfit Wearables, a company co-founded by former Apple CEO John Sculley.

The Shine shows you two things when you tap its brushed metal surface twice. Twelve lights around the perimeter indicate your progress toward meeting your activity goal; for example, three lights indicate you’ve accomplished 25% of your goal. Next, the Shine shows you the time by dimly lighting the quarter hour positions for orientation, brightly lighting the hour position and blinking the minute light.

What’s different about the Shine is how it syncs with its companion iPhone app. The Shine uses Bluetooth in combination with sensors on the iPhone, including the capacitive screen, to detect that the Shine is touching the phone in order to activate and execute the data transfer process. (Proximity matters because this happens through metal.)

Within the Shine iPhone app, you determine what activity level you’re aiming for and earn points according to how well you perform meeting that goal. The clean and beautiful app also shows your steps taken, calories burned and distance traveled, as well as highlights of your day such as times when you were more active and milestones you hit. Triple-tap the unit at the beginning and end of certain activities to log them (although you have to specify within the app whether the triple tap correlates to tracking sleep, cycling or swimming).

The Shine is water-resistant for swimming, and its accelerometer senses biking and running on a treadmill, but you might not get full credit for lifting weights.

Like when you wear the Fitbit Flex, you might forget you’re wearing your Shine. The CR2032 battery lasts for four months and is easy to replace with the special tool that comes with the unit. The purchase package includes the Shine tracker, a sport band and a clasp to attach it to your clothing.

Price: $120 at the Misfit Wearables store for a package that includes the Shine tracker, a sport band and clasp to attach it to clothing.

The Withings Pulse: Best for tracking sleep

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Withings

Don’t let this unassuming black rectangle fool you — it’s packed with some nice features.

First off, the Pulse holds a charge for two weeks. While that’s not as good as the Sync Burn or the Shine, it kills the Basis and the Fitbit Flex by a large margin. (The latter both need charging in less than a week.)

To use the Pulse, install the Withings Health Mate appon your iPhone or Android. After pairing your Pulse with your phone via Bluetooth, depress the device’s only physical button for three seconds to transfer data to the app. The app shares your metrics with the Withings web app, which communicates the same information as the mobile app but also features a useful heat map that shows patterns in your activity and sleep for the entire week.

Even though the Pulse looks inconspicuous, it holds a lot of data. The accelerometer measures steps taken, elevation climbed, distance traveled and calories burned. You can see all these metrics one at a time by tapping the unit’s sole button. The current time is also in this lineup of numbers, as are icons you can tap to start tracking your sleep or check your heart rate via a tiny optoelectronics sensor on the back of the Pulse. If you swipe the front of the Pulse, you can see up to 10 days of history.

The Pulse handles sleep tracking admirably. It comes with a soft fabric sleep wristband that holds the Pulse device on your wrist to monitor how much you move during sleep. To turn it on, tap a moon icon on the device when you get into bed and again when you awaken. After syncing the Pulse with the mobile app, you can see how many minutes you spent in bed, how many minutes you actually slept, the total time you slept and how many minutes you were in deep and light sleep modes.

If you own a Withings Internet-connected scale (which I happen to use and highly recommend), your weight measurements automatically load into your Withings account, joining all the information the Pulse gathers such as heart rate measurements and activity levels over time.

The Withings Pulse comes with a rubber clip so you can attach it to a belt or the front and center of a bra. You can also let it hang out in your pants pocket along with your loose change.

Price: $100 at Amazon and withings.com
This article was written by Christina DesMarais and originally appeared on Techlicious.
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