Tuesday, December 9, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Samsung Challenges Fitbit With $180 Fitness Tracker With GPS

The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2016 01:11 PM
    NEW YORK — Just in time for summer, Samsung is unveiling a new fitness tracker that aims to undercut gadgets from market leader Fitbit.
     
    Beyond offering all-day step counting and automatic sleep tracking, the $180 Gear Fit2 comes with GPS sensors for more accurate measuring of distance and pacing for runners and cyclists.
     
    GPS is typically limited to higher-end devices, such as the Fitbit Surge and the Microsoft Band 2, both of which go for $250. The Fit2 is also cheaper than the new $200 Fitbit Blaze, which doesn't have GPS.
     
    The main drawback: The Fit2 won't sync with iPhones, as Fitbits do. An Android phone — not necessary Samsung's — is required for syncing music and workout data.
     
    While Samsung is the world's fifth-largest maker of wearable devices, according to technology market research firm IDC, most of those are Gear smartwatches, where fitness is an afterthought.
     
    By contrast, fitness is front and centre with the Fit2. Yet it will also have some smartwatch capabilities, including the ability to reply to messages from the device. Rival trackers at most tend to show you messages; replies are typically limited to smartwatches such as Apple Watch and Samsung's Gear S2.
     
    Advance orders on the Fit2 will begin Friday in the U.S., with shipments a week later.
     
    Later this year, Samsung will release its $200 Gear IconX earbuds that, in addition to playing music, will track exercise and heart rate. They're designed as a stand-alone tracker, rather than a companion to the Fit2.
     
     
    Under Armour's upcoming heart-rate-tracking headphones are expected to cost $250. Samsung's IconX goes further with built-in sensors to measure distance and pacing, though with less accuracy than GPS devices. There's no screen, so you get audio readouts every mile or whatever interval you set.
     
    With Thursday's announcements, Samsung is trying to tap growing interest in health and fitness as sales of smartphones slow down.
     
    In the first three months of this year, Fitbit shipped 4.8 million devices, or 25 per cent more than a year earlier. That accounts about a quarter of all wearable devices worldwide. Samsung, by contrast, shipped about 700,000, an increase of less than 5 per cent, according to IDC. Samsung's devices require an Android phone, while Fitbits work with iPhones and Windows phones as well.
     
    Samsung is taking a cue from Fitbit in creating leaderboards and challenges for family and friends to motivate each other. This has been one of Fitbit's strongest areas, and Fitbit has an advantage as the market leader: Someone you're trying to challenge — or taunt — will more likely have a Fitbit than another device.
     
    Samsung's version works through its S Health phone app, meaning Android phone users will be able to participate without a dedicated tracker. But it could be tougher to motivate someone who hasn't made a commitment to fitness by buying a tracker.
     
    Both the Fit2 and the IconX will let you leave your phone at home. You can download hundreds of songs for phone-free workouts, but you can't tap Spotify and other online services without the phone. The phone needs to run at least KitKat, the 2013 version of Android. For the IconX, music syncing might not work with non-Samsung phones. A PC would be needed in such cases.
     
     
    These devices represent Samsung's second effort at fitness tracking, not counting all its smartwatches with fitness capabilities. The original Gear Fit in 2014 had a beautiful, curved screen, but lacked many power features. The Fit2 addresses that with GPS and a wider, customizable screen to fit in more data on your workout. But like most trackers, the Fit2 lacks many stopwatch controls found on sports-specific devices such as Garmin Forerunners for running.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Disappearing Act: Twitter Reports Flatlining User Growth

    Disappearing Act: Twitter Reports Flatlining User Growth
    Twitter set out to build a virtual town square bustling with billions of people. But it's starting to look more like a novelty stand as the masses flock to other services that strike a more personal chord.

    Disappearing Act: Twitter Reports Flatlining User Growth

    Proposed Rules On Unpaid Intern A 'political Problem' For Liberals: Advocates

    Proposed Rules On Unpaid Intern A 'political Problem' For Liberals: Advocates
    The proposed regulations are a holdover from the previous Conservative government, whose last budget bill set the stage for changes to the labour laws to protect unpaid interns.

    Proposed Rules On Unpaid Intern A 'political Problem' For Liberals: Advocates

    Twitter Tweaks Its Timeline To Look A Bit More Like Facebook

    The social media site will let people turn on a setting that lets popular tweets related to people you follow show up first in your timeline, followed by the real-time feed most people on Twitter are used to.

    Twitter Tweaks Its Timeline To Look A Bit More Like Facebook

    NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India

    NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India
    India's government has essentially banned a Facebook program that sought to connect with low-income residents by offering free access to a limited version of the social network and other Internet services.

    NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India

    Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone

    Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone
    Until now, Apple offered credit to iPhone owners only if the device had an intact screen and working buttons.

    Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone

    App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments

    App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A P.E.I. company has developed a new online booking application aimed at reducing wait times at the doctor's office.

    App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments