Health

Fitbit Tosses 3 More Bands Into the Activity-Tracking Melee

With smartwatches providing all sorts of health and fitness options, and activity-tracking gadgets selling for as little as $12 -- that's Pivotal Living's Life Tracker -- is there a place for the pricey dedicated bands Fitbit offers? Possibly. Serious fitness enthusiasts may not need or want all the bells and whistles of a smartwatch, but they might appreciate Fitbit's feature-rich alternatives.

Fitbit on Monday announced three new fitness and activity-tracking wearables: the Fitbit Charge, Charge HR and Surge.

The Charge HR and Surge will be available early next year. The Charge is available now on Fitbit’s site and is coming soon to retailers nationwide.

Prices are high — US$130 for the Charge, $150 for the Charge HR, and $250 for the Surge, a fitness super watch with eight sensors.

Steep competition has driven down fitness-tracking device prices. For example, Pebble cut its smartwatch prices to $100 to $200 — a $50 reduction — while adding 24-hour fitness tracking. A Samsung Gear Fit is available on Amazon for $124, and a Garmin Vivofit fitness band costs about $100.

This strategy “will likely backfire unless there’s more to the product that has yet to be released,” Susan Schreiner, senior analyst at C4 Trends, told TechNewsWorld.

The Surge especially might be hit hard, because its price makes it “more likely to appeal to the hard-core fitness enthusiast” rather than the mainstream market, reducing its potential audience, observed Matt Wilkins, a research director at Strategy Analytics.

What the New Fitbits Deliver

Charge is a wristband with all-day activity tracking that offers real-time fitness statistics and caller ID. It has a sleep detection monitor and exercise tracking capability, and it is water-resistant. It runs for up to seven days on one charge.

The Charge HR adds 24×7 heart rate monitoring with LED lights, plus all-day display of information such as resting heart rate and heart rate trends. It runs five days on one charge.

Fitbit Charge HR

Fitbit Charge HR

The Fitbit Surge has all the features of the other two devices plus a built-in GPS, text alerts, mobile music control, three-axis accelerometers, a gyroscope, a compass and an ambient light sensor. It also records multisport activities.

The Surge runs up to seven days on one charge.

Awash in a Sea of Competitors

It’s a feeding frenzy in the fitness tracker business. A quick check for fitness trackers on Amazon’s website returned 100 results for best sellers alone.

Meanwhile, Lenovo has jumped in with the Lenovo Smartband SW-B100, and Pivotal Living on Monday announced its Life Tracker 1 fitness wristband for $12 — that’s right, $12 — for the device and its app.

Then there’s the Health app in iOS 8.

Of Recalls and Probes

Consumer complaints forced Fitbit to recall more than 1 million units of its Force wristband earlier this year and give purchasers a full refund, following an investigation by the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Fitbit is facing two lawsuits — one a class-action — over the issue.

The CPSC later opened an investigation into the Fitbit Flex, again following consumer complaints.

“CPSC has concluded its investigation into the Fitbit Flex, but we will continue to monitor the safety of the product,” CPSC spokesperson Scott Wolfson told TechNewsWorld.

Consumers will see a label on the product advising that it contains nickel, and the product will have sizing guidelines, Wolfson said, adding that CPSC believes the Flex should be worn loosely.

While news of the investigations might put off some consumers, “there are many more who will say it’s a fluke and that Fitbit has learned its lesson,” Schreiner said.

Who Might Want a Fitness Wearable Anyhow?

Given that smartwatches — and increasingly, smartphones — have fitness-tracking apps, will there continue to be a market for fitness wearables?

Yes, contends Strategy Analytics’ Wilkins.

“While the fitness band market is facing competition from devices such as smartwatches, there are consumers who require a device to purely track their physical and fitness activity,” he told TechNewsWorld. “Some consumers will be in the market to buy a device that is purely focused on fitness tracking and not require the additional features that a smartwatch needs.”

Richard Adhikari

Richard Adhikari has written about high-tech for leading industry publications since the 1990s and wonders where it's all leading to. Will implanted RFID chips in humans be the Mark of the Beast? Will nanotech solve our coming food crisis? Does Sturgeon's Law still hold true? You can connect with Richard on Google+.

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