
No i do not sleep standing up, at least to my knowledge. Second inaccuracy: My AW says i have been standing in bed. But maybe on AW the sensitivity can be adjusted? Can any setting be changed on the AW to help this out? I realize as one moves these trackers an mistake non-steps for steps. Count when i actually went to bed and tack on another 60-70. Important to note that AW daily count started at midnight. After i really got out of bed the two are within 1-5 steps of one another. To be exact this morning i find AW said i took 60 steps in bed where the fitbit said like 13. Apple on non-dominant wrist, Fitbit on dominant wrist.įirst inaccuracy: My AW says that i have taken steps while in bed. For the past couple of days i have been wearing both. Fitbit is native for sleep and for Apple Watch i have been trying Autosleep. I use both to track sleep and health data. In my case i wear this as much as i can 24/7. I am curious if there is something i should be looking at on the Apple Watch to help it be more accurate. I am finding the Fitbit's tracking and data to be far more accurate. I am currently trying to decide between an Apple Watch Series 3 (GPS only) and a Fitbit Versa. The Sense 2 and Versa 4 both offer six-day battery life and support fast charging - a 12-minute charge will provide a day's worth of battery life.I am looking for genuine feedback here, not the usual toxic fanboy attacks that can happen at times on Apple centric reddit subs when possible negative things are said about an Apple product. Both watches will also receive an update that brings Google Maps and Google Wallet in the future. The smart features are identical for both watches with support for calls, text and app notifications, built-in Amazon Alexa, Fitbit Pay, Find My Phone, and compatibility with Android and iOS devices. They also have sleep tracking and women's health tracking.

It also has stress monitoring but not on the same level as the Sense 2.įitbit's new smartwatches can track more than 40 different workouts and exercises and have a built-in GNSS chip (GPS & GLONASS), NFC and Wi-Fi.

While the Versa 4 doesn't have an ECG sensor, it has support for irregular heart rhythm notifications which can also be used to detect signs of atrial fibrillation (AFib). Fitbit also includes red and infrared sensors for blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) monitoring. There is a heart rate sensor for all-day tracking on both watches with notifications for high and low heart rates.

Both the Sense 2 and Versa 4 have a color display with always-on display support.
