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Filed under: fitbit

VB Talks Fitbit and the Fitbit Ultra

Veronica Belmont (affectionately-known-as-"VB"-by-only-me) covers the Fitbit and the newer Fibit Ultra on Techzilla.  The Fitbit is a high tech and very accurate step counter that syncs your activity to the http://fitbit.com website.  I've had a fitbit since September 2009 and I still wear it every day.  It provides the extra motivation to be "minimally active."  One of the occupational hazards of my job is sitting on my butt all day and, as of late, night.  I shoot for 10,000 steps a day.. and fail often but it keeps me more active than I would be otherwise.


 

I've often thought my Fitbit should have a clock, now the Ultra does.  Is it worth the $99 upgrade? ..not for me.. yet.  :)

RunKeeper Now Integrates with Fitbit

Fitbit
Fitbit Tracker, Shop Now
Fitbit tracks your motion all day and night, allowing you to see how active you are, and inspiring you to walk more and do more. Set goals and track the following:

- Total daily Calories burned
- Total daily Calories consumed
- How long and how well you sleep.

Learn how to import your Fitbit data into RunKeeper.

Runkeeper keeps getting better and better. They now integrate with Fitbit. If you are looking for ways to keep motivated on your fitness goals, get a fitbit! (http://fitibit.com). If you have an Android or iPhone with GPS and walking, hiking or running are in your routine, get the Runkeeper app (http://runkeeper.com).

YouTube: dailyburn intro video.mov

Dailyburn has some new features. I used this site last year to lose nearly 30 lbs. I'm currently using http://fitbit.com to maintain my weight and track my activity level... along with http://runkeeper.com and http://connect.garmin.com. Dailyburn recently release a multi-tiered pricing scheme which I don't really care for - especially when some of the core features clearly need work. They could take a page from Fitbits UI design and make the food/calorie entering process easier.

A Week with Fitbit

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After some hesitation, I reconfirmed my Fitbit order the end of December.  Fitbit is a high-tech step counter.  It utilizes wireless Ant+ technology to sync its data to your desktop where it is automatically uploaded to the free Fitbit web site, fitbit.com.  This small black device clips to your clothing or the included wristband for sleeping.  Yes.  Sleeping.  The device has a record function that allows you place start and stop markers in your step data that delineate specific activities - sleep being one special activity.  The Fitbit site is able to show how restful your sleep was based on how much you moved around during the night.  The device has a single button that allows you to toggle through all information on its clever OLED display.  I say clever, because when the display is not active it is invisible - its just a black surface.  That single button is also used to mark activities, by holding it down for two seconds.

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Basically, this little thing is meant to be with you most of the time - monitoring your activity or lack of thereof.  The free web site allows you to track your activity stats, manually enter other activities, track your weight and record the food/calories you've consumed during the day.  After a week of use, I can say it works as advertised.. for me.  Here is a screenshot of my dashboard on fitbit.com:

Fitbit_dashboard1

The site is very clean and easy to use.  I particularly like the food tracking UI.  It is missing some of the goal setting features of other sites.  But the biggest missing feature in my opinion is a comprehensive database of exercises and the ability to set activity stats like heart rate, calories burned, etc.  Because of this and the limited goal setting options, I cannot recommend it to the hard core fitness junky or those seriously looking to lose weight.  For those people, I still have to point them to http://dailyburn.com (paid) or http://thedailyplate.com.  The Dailyburn helped me lose 30 lbs last year!  

From the community forums and my own experiences it is clear that kinks are still being worked out in the device and the web site.  None of these kinks have been show stoppers for me.  The biggest issue I had was with the Mac driver software - it interferes with my Garmin Ant stick I use to sync my Forerunner 50 data.  Neither device would work while both were plugged in.  I now sync my Garmin device using my laptop and have left the Fitbit base on my desktop computer.  In the forums, others have reported Mac kernel panics and other stability issues.  I've had none of that running Snow Leopard.  The device itself seems pretty stable.  Occasionally it will stop updating its step count on the screen, but if I cycle the activity mode on it, it seems to start updating the display again.  Others in the forums have reported that it totally freezes on them forcing them to hit the reset button.  I have not experienced that problem either.  Firmware updates are supposedly in the works.  

I see a lot of potential in what the Fitbit is doing.  Becoming more aware my level of activity and caloric intake was the key to my losing weight.  Devices that made it painless and quick to do were essential.  Maybe its the geek in me, but watching my progress through a series of charts and meters definitely was motivational.  I'm hesitant to recommend Fitbit to everyone looking to lose weight.  There seem to be too many little bugs and missing features in the web site to make it a complete solution.  However, for the early adopter with $99 to burn, its a lot of fun.  Get it here: http://www.fitbit.com/product 

My FitBit Re-Confirmation Has Arrived

I started this fitness kick last year, January 1, as a new year's resolution - "Lose the weight, re-claim your youth, delay the inevitable cardiac death that awaits me."  I lost nearly 30 pounds through diet and exercise.  I feel healthier, and more energetic.  It seems its all about inertia.  A body at rest tends to stay at rest, a body in motion... So the fitness thing kinda feeds into itself perpetuating more fitness.  The FitBit seemed like a good motivator to keep the fitness momentum going.  It supposedly tracks your steps taken with a good degree of accuracy and automagically uploads it to their web site.  Keeping active, staying in motion, is the goal and you can set the number of steps you want to take each day.  It isn't the first "biometric-type" device I've used.  My first was the Garmin Forerunner 50 which has a foot pod (step/run counter) and heart rate monitor, among other devices.  This device also seamlessly uploads my workouts to a web site and gives me pretty graphs to track my progress. While the Forerunner is meant to workouts.  The FitBit is meant for use the entire day, tracking how sedentary or active you are.

I pre-ordered my FitBit way back in May 2009.  It was supposed to ship early summer.  After MANY delays, the device is finally ready and I must re-confirm that I still want the thing.  It is with some hesitance that I confirm my order, but I'm still intrigued by the device even if the company's numerous delays and less than shining web site (http://fitbit.com) has shaken my confidence.  I suppose all will be forgiven if the device works as well as they claim.  Delaying the product to ensure the best, and most accurate, step counting etc. is admirable.  But if it is still a shiny black turd, then I have no one to blame but myself.  The writing was on the wall.  

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More on this when my FitBit arrives.