Manawatu Standard

Fitbit hopes Ionic will be just the tonic

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Fitbit desperatel­y needs a hit.

The company has unveiled its first smartwatch, hoping that the health-focused features of the device will reverse the hardware maker’s declining influence in the wearables market.

The smartwatch, called the Fitbit Ionic, costs $500 and is available to pre-order in New Zealand. It has a square touchscree­n similar to the one on the Apple Watch. It includes a heartrate monitor, GPS tracking and four-day battery life. The watch, which is water resistant up to 50 metres, can make wireless payments and store music offline from Pandora Media.

Fitbit recently lost its position as the top seller of wearable devices, falling behind Apple and China’s Xiaomi. Since going public two years ago to much fanfare, the novelty of its wrist-worn devices have waned with investors. The smartwatch is the company’s first device to include a sensor that can estimate blood oxygen levels, called a relative SPO2 sensor. The Ionic will be pre-loaded with the apps for weather, payments and fitness.

‘‘Smartwatch­es are a platform for us to deliver the most powerful health tools the market has seen,’’ chief executive James Parks aid. ‘‘The larger form factor lets us integrate many more advanced sensors, provide richer display and user interfaces for people.’’

Park is betting that its fitnessfoc­used device will reinvigora­te demand and differenti­ate the product from competitor­s in the smartwatch market, which is expected to reach almost $18 billion in 2020, according to data from IDC.

Fitbit is encouragin­g developers to make apps that focus on health and fitness. The company is also rolling out audio coaching sessions and virtual trainers on the smartwatch that take users through personalis­ed workout sessions.

It’s also introducin­g guided health programmes that give stepby-step advice to consumers on how to eat healthier, sleep better and exercise more.

In addition to the watch, Fitbit is rolling out an upgraded smart scale, the Aria 2 ($220), and $230 bluetooth headphones that pair with the smartwatch. Both are available to pre-order in New Zealand.

The watch will compete with dozens of cheaper Android products and Apple Watch, which already has an establishe­d app store, tight integratio­n with the iphone, built-in music and payments services, not to mention hundreds of accessorie­s.

Fitbit originally planned to debut its watch earlier this year, according to a person familiar with the situation, but various setbacks forced the company to delay the release.

The delays were partly because Fitbit has built its custom operating system, which requires an entire ecosystem of apps. It’s already a risk for developers to make apps for wearable devices, which haven’t caught on as widely as smartphone­s. But among the wearable devices, it’s a safer bet to develop for Android or Apple watches, which already have a proven user-base.

The company is trying to build upon the developer community created by watch maker Pebble, which Fitbit acquired last year. Developers will be able to share their apps with a private community or submit for a review process to be included in Fitbit’s app gallery.

For years, Park has been saying that he wants to transform Fitbit into a digital-health company. With the smartwatch rollout, the company has given hints as to what that plan will look like. Fitbit is exploring how they can aid consumers with heart health, chronic diseases, stress and sleep apnoea.

The company has started using the Fitbit Ionic to work with clinical researcher­s to measure sleep apnoea. In the next several years, Fitbit aims to eventually deliver consumer subscripti­ons that predict health outcomes to move beyond hardware and into a recurring revenue stream. – Washington Post

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