Austin American-Statesman

Gallaga

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Sleep by unattracti­ve headband

In late 2012, I found a new device at a blogging conference called Zeo Sleep Manager, which combined a headband sensor with an app for your phone. The headband, holding a large piece of plastic that went right on your head, recorded brainwave activity and sent that informatio­n to your smartphone. (Which, when I tried it, required the phone to be on and plugged in to work; it was a huge battery drain.)

Zeo used your sleep informatio­n to give you a “ZQ Score” and offered tips to correct your sleep behavior.

It was a neat idea that suffered from major hardware design issues. The $99 headband sensor was uncomforta­ble to wear all night and the sensor was built to wear out in a few months of sweat exposure, at which time it was to be replaced. By the time I got to that point, with data that told me what I already knew (“Get more sleep!”), I was ready to throw the Zeo in a drawer and never see it again.

That must have been a common response. Last year, the company behind Zeo announced it was shutting down and even the website for the product has disappeare­d.

Sleep by sporty wristband

Earlier this year, I bought a FitBit Force wristband. I was interested in the fitness data (it tracks your activity, such as walking and stair climbing), but was far more interested in sleep data it could collect.

This worked out well for a while, even after the product was recalled for a series of skin rashes. I got no rash, so I held onto the wristband and continued wearing it all the time, activating its sleep monitoring at night and when I took naps.

It was a lot of data beamed wirelessly to my phone and pretty graphics showing me when I got up at night, what hours I was restless and how much sleep I was getting over time. But if I forgot to activate sleep mode, the FitBit wouldn’t remember, and if I forgot to turn it off upon waking, it just kept on recording sleep. I could go in and manually adjust that informatio­n in the iPhone app that collects the data, but after a while I stopped bothering.

Wearing a slim, rubber wristband turned out to be a lot less hassle than a big headband sensor, but my tendency to forget that the wristband was recording data began to make the informatio­n it was collecting useless.

Wired mattresses

For a few months, my sleep began to deteriorat­e, even when I was getting to bed at a decent hour. I wondered if the sag in our 10-yearold mattress might be to blame.

I visited a Sleep Number store in South Austin and was thrilled to learn that the company is embracing high-tech and the quantified self data movement for its beds.

The company’s flagship innovation is still the Sleep Number dual-air technology, which allows you to adjust the firmness on either side of the bed separately. Newer models, like the top-of-theline x12, a bed that starts at $ 8,000 and whose name sounds more like a fighter jet, can recognize voice commands (think Siri for your bed).

Most Sleep Number beds can communicat­e with apps from the company that track sleep patterns, a technology called Sleep IQ. There are also bed toppers to make one side of the bed cooler or warmer than the other.

The manager at the South Park Meadows Sleep Number store, Tim Topicz is handsome in a Scott Bakula way and has an easy charm when it comes to discussing America’s sleep problem.

Topicz says that people are more focused on sleep as one of the pillars of health, alongside diet and exercise. “The easiest one to deal with is sleep,” he said. “We are educating people. Even though people are putting a premium on sleep, the most expensive bed or the most expensive technology may not be right for you. If you’re lying awake thinking about how much money you spend, we’ve defeated the purpose.”

Topicz guides me through the Sleep Number process and I emerge with a score of 35, on the soft side of bed firmness. With a slick remote, he adjusts the x12 into the “Zero G” position, elevating my feet and head for maximum relaxation.

He tells me about “Partner Snore,” a way to adjust the bed so that your spouse ( or other sleep partner) will stop with the snoring.

It’s very hard not to fall asleep, forget work and drift away right there in the middle of a retail store on a Tuesday morning.

But I’ve got a story to write.

It’s a story about sleep that I’ll end up filing at about 1:30 a.m., because some habits are very hard to break, even with the lure of the best zzz’s money might buy.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BYNORTHCUB­E AB ?? “Sleep Cycle”is an alarmclock app that analyzes your sleep patterns andwakes youwhen you hit your lightest sleep phase. The company behind it recommends placing your phone in the bed to use the app.
CONTRIBUTE­D BYNORTHCUB­E AB “Sleep Cycle”is an alarmclock app that analyzes your sleep patterns andwakes youwhen you hit your lightest sleep phase. The company behind it recommends placing your phone in the bed to use the app.
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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY FITBIT ?? Ascreensho­t fromFitbit’smobile app, which can sync sleep data fromthe company’swearable devices. It’s tough to tell if the sleep data is accurate, but it defifinite­ly doesn’twork if you forget to turn sleepmode on and offff.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY FITBIT Ascreensho­t fromFitbit’smobile app, which can sync sleep data fromthe company’swearable devices. It’s tough to tell if the sleep data is accurate, but it defifinite­ly doesn’twork if you forget to turn sleepmode on and offff.
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