Tech Review – Creative Outlier Free+ and Outlier Free Pro+

Bone conduction headphones have surged in popularity over the last two years and we know that due to the numerous models we have tested and stay tuned for more by the way which are in the review process and for the most these are simple products to use and set up and again for the most there is no app to content with so they are a connect to your phone device and away you go, some however offer more and then you have Air conduction headphones.

Creative however is not new to the scene here nor is the brand and known for delivering excellent audio products be it speakers headphones or earbuds and this is their second time around now with these bone conducting headphones and there is an improvement on last years models and that being in the sound department.

I am speaking about the two products in one review because they are almost identical and the pro offering extra on board storage and a better IP rating other than that the sound for me was identical the controls are identical and the audio profiles are also identical so is the looks apart from the colour choice.

The build quality is great as before and these are super robust they could be flung about the place and still work they can be twisted and tortured and they still work so they are built to last.

Some folk find these neckband type headphones annoying and the questions I always get asked is does the band bounce up and down and how do they sound same two questions all the time oddly enough they never ask about battery life or any other factors.

The neckband sits nicely on your neck to begin with and stays there even in the gym once you have these sat on your ears correct there will be no issue now you might get the odd bounce on the neck if you push it but for the most they are grand and comfortable the only difference is they don’t do in your ears and that is a transition you can only decide if it is for you and it is not as bad as some might be lead to believe.

Controls are simple to use on these guys and both identical you cet three small raised buttons that are tactile and work well to do all the things you need to do so which is volume control skip and reverse tracks play and pause control calls and activate your voice assistant so you have all the controls required however there is no app here.. You have a mfb or better known as a multifunction button which you press 4 times yes 4 times to change the latency, now I say 4 times however there is some earbuds I recently tested that went up to 5 times to do something which is a bit of a joke to be honest.

How do they sound then, well they will and bone conducting headphones will never be as good as headphones or earbuds however the sound quality is getting better as the technology improves over time and for me it has from what I have tested to date and these have vastly improved over their previous models and you have to take into account these are aimed at the sporty person but anyone can wear them which I often do asides from testing.

These both have some bass in there pretty decent sound overall for the technology in play here and deliver a good audio experience whilst being able to hear what is going on around you which is important, not as good as in ear earbuds or headphones but overall you can’t complain when using this technology but it is getting better.

Creative Outlier Free+ is priced at £89.99 and is available at Creative.com. For more information, visit creative.com/OutlierFreePlus

Creative Outlier Free Pro+ is priced at £119.99 and is available at Creative.com. For more information, visit creative.com/OutlierFreeProPlus

Video Review

 

 

VRWorkout Launches a Future-of-Fitness Experience

XRWorkout, an extended reality company company, announces the launch of the VRWorkout fitness experience in the Meta Quest store. Using first-of-its-kind controller-free gameplay, VRWorkout builds on Meta Quest hand-tracking to unlock true bodyweight exercises like pushups, crunches, planks and burpees. The result is a high-intensity calisthenics workout, different from other VR fitness apps which focus mainly on cardio.

VRWorkout is designed to be a safe and balancing experience by engaging the user in a wide range of movements, while keeping them centered in a fixed location. The app uses a unique combination of immersive virtual worlds and the player’s immediate surroundings. Leveraging “passthrough” technology, VRWorkout creates a Mixed Reality fitness space that gives players presence in their real world while being fully engaged in the game. The app features arcade-style futuristic environments, as well as a strong song library for its debut launch.

A core value of VRWorkout is the community aspect of fitness, with a unique way for people to workout together across the globe in multiplayer group workouts. This enables a social fitness experience from the safety of players’ homes.

VR is the most effective way to guide people into following certain movements short of physically touching them. Compared to traditional 2D content it shows the players expected movements from their own vantage point. Minimizing the gap between instructions and action reduces mental stress by inviting a kind of “paint by numbers” training for health and fitness. VRWorkout users state they often ‘zone out’ and really enjoy the fun of the workout, without worrying about what to do next.

Designed as a fitness-first experience, VRWorkout offers user-level adapted workout routines every day. Even if the players repeat the same song multiple times, the in-workout performance adjusts the difficulty as well as changes sequence of movements for a VRWorkout that feels fresh every time.

As a fitness first experience, VRWorkout players always win even if they are not always “on beat”. Regular post launch updates like heart rate controlled exercise, an ever expanding workout catalog and continuous integration of cutting edge developments in the XR space give users the confidence that VRWorkout is leveraging the best of what digital innovation offers for optimized exercise.

VRWorkout is a global physical movement initiative, with a co-founding team that represents Europe, Asia and the US.

Co-founding CEO Alex Azzi steers the venture towards positively impacting humanity at scale. A serial entrepreneur in VR, software, and health and wellness with two exits, Azzi is responsible for leading the team and evangelizing the product.

CTO Michael Gschwandtner, PhD, based in Vienna, is the technical co-founder and a Software Engineer and Computer Scientist in the field of computer vision whose research and innovations include obstacle avoidance for self-driving trains, a popular LIDAR simulation toolbox and research on optical document security. He personally developed the basis of the app as a self-motivational tool for his own exercise routine.

Co-founder and Head of Global Partnerships, April Swando Hu, MBA, based in Singapore, is a Yale and Stanford-alumna, and steers VRWorkouts global strategy for both consumer, enterprise and government applications. Having dedicated her career to increasing access to global education and wellness programs, Hu’s main focus is promoting physical well-being at a personal and societal level.

Co-Founder Rachid Akiki, MD, MBA is a healthcare entrepreneur with a mission to decentralize the industry with his medicine expertise and people-management talent.

“Our mission at VRWorkout is to form a movement, driving the future of fitness, enabling happier, healthier and longevity“ says Azzi. “We are excited to be at the forefront of fitness on the exponentially growing platform of spatial computing, the next computing paradigm after mobile. We Are Movement!”

Find VRWorkout at XRworkout.io

Raising the Bar for Wearable Fitness

Smartwatches have soared in popularity in recent years, with their motion and heart rate sensors tracking the activity of millions worldwide. However, not all activity can be monitored using step counts – limiting the appeal of existing wearable technology to many gym-goers and amateur athletes.

Monitoring specific exercises

Running is one of the most popular activities tracked by motion sensors in watches. They are used to keep track of the distance and speed covered by a runner, complemented by some with heart rate data to show calorie burn and effort level.

Whilst these systems are excellent at measuring the overall movements of a watch wearer in two dimensions, to date they cannot accurately determine movements in a third – height.

Changes in the height of a watch are crucial for monitoring many exercises and movements. Consider sit-ups and push-ups, or a tennis serve and a golf swing. Moreover, consider the impact of gradient during running or climbing that is too subtle to be determined using GPS.

Third-party apps are available to process motion data – and with the right algorithms, this can be successful. In fact, Apple use software to specifically allow users to input data while rowing and swimming.

However, it is well known that many apps to augment wearable sensor data are deleted shortly after download. Moreover, many of the popular features by Apple are still focused on two-dimensional insights; lengths completed in the pool or the number of rowing strokes, for example.

This creates an opportunity for sensor technology capable of accurately determining the height of wearables to disrupt the industry. We are already seeing some companies seek to capitalize on this gap in the market, with Bosch Sensortec adding a miniaturized pressure sensor to its suite of MEMS for wearables. Capable of determining changes in height as small as 50 cm, and small enough for integration into wrist-worn and in-ear devices. Successful implementation is marketed as allowing for the number of push-up reps, length of pull-up extensions, and overall form during strength training to be directly measured.

The smartwatch and fitness tracker industry is becoming more crowded, and as prices for the latest tech continue to increase, so does the expectation of the consumer. Differentiation in the wearable fitness space will be crucial for success in the coming years, and device manufacturers should raise the bar of their sensor’s capabilities so that their users can too.

Beyond the smartwatch

For many sports wearing a watch at all during play isn’t feasible, safe, or permitted. A rigid wrist-worn device is too dangerous to wear whilst playing contact sports like football and rugby, and too valuable to risk during hockey or squash.

As such, a large proportion of amateur and professional sportspeople are removing their smartwatch just as they are about to exercise the most. For this market, understanding their performance during a match is arguably as important if not more essential than tracking fitness during a training run.

Innovations in wearable sensor technology, specifically e-textiles are a promising solution to this problem. Traditional textiles integrated with electronics, or e-textiles, have been under development in different forms by many universities, start-ups, and larger companies alike. Conductive components embedded within clothes have shown promise for the measurement of heart rate and activity level, alongside other biometrics valued in the wellness and even healthcare space.

To date, the major hurdle facing e-textiles has been washability, durability, and cost. The integrity of the clothing often fails within a few cycles in the washing machine, which is unlikely to tempt many consumers to part with very much money at all. This has led to some disenchantment with e-textiles, with them written off as the perpetual technology of the future.

However, the gap in the market for wearables for sports creates a unique opportunity. Match-day tops are not worn as frequently as other clothes, and buyers are already used to spending more on sport-specific equipment and local club apparel. Furthermore, professional footballers are increasingly seen sporting chest straps tracking their performance, making wearable technology of this kind much more socially acceptable.

E-textile technology is slowly improving, with some companies now capable of creating garments that can survive more than a hundred washes and cost a few hundred pounds. Whilst still a way off being commercially viable to the mass market, it is iterating closer to promising niches such as contact sports.

The most promising companies are creating fundamental components for e-textile integration: wiring, electrodes, and interconnects; that can be easily incorporated into existing mass manufacturing methods for clothing. It is also popular to see companies create fully realized shirts, headbands, bras, and socks as marketing tools with which to generate interest and engage with more established players. As early-stage companies focus their energies on scaling up and collaborating with big-name brands, it wouldn’t be surprising if we see high-end smart shirts for the prosumer emerge onto the market within the foreseeable future.

Those looking to compete in the wearable technology space would be remiss to overlook users for whom the form factor of the watch will always be inappropriate. This could be through flexible electronics and e-textiles, new locations on the body or even sensors integrated within wirelessly connected sports equipment.

Outlook and market forecasts

There is no denying that major players like Apple, Fitbit, Garmin, and Samsung currently dominate the wearables market. However, whilst the industry looks set to split between consumer and medical devices – the opportunity remains for sensor innovations to create more space in the market for activity monitoring.

IDTechEx has been covering wearable technology for almost a decade, and our dedicated portfolio of reports provides a detailed overview of fitness tracking, smartwatches, skin patches, augmented and virtual reality hardware, e-textiles, hearables, and more. Our granular ten-year forecasts segment each industry by application and technology, and together, they include hundreds of company profiles from interviews with both major manufacturers and start-ups. Also included in the reports are multiple use-case examples, SWOT analysis, and technological/commercial readiness assessments. Further details and downloadable sample pages for each report can be found on the IDTechEx website.

Tech Review – The Newbee F13 affordable smartwatch

Wearables are a huge industry and there is something for everyone too, price plays a factor and features come with the price but over the last year it seems like the cost of an extension to your phone on your arm is coming down with plenty of wearables coming in under the 100 euro mark however there is some out there that can cost well over 500 euros and it is a matter of opinion or if you are simply a fan of a particular brand you are willing to pay the excess.

On the upside however is good news if you do not want to spent silly money on such products and there are many to pick from now sub 100 euro. An example I have been testing is the F13 smartwatch from Newbee who sells tech at affordable prices and this also comes with an app and a UI i have seen before on other similar smartwatches.

This watch has a colour screen albeit small and has plenty of sports features inside and not just the handful you often get, you cant take calls on it which might be a drawback for some however there is nothing out there at this price point that does and also much more expensive watches, the app is pretty good I must add and has a myriad of features and functions for most people including heart rate monitoring SPO2 monitoring and sleep tracking just to name a few and again often left out on more expensive models, notifications work a treat and there is no lag either, you can control the notifications too keeping in mind the more you have the more it will impede on battery life, they are not rich but a plain text and you cant respond so it is a keep it simple approach but it does it rather well.

For the fitness there is plenty of sports included you can see all about the watch in detail in the video review below and we go through the app to and show you what to expect if you decide to purchase, there is also a discount for our viewers (techbuzz20) using the link below.

 

Features include

  • 1.69-inches full screen
  • Size : 45.2*35.6*11.8mm
  • Long Battery Life
  • Body temperature monitoring. IP67 Waterproof. Sport Mode. Health monitoring. Smart notification & Reminder. Sleep monitoring. Heart rate monitoring. Daily activity tracking.

BUY

Video LInk

Innovative Software Solution Glofox Partners with Xponential Fitness for International Expansion

Glofox, one of the fastest growing fitness business management software platforms, today announced it had been selected by Xponential Fitness, a curator of leading brands across a variety of verticals in boutique fitness including Club Pilates, Pure Barre, Rumble and CycleBar, to support its network of master franchisees as it expands internationally into new countries.

The innovative platform provides powerful and easy to use software for studio staff, a seamless and engaging multi-platform member experience, and network-wide reporting for franchise headquarters. “Partnering with Xponential Fitness is a real milestone for us; we’re excited to support their renowned portfolio of brands as they scale internationally,” said Conor O’Loughlin, Glofox CEO.

Glofox’s international support across payments, multi-language capabilities within its platform and global support teams will allow Xponential Fitness to successfully execute their expansion into new locations outside of the U.S.

“Working with Glofox gives me peace of mind as we undertake our global expansion. They are an innovative partner who we are confident will deliver a robust platform that will enable us to successfully scale into international markets and support our master franchisees in their businesses as they grow,” said John Kersh, Chief International Development Officer of Xponential Fitness.

The addition of Xponential Fitness further validates Glofox as the industry leading software management offering driving international growth for franchise businesses. They join Glofox’s burgeoning portfolio of some of the largest, fast-growing franchise operators as well as its growing network of independent businesses spanning over sixty countries.

#Garmin announces vívoactive HR and vivofit 3 smart #wearable at #MWC2016 by @Tiwaash

Garmin, the popular innovative wearable along with maker has announced vívoactive HR along with the vivofit 3 fitness tracker, successor of last year’s vivofit 2, at the MWC 2016 in Barcelona.

Garmin vívoactive HR

Vívoactive HR features a built-in GPS-enabled sports apps for walking, running, biking, swimming, golfing, paddle boarding, rowing, skiing and snowboarding. It uses 24/7 wrist-based heart rate data to calculate calories burned information as well as the intensity of fitness activities. With the Connect IQ store, users can easily personalize their vívoactive HR with free apps, widgets, watch faces and data fields.

The vívoactive HR sports a always-on, touchscreen, sunlight-readable Garmin Chroma Display that lets users track activity and stay connected along with a GPS with Garmin Elevate wrist heart rate technology. It keeps track of activities like counting steps and floors climbed, intensity minutes, monitoring sleep. It also comes with Garmin Move IQ which continuously monitors for periods of sustained activity and automatically recognizes walking, running, biking, swimming and elliptical training.

Garmin vivofit 3

vivofit 3 has has a backlit display that shows steps, calories, distance, intensity minutes and time of day. It also comes with Garmin Move IQ that captures different activities, such as walking, running, biking, swimming and using an elliptical, to view on Garmin Connect.

vivofit 3 is  water resistant to 50 meters, has one-year battery life and comes with a range of colorful interchangeable accessory bands, designs from the Garmin Style Collection and new styles from the Jonathan Adler + Garmin line. The move bar with audible alert reminds users when they have been inactive too long.

Pricing and availability:

The vívoactive HR costs $249.99 and will begin shipping in Q2. It will be available in regular and extra large fit black bands. Accessory bands will be available in black, white, force yellow and lava red for a suggested retail price of $29.99 each.

The Garmin vivofit 3 is priced at $99.99 that comes with a regular or extra large sized black band.  Tracker with regular sized dark camo band is priced at $109.99. The Garmin Style Collection’s Gabrielle bundle includes a small sized black quilted band and white waves band for $119.99. Interchangeable accessory bands will be available in regular and extra large sized two packs for $29.99 each. Two pack options include marsala and white, slate and borealis, slate and marsala, camo and orange, and pink camo and white.

See Garmin for more details

#TomTom Spark GPS fitness watch with Music Player up for pre-order by @Tiwaash #Fitness #Wearable

TomTom is here to bounce back with its newest product in the wearables segment, which now has many dominant players to compete with, but the company is hopeful of gaining back the lost momentum in the recent times.

TomTom has announced Spark, its latest fitness watch which is more than just a tracker. TomTom Spark is focused on fitness freaks who love their music by offering music support. You can store upto favourite tracks on the device and carry along on your wrist.

TomTom Spark is one of the first multi-sport fitness watches that combines heart rate monitor, GPS activity, sleep tracker and built in music system. The wearable is also water resistant up to 40 meters.

The users can add music through iTunes or Windows Media Player. TomTom has also partnered with Ministry of Sound to offer a playlist of songs and that come pre-installed. At the moment, the watch doesn’t support smartphone notifications, but the company says that future software updates will bring the missing functionality.

TomTom Spark will be up for grabs in different sizes of wrist strap and colors. You can pre-order one today for €189.99 and the device will be shipped to you in October.

Features

  • Over 500 Songs of Music Storage (subject to file size)
  • 24/7 Activity Tracking
  • Built-in Heart Rate Monitor
  • Multisport Mode
  • Automatic Sleep Tracking

Stay tuned for more tech buzz.

#MobieFit enters the #mFitness league with #FirstRun by @Tiwaash #Fitness #Android #Startup

How often do we get a celebrity who takes interest in taking care of the fitness of their followers??? Well this doesn’t happen quite often but it just so happened. The renowned celebrity from India, Gul Panag, has taken up this task to encourage and train her fans & followers with her latest venture in tech, MobieFit. “MobieFit is a venture, incubated by Prototyze, focused on mobile fitness powered by celebrity trainers. It helps you become as fit as you want, in the way that you want”.

MobieFit launched their first of the mFitness app FirstRun, with Gul Panag being the Chief Fitness Officer. FirstRun is focused on people who have never took up running and to encourage them to run. Gul says “Our debut product FirstRun has launched on the Google Play Store. It is specifically designed to take people who’ve absolutely never run before and get them running many kilometres within just a few weeks. Among a dozen unique features is a personal trainer (yours truly!) who will guide you through the entire journey. I am now the CFO, yes that’s right, the Chief Fitness Officer.
Not tomorrow, not next week, not after the vacations…Start your FirstRun today!”

Features of FirstRun:

  • Personal Running Coach, Gul Panag
  • Built for Beginners (not that seasoned runners cannot use it, but main focus is to encourage people to run more to become fit)
  • Train for either 5K or 10K run
  • All season app
  • Run to your Beat with in-built music player
  • Your Running Diary (log with graphs of your runs)

Download your copy of FirstRun for free from the Google Play Store & hit the park with your jogging shoes on and start running with Gul Panag. There is no news of the app coming to other platforms but we are sure users of iOS & WindowsPhone would definitely appreciate it.

Let us know your experience with FirstRun in the comments below or tweet us using #TechBuzzIreland

Stay tuned for more tech buzz.

Source : FirstRun Blog

Microsoft Band gets Guided Workouts support in its first major update by @Tiwaash #Fitness #MicrosoftBand #Wearable

Microsoft has updated its Band fitness tracker in its first major update. Microsoft started rolling out additional features to the Band such as guided workout and more.

The Band fitness tracker is getting 12 Guided Workouts that Microsoft has sourced from various partners, like Gold’s Gym and Men’s Fitness magazine. Users will have to load the workouts from the Microsoft Health app to the wearable gadget. Earlier in January, Microsoft pushed a general software update to the Microsoft Band and to the Health app, which primarily addressed performance and fixed a few bugs.

The  Microsoft Band uses a series of timers and wrist buzzes to guide the user through the workouts. Some of the workouts use common exercise equipment like kettlebells, dumbbells, plyometric boxes, and jumprope.

To know about Microsoft Band and it’s feature click here.

Stay tuned for more tech buzz.