Fitbit Alta: Fitness-tracking should go super-stylish
Meet up with the Alta
All sorts of things let you know that the Alta is suitable for each day consumers who just want some healthy drive; it’s not for health nut products or runners. It emphasizes sleek visual appearance, and de-emphasizes data collection.
First, the good thing. The Alta is the skinniest Fitbit strap ever - about 50 % the width of the Demand band. It appears to take immediate purpose at Jawbone’s Up strap, which includes been super-skinny and for that reason much less unappealing than competitors always.
First, the good thing. The Alta is the skinniest Fitbit strap ever - about 50 % the width of the Demand band. It appears to take immediate purpose at Jawbone’s Up strap, which includes been super-skinny and for that reason much less unappealing than competitors always.
But here’s a twist: You can pop out the Alta’s mind module to put in it right into a different band.
You may choose that music group in a new silicon color ($30; dark-colored, blue, plum, or teal), a leather one ($60; red or grey), or a stainless-steel even, bangle-type group ($100; arriving this spring and coil) that requires fitness trackers into a complete new world of jewelry-ishness.
The OLED display screen is big and dazzling and beautiful, and readable in virtually any light. You could choose the type and orientation of its time screen:
Unfortunately, the display screen is turned off. To start to see the right time, you either double-tap the Alta or increase your wrist; there’s no physical Wake key, as there is certainly on Fitbit’s other products. (This might have been excellent if it designed that the Alta, which right now does not have any physical holes in its shell, was showerproof. Alas, it’s not. Grr
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