It's also got bright LED lights that make it flashy but unfortunately it results it faster battery drain. If I'm lucky I can squeeze five days out of it. I've found the Nike FuelBand SE to suck the most battery resulting in needing to charge it every three to four days. What kind of battery life you get varies greatly across all four trackers. The UP24 not only analyzes sleep better than the rest, it's by far the most comfortable to wear all night long. And as mentioned before, I had issues with the others coming off during the night which is something to think about. When it comes to comfort, the UP24 is by far the most comfortable. The UP24 will never disturb you during a REM cycle. You can even set an alarm within the app and the UP24 will wake you up within 20 minutes of it based on where you are in a sleep cycle. Just hold the only button found on the UP24 down when you're ready to go to sleep to put it in sleep mode. The UP24 analyzes and breaks up sleep the best within the app and shows you how many times you woke up, how many hours of light sleep you got as opposed to heavy sleep, and more. If you're just tracking how many hours you're sleeping each night, all three apps can either track while you sleep or you can manually enter it in. When deciding between the other three, it really comes down to what you want to know. The only fitness tracker out of the bunch that does not track sleep is the Nike FuelBand so if that's important to you, eliminate the FuelBand from your pool of candidates right off the bat. Fitbit's data concerns me as it seems to be far too generous when it comes to steps and calorie count. Garmin's Connect app is the only one that tracks heart rate while UP by Jawbone has the best third party integration. The FuelBand app by Nike is the best of the bunch when it comes to design and usability. It breaks it out separately instead of lumping it with everything else. The Sessions feature for SE owners lets you track Fuel points that you rack up doing a specific activity like biking, playing basketball, or anything else. As for the FuelBand app, it's well designed and easy to use. Just give it a few twirls around your finger and watch your step and NikeFuel count climb. Unfortunately it's also the easiest to fool. Aside from the uniqueness of the NikeFuel system, I've found the FuelBand SE to be the most accurate when it comes to actually tracking calories, steps, and distance. You can compete with friends to rack up the most NikeFuel and hit milestones. This algorithm combines calories, steps, and activity to obtain your NikeFuel point count. The FuelBand SE tracks basic data like the others but also uses its own system of points called NikeFuel.
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