Wearables wearing out their welcome

I had a draft of a post ready to go where I was going to do a comparative test of the sleep tracking of the Hello Sense, the Misfit Flash and the Fitbit Charge this week, but in the last 2 days the button has snapped off the Charge and the Flash no longer syncs (have tried on both android and iOS, multiple installs and wipes, new battery, no idea what's up with that thing). So, that plan is probably a bust, therefore I have no choice but to declare the Sense the winner of my little sleep contest due to forfeits... For now.

Something has broken on every single "wearable" I've had.

  • 2nd Generation Jawbone UP - had 3, all died. One had the button break, the others had internal faults. First one was bought in May 2013, none lasted more than a few weeks. Retailed $129.95.
  • Fitbit Flex - Band split apart after 2 months, had to get a replacement. Retails $99.95.
  • Fitbit Force - Non-replaceable band split apart within a year, and then they withdrew them for sale because of skin irritation complaints. A gift, was retailing at $129.99.
  • Misfit Flash - Unknown syncing fault. Bought November 2014 for half price during their Black Friday sales. $49.99 retail.
  • Fitbit Charge - Button snapped off while I was asleep. Got that January 2014. Bought for $110 with a discount code from my broken Force, retail $129.95. Currently in a back and forth with customer support to hopefully get it replaced.

I'm 7 for 7.  Seven wrist-wearable devices in 2 years!  (Just to be clear - I only wear them one at a time.)

I feel like a mug. I don't treat these devices badly - I don't wear them in the shower like some heathens do, asking for trouble. These relatively expensive toys appear to just expire.  Sure, they pretty much all have a 1 year warranty and mostly thoughtfully die within that window, but that doesn't really make it OK - it's a pain in the ass to keep chasing up tech replacements for things that really shouldn't be keeling over within their warranty period.

Am I just unlucky?

Hello Sense sleep tracker review

Backed on Kickstarter sometime last year, my Hello Sense unit materialised without much warning. I've had it about 2 weeks now, so I think it's about time for a review. 

The Sense consists of two parts - an orb about the size of a small apple that lives on your nightstand and low-powered Bluetooth trackers called "pills" that clip onto your pillow. 

Physical design

Design wise, this thing is lovely. The unboxing and styling is very Apple-influenced, with all the packaging designed to warm you up to loving the device. The orb glows pleasingly with different colours to indicate what's going on (purple is pairing mode, for example) and it has a sharp modern look about it that makes it feel a bit like an art object on my nightstand rather than just another piece of technology. 

The little pills that clip onto your pillow are pretty cute. They have jaws of doom however and are a complete bastard to get onto the pillow, but once they're on, they're on - so at least they're not going to pop off in the night and disappear into the bed someplace.  I worry about accidentally washing them, but I'll cross that bridge when it happens (extra pills are $59 each, though, so I hope they have decent customer service when that does happen, because that's not cheap).

My one complaint about the design? They made the plug round instead of a neat rectangle (the orb needs to be plugged in, and it's a bit fussy about the cable it gets given), so it takes up two plug spaces on my power strip. I intend to swap it with a neater USB plug at some point.

Setup

Sadly, the setup somewhat ruins the initial design good feels. It was a complete pain in the arse to get connected. Putting the orb on the wifi went smoothly enough, but pairing the pills was hit and miss. I bought two pills, one for me, one for Husband (who doesn't give a monkey's about sleep tracking, but I want a comparison point), and we struggled to pair both. You have to do this shaking thing while the orb is in pairing mode, and the Bluetooth processes kept crashing, so you feel ridiculous and you spend a lot of time waiting for phones to reboot. It all appeared to be faulty software, at least, so hopefully they can iron that out, but I'm not looking forward to having to replace or change the setup any time soon. 

So, what does it do?  

Via the app, you can always see the current status of the bedroom - it shows you the current temperature, light level, sound level and humidity plus all of those over time in a graph. If you pass your hand over the orb, it'll glow a colour to indicate the current room quality based on these values. The Kickstarter advertised a particulate sensor, that at first I thought was missing, but for whatever reason it's not available with the other data in the "right now" screen, you only get to view this via the "before sleep" tab as an AQI value. I assume because they don't want to show the average out of context.

Based on these values and the movement of your pillow, it has a go at telling you when you're sleeping and how soundly. If you have forced your loving bed partner into tracking their sleep too, the app will reflect that in the overnight data, indicating when you were both moving or if it thinks it was just you. In the morning, you'll get a sleep score - mine hovers around 82 most nights. I think that's OK, but I'm not sure what it really means because Husband's is roughly the same and he definitely sleeps better than I do so I really don't know how it's being calculated.

The sleep tracking data quality is on a par with the data I get from my current FitBit Force (and Jawbone Up I had before), but it attempts to quantify it more by telling you about conditions before bed and asking you a few questions about how you slept and your habits. It says things like "you move in bed 13% more than other sense users" and it constantly tells me my room is too warm - got it - but attempts to lower the temp haven't been praised or shown to improve my sleep yet. I want a pat on the head! But my sleep quality is my own fault and I should feel bad, I guess. But in short, the data looks about right. Consumer level sleep trackers just aren't that detailed, and this one is no exception - but at least I don't have to physically wear a device to get a similar quality to that of a Jawbone or Fitbit.

The thing I like most - the alarm. I've switched to just using the sense alarm, because they have really nice sounds that aren't shrill and jarring, it fades up slowly in volume and the little orb glows a pale blue to wake me up. I just have to wave my hand over it to shut it up. It really is that future feeling I want out of my personal tech, plus it stops me reaching for my old alarm (my phone) which helps delay me checking my email. However, it doesn't have snooze so I've just set up a series of alarms 10 mins apart to fake it, but I really hope they add that (snooze could be a short wave over, off could be a triple wave over or something, Hello guys).

The thing I'm saddest about? The Kickstarter said it would have a white/pink noise generator for falling asleep. It's not there. They haven't done it. I use a few apps on my iPad for this already (I actually usually opt for rainstorm sounds - I think I miss the motherland), but I was super excited to have a noise generator connected to a sleep tracker, so I could build up some data on what sounds work best. I'm bummed they didn't add that - I'm hoping they still will, after all, the orb is basically a Bluetooth speaker. If they would just open it up to let me pass whatever audio out I wanted to the Bluetooth that'd work, too.  

Oh, and while I'm begging for features - there is no way to connect this system to anything else in the house/life. I can't even get it to send me an email with the day's stats that I could then IFTTT out to do something else based on that (Slept badly last night? Here's a reminder to go to bed earlier. Room too hot again? Turn on a fan. That sort of thing). If I could communicate with it, I'd be able to use the speaker for notifications or set light sequences for things, too. Oh, and can I have a web interface with an export? I hate having my data locked away and the small screen is not ideal for studying graphs. 

In summary

Pros: 

  • Slick modern design
  • Nice alarm
  • Good for bed sharers
  • Data quality on par with FitBit Force
  • Don't have to wear anything on my body for tracking

Cons:

  • Pain in the butt to setup
  • No snooze
  • No white noise generator
  • No API / integration points
  • Lack of detailed particulate information
  • Data only accessible via the app

The Sense orb + 2 pills cost me $129 during their Kickstarter campaign. The same setup today would cost $188, which is really pushing their luck on price point.

So, do I like it? Yeah, I do, although it feels a little under developed right now. I don't think there's anything I'm griping about that can't be fixed in the software, so I hope they keep working on that to improve the data / feature set and if they open up an API there's plenty of opportunity there to do some cool stuff. I've got my fingers crossed that this isn't just a one trick pretty pony.