- cross-posted to:
- android@chat.maiion.com
- cross-posted to:
- android@chat.maiion.com
I hate being a doomer, and this does look great… But doesn’t Google own Fitbit now? And hasn’t material you been out for almost 2 years now?
Back in my day, Google apps were often among the worst offenders when it came to not following their own design philosophy!
They’re in close competition with Microsoft.
Google has no idea what to do and how to make it happen.
Bro gadgetbridge will sooner get support for all fitbits AND get material you than google makes up it’s mind on how youtube should look
But- But… Dislike button…
Oh no, they’re eating away our ad profits!
How evil!
What about dark mode? To me that should be the priority.
Edit: I just noticed that on the new version we will no longer be able to see the sleep stages without premium.
Fitbit/Google is again restricting data behind a subscription, I will move on to Garmin when the update is mandatory.
Ugh really? Lame. That’s the only thing I really use my Fitbit for. My Galaxy Watch 4 does the sleep phases, its battery life just isn’t as great.
on the other hand, if you use health connect you can export all of that juicy good data to something else that actually lets you view it
What something would that be?
Google Fit, ironically
Seems a waste of time and resources. We all know that google is going to kill this and merge it with google fit. So, start adding features to google fit, so when the time is come, it’s a suitable replacement. Please don’t do like usually, the replacement is not ready or has nowhere the same features
I thought one of the terms of the Fitbit deal with the competition ombudsman was that they had to keep it separate from fit. What makes you think they’re going to join them?
usually google doesn’t like redundant stuff
More likely to kill Fit then.
unfortunately. Fit is such a nice clean app, it’ll be a shame when it is killed
I thought it was the opposite? Google Fit is practically abandoned on WearOS in favor of the Pixel Watch’s Fitbit integration.
ah right i forgot how google operates.
First they abandon their perfectly good app.
Then they focus their attention on the new shiny toy
Finally, they kill the old one and rebrand the new with a new name that leave everyone confused.
One week ago my grandma called me to ask “where’s that Duo icon that you told me for do video call to cousin?” I was blindsided as i uninstalled it years ago. It was renamed to google meet, but old google meet was killed. Or something like that.
deleted by creator
I don’t have a watch or a Fitbit, but these screens sure look a lot like Google Fit.
Wow, looks great!
deleted by creator
Looks fantastic. Nice and clean.
I’m holding it up against the current app and it does look way better, but the changes are less drastic than expected.
Most of the change comes from going from 4 options to 3. It happens on the bottom tab bar, and on the small trackers below the main one on the today tab. They also add some more whitespace around those trackers, boost their size, and add more separation between the next section.
It’s subtle, but it’s honestly a huge improvement in cognitive load. The first time I opened the Fitbit app on my new phone I closed it because it felt overwhelming and cluttered, this feels a lot more focused.
That being said, still really irritated that basic watch and health tracking is locked behind Fitbit Premium, and given that it’s Google, it’ll probably be cancelled with no clear migration options in a year or two.
I see very little functional difference and as I don’t vibe with arbitrary changes too much I’d like to know how I can skip the update? Though I guess I’ll find out when it comes out whether it will force itself to be updated.
I like the way it looks, though I never felt anything wrong with the current app to begin with.
Like @psychic717@lemmy.world mentioned, hopefully there’s a dark mode.
Additionally, apparently the Android app does not show your step streak while the iOS app does. I don’t see it in the screenshots in the article, but I hope it’s something they’ve addressed.