agentmikeyd99
Banned
They are most certainly not being deceptive.
Disagree. Love ya man, but the ad on Microsoft store is absolutely deceptive and misleading
They are most certainly not being deceptive.
Disagree. Love ya man, but the ad on Microsoft store is absolutely deceptive and misleading
Because this is the only forum with a high number of Band owners/users.
If you read from the beginning of the thread, people have been stating that the unit automatically pings HR more than once an hour during the day while active and that the HRM is activated by motion. Whenever I state that is not true I get nailed to the stake and am accused of being dishonest, dumb, a shill for Mio, etc etc. Does that sound reasonable to you?
You are the third person on this forum to bring up potential lawsuit with Microsoft. That's disturbing. I would never in a million years consider suing for this... I am simply making posts on a forum. To assume that could be the harbinger for a full blown lawsuit is ridiculous. Times that by 3. Very disturbing.
Again, my purpose here is to let others that do care about continuous heart rate monitoring know that this device does not accomplish that. It may only be 1 in 10 or 1 in 20 readers here but some people do indeed care. The misinformation being tossed around here is beyond unacceptable.
I'd probably wait for his article clarifying the issue first.Disagree. Love ya man, but the ad on Microsoft store is absolutely deceptive and misleading
I'd probably wait for his article clarifying the issue first.
What a tiresome thread over a word..
(I binged it...)
Continuous indicates duration without interruption.
Or is it..
Continual indicates duration that continues over a long period of time, but with intervals of interruption
whichever it is, I hope the Band comes to my part of the world... I'm getting it.
The ad clearly says 24 hour monitoring. Good thing my alarm company has a different definition of 24 hour monitoring
The ad clearly says 24 hour monitoring. Good thing my alarm company has a different definition of 24 hour monitoring
Trained as an EMT in Connecticut; later on did EEGs in grad school for language/brain research; later still I was a polysomnographic technician at Weill Cornell/NY Presbyterian (aka a 'sleep tech').Interested to know what you did in the medical field before coming here. Does hackery pay more than medicine in the US?
Article is up: http://www.windowscentral.com/how-often-microsoft-band-checks-your-heart-rate
Long story short:
- Exercise modes (Run and Workout): Heart rate records every second
- Sleep tracking : 2 minutes on, 8 minutes off. Repeats throughout duration
- All other times : 1 minute on, 9 minutes off, and repeating the cycle
- Manual: You can force-check your heart rate at any time by tapping the Me Tile
Article is up: http://www.windowscentral.com/how-often-microsoft-band-checks-your-heart-rate
Long story short:
- Exercise modes (Run and Workout): Heart rate records every second
- Sleep tracking : 2 minutes on, 8 minutes off. Repeats throughout duration
- All other times : 1 minute on, 9 minutes off, and repeating the cycle
- Manual: You can force-check your heart rate at any time by tapping the Me Tile
"We asked Microsoft specifically about how often the Band acquires your heart rate, and they were more than happy to provide the information.Where exactly did you get this information from. Can you provide us a source?
Here's how you can test your unit... place it on your wrist fairly loosely. Go into a dark room and plan to do something uninterrupted (like read a book) for at least 10 minutes. Place your wrist so that you can barely see the underside of the optical sensor. If you are in a dark room, the LED will light up and grab your attention instantly. If not, the sensor did not turn on and no HR data has been logged.
Alternately, you can just glance at your wrist every 30 seconds (you can set up a repeating timer on your phone) for 10 minutes and you will see that the optical sensor does NOT turn on for one minute out of every 10 minutes.
Here's how you can test your unit... place it on your wrist fairly loosely. Go into a dark room and plan to do something uninterrupted (like read a book) for at least 10 minutes. Place your wrist so that you can barely see the underside of the optical sensor. If you are in a dark room, the LED will light up and grab your attention instantly. If not, the sensor did not turn on and no HR data has been logged.
Wait, you don't even own a Band yourself? You've been arguing with me this whole time and you don't even have a unit in your own hands? Good grief. I must be in the twilight zone.
I did the same thing (albeit googled it). As far as I can tell the word continuous is not on the band's page but used by one of the engineers in an interview. Boy did he start trouble. Most people use the words continuous and continual interchangeably, although incorrect. He's an engineer not an English professor. On the website it only says 24-hour heart rate monitoring, (which it does) which is what should have been the OP's guide.