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One of a typical products have been present adorn the day - your sidereal day. UP by Jawbone is one ware the specific is not a lot of . The process of market place demand that much, it may make UP by Jawbone will quickly sold out. UP by Jawbone is designed with an entire details for your gismo in use. A equipment that has a complex taste , so you will be confident in using it. UP by Jawbone I extremely strongly recommend , and some members too can't help but recommend .
For sale now at cheap price, special discounts and fast shipping. I am really happy with their qualities and highly recommend it to everyone needing for a top quality product with the newest specifications at an reasonable. You can read review from customers to find out more from their experience. UP by Jawbone has worked beneficial for me and I believe it would do wonders on you too. Why then spend much more time? Have Fun, you understand where to buy the best ones.
Most people reviews speak that the UP by Jawbone are splendid luggage. Also, It Is a pretty well product for the price. It’s great for colony on a tight budget. We’ve found pros and cons on this type of product. But overall, It’s a supreme product and we are well recommend it! When you however want to know more details on this product, so read the reports of those who have already used it.
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #290 in Cell Phone Accessories
- Color: Onyx
- Brand: Jawbone
- Model: JBR52a-MD
- Dimensions: 2.13" h x
2.99" w x
.50" l,
.5 pounds
Features
- Designed to be worn 24/7; up to 10 days of battery life
- Track your sleep: total hours, light versus deep, length of time to fall asleep
- Track your activity: steps, distance, calories burned, time spent active versus idle
- Log what you eat & drink & track nutritional info
- Free iPhone app required
Product Description
UP is a system, wristband + iPhone app, that tracks how you sleep, move and eat so you can know yourself better, make smarter choices and feel your best. Know yourself. Live better. TRACK YOUR SLEEP. Small and comfortable to wear all day and night, UP senses your micro-movements while you sleep and uses advanced algorithms to determine how many hours you slept, how long it took you to fall asleep, time spent in light vs. deep sleep and how many times you woke during the night. TRACK YOUR ACTIVTY. Wearing UP captures a complete picture of your day, so you don’t have to guess how active you are. UP tracks your steps, distance, calories burned and time spent active vs. idle. TRACK YOUR FOOD & DRINK. UP’s mobile app lets you log what you eat and drink and get as detailed as you want. Take a photo of your food, scan a barcode, browse the UP image gallery or search the ingredient database. UP also helps you track calories, fats, carbohydrates, protein, sugar, fiber and sodium. GAIN INSIGHT. UP simply and beautifully visualizes your information so, at a glance, you can understand the meaning behind your data. UP also delivers personalized insights and clear, actionable tips to help you achieve your goals. TAKE ACTION. UP helps you set daily goals and tracks your progress over time. It also lets you set helpful alarms and reminders. You can set a Smart Alarm to silently wake you at the ideal moment in your sleep cycle to help you wake up feeling refreshed. You can also set Idle Alerts to remind you to move when you’ve been sitting too long.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
625 of 634 people found the following review helpful.A comparison to Fitbit One -- The Holistic Wrist
By THATCH
A couple weeks ago I received my Fitbit One Wireless Activity Plus Sleep Tracker, Black after a few months pre-order wait. I had it two full weeks, got to know and learn it, and lost it swiftly. The fact that I lost it so easily made me decide to try Jawbone Up-- thinking that if I lose my arm, I've got larger issues... My review will be a comparison of these two devices for those trying to decide between the two. Early spoiler: I recommend Jawbone Up over the Fitbit One for most people. I'll tell you why...Hardware itselfThe biggest frustration I had with the Fitbit One was that I wanted to use it for daytime activity monitoring and for sleep monitoring. Using it for both activities included moving the device from my belt clip, taking it out of the rubber clip, putting it in the wrist strap, and reversing this process each day. It felt like a chore after a few days, and some mornings I even forgot to put it back on my belt after showering & changing. These issues aren't faced with the Jawbone Up because you can leave it on your wrist at all times-- even in the shower. No annoying loss, no annoying moving it from clip to pouch to clip, no forgetting it at home in the morning. The Fitbit met it's ultimate demise after only its second fall off of my belt. It's so light and in rubber, it didn't even make a sound when it left me and met the ground. It was never found. Long live my FitBit One on however many belts it ends up on before it's lost again terminally...Battery Life & ChargingBattery life on the Fitbit One can be as much as 14 days. The Jawbone Up is rated for 10. Both devices include a USB dongle for charging, and charge in about the same amount of time. Both charged fine when I used my iPhone charger to USB for their dongle.SyncingThe Fitbit One bluetooth sync's wirelessly to an iPhone if you want, or to a PC. The fitbit comes with a charging dongle, a bluetooth adapter-- which must be used as it won't work with most or all other bluetooth adapters already built in to a PC. Plan to use up one or two USB slots for the Fitbit One. It's not a constant sync-- you have to initiate the sync if you want it to sync "now".The Jawbone Up syncs by removing the cap and plugging in to the headphone jack of the iPhone. At first this felt like it may be a step back from the Fitbit One, but ultimately it's simpler and I waste less battery having bluetooth activated on the phone all the time. It's simple, works reliably, and you can sync to multiple devices if you want.WearingThe FitBit One is quite small and the rubber belt clip is smooth and small. Many users simply drop the device in the pocket, but I'm not one to let that happen and risk loss-- ironic because I lost it via the belt clip. I also have some belts that it would't clip on, so I found myself doing creative things like clipping it inside my change pocket.The Jawbone Up is basically a bracelet-- and a stylish looking one at that. I found that the fitment guide on the back of the box ran a little large, so I originally bought a medium. After wearing, it felt too tight. I returned it for a large. I have so far been very happy with the large size. I recommend using the print out PDF from the Jawbone site as it clearly marked me as large when the plastic guide on the box made me think medium. They recommend going "up" a size.From a daytime perspective, the wrist band of the Up hasn't bothered me at all, and actually I see it and it reminds me to move! I never saw the Fitbit One, and thus thought about it less often and had fewer reminders. More about reminders in functions/software!I do wear the Jawbone Up in the shower, and have had no issues with that so far. It feels sturdy without feeling stiff. You can manipulate it by squeezing to fit tighter, looser, reverse which side meets which, etc. It isn't a "bendy straw" style where it holds shape. It always holds the wrist shape. The rubber on rubber is what lets it grip more or less. It doesn't feel heavy or annoying.SoftwareAside from the functionality of wrist vs belt clip, the software is really what differentiates the Jawbone Up from the Fitbit One for me. The Jawbone Up software is infinitely more useful, visually appealing and informative for me than the Fitbit One software. The Jawbone software tracks your performance over time and so does the Fitbit One-- but the Jawbone analyzes your data and makes observations-- "Hey you had 2x your normal amount of deep sleep last night-- did you do something different?" and other observations like that. You can also compare your sleeping data to your day's activities. The ability to view, review, and drill down/compare your data is easier/simpler/more automated and more enjoyable on the Jawbone Up than on the Fitbit One.Fitbit supports some more social features-- like sharing to Facebook. Both support having friends in the system who also have the device that you can view/cheer on, etc.As far as food logging goes, I'm not a huge user of this feature yet. What I do know is that the Jawbone Up supports scanning barcodes on food to capture what it is and content. The interface to browse and add food is far more visually appealing in the Jawbone Up than in the FitBit software.About sleep monitoring: I don't know if it's accuracy or philosophy, but from a span perspective both units were accurate. I actively tell them when I am about to drift off and when I'm done sleeping. From there, the data varies. The Fitbit One would say that I woke up some 20 - 40 times per night! Maybe each time I roll over it thinks that qualifies as awake, I don't know. The Jawbone Up rates that much less, but also gives me info on "deep sleep vs light sleep and awake times" which I find more useful than just knowing how many times I was awake. I've found this analysis interesting because some nights I'll feel like I slept all night, but don't feel rested in the morning, and the Up will conclude that I didn't have much deep sleep at that night. That allows me to look back at my day before and contemplate why: too much caffeine too late? Too little exercise? Too much food to late? etc. Helpful data to influence how you live your days.Both of these devices sync your data to a website. I personally rarely visit either of these, and don't plan to, thus my lack of review on that regard. In the iPhone age I only go to a PC when it involves a lot of typing, for the most part.Functions & Added Benefits -- most of my conclusions here are about the Jawbone Up.Fitbit One: It has an altimeter. This is how it guesses how many flights of stairs you've climbed. It also counts dual propeller flights I found accidentally on a recent business trip. If your'e a person who is not interested in tracking sleep or want to spend the least, this device could help you start getting an idea of your day & night activities.Jawbone Up:-A "power nap" feature that utilizes data from your normal light sleep cycle at night to determine optimum number of minutes for a power nap under 30 minutes. You can initiate a power nap by a series of button presses on the wrist band.-An inactivity reminder: The wrist band can vibrate you every so many minutes that you're inactive, and you can configure this in the iPhone app-A wake up alarm, at a custom time and you can additionally have it wake you at "an optimum time around your alarm" depending on your sleep cycleBoth devices allow you to customize your stride or calibrate the distance walked.I'm still only in my first week of owning the UP, and I prefer it over the Fitbit One. To me, the Jawbone Up is more of a "holistic life data device" due to the software and the fact that you can wear it all the time. The FitBit fits more in the fitness data device for me, because of the lack of insight the software provides on the phone and the fact that it isn't as simple and easy to wear all the time. I'm an IT guy who spends too much time in front of computers, a lot of time traveling, and generally not feeling like I am active enough. I wanted these devices to help me improve my awareness of wellness, activity and sleep results. For me, the Jawbone Up was the right answer all along.You might know that a year ago the Jawbone Up was released and recalled within a month. There were some technical reliability issues and the company took the opportunity and almost an entire year to rework the device, refund all customers and let them keep the potentially failure-likely device. They have some impressive videos at their website about how they re-worked the device.Both devices are good devices and neither had any critical flaws. n that, I hope this review may have helped you decide which fits your needs most. I plan to respond to any specific questions below so feel free to ask!
148 of 151 people found the following review helpful.Up - What it is, How it works & Why use it...
By J. Russell
So you buy the wristband and get the Up app on your iPhone. When you first connect the Up wristband to your iPhone it will give you a brief rundown on how it works and setup an account for you. After that it starts collecting your data.Here is how it works... You wear the band 24/7. During the day it records when you are doing nothing, doing a little, and when you are doing a lot of activity. I tested the distance calibration with a GPS and it is actually fairly accurate; so it also records the distance you walk or run. All this happens without any input from you.When you go to sleep... You press a button (on the band) to switch to sleep mode. When you wake up you press the button again to tell the band your day has begun. While you slept Up recorded information about your rest. Using Up's sensor the band knows how long you took to fall asleep, how many times you woke up, and whether you were in deep or light sleep. It also knows how much time time you spent in these different states. Now you connect the band to your iPhone and all your data is loaded into the app, which on my iPhone 5 runs very well. The Up app gives you visual and numeric representations of your data. The data is actually interesting information, especially relating to how you currently feel. The more days you log the clearer picture you get. This is the basic utilization of the band and app. You have to do at least this much.And the Up band extras... It can be used as an alarm clock to silently wake you up. It can also alert you if you have done nothing (idle alarm) in a set amount of time during specific hours. For activities that the motion sensor will not represent well (like biking) you can press the wristband's button to record an activity. This activity can be viewed or edited separately from the other activity information. This is helpful. The only other thing the band does is wake you up from a mid-day nap if you need one. This PowerNap feature takes into account your sleep history, then monitors your nap, and wakes you up at an optimal time to be refreshed in the shortest time.And the Up app extras... The app is organized very well, but also fairly limited on what you can do. You can set your current mood with emoji type smily faces. You can connect with other Up users and if you like, share your information with them. You can edit your activities, set goals to meet, and review your data. Graphs and charts can be utilized to look for trends over days, weeks, or months. You can also log what you eat using the app. This final piece of the Up app is also the most difficult to use and understand. While the food logging part of the app is extensive and powerful, everything else is so simple and easy to use, making it seem daunting. You have to put some time in to figure it out. Once you figure it out you can track your food intake and all the nutritional information that goes with it.The wristband is very light and comfortable to wear. Without bluetooth wireless syncing it has an incredible 10 day battery life. Syncing via the headphone jack on the iPhone takes just seconds and only needs to be done twice a day. Personally I prefer a few seconds syncing rather than charging the band every few days to accommodate bluetooth. Overall the Up band/app combo is good and a decent starting point. And the one characteristic of the Up wristband I appreciate the most... people don't think it's electronic! Without this added attention it disappears into your everyday life, which I believe is the whole point of a device like the Jawbone Up.
101 of 110 people found the following review helpful.Not bad, but just not for me
By AmazonBox@theDoor4Me
This will have to be a quick review of the Jawbone UP. I've been using this for the last three weeks and found a lot to like and not to like. In the every end, I'll be trading this in for a Fitbit trial.PROS:Love the 1-hour idle alert if you haven't been moving. I'm a desk jockey and often forget to get up and move about. Nice feature.UP App is easy to use, graphically beautiful, nice robust food tracking (although a bit confusing at first). Would like to see it return more useful data in the future. I like the steps and sleep data. If I were more diligent I'm sure the food data would be useful too. Would like to see online tracking too. Would make for manual logging efforts much easier. More on that later.Power Nap - would love to try this feature. Haven't found time to catnap anywhere yet.Steps - nice. Didn't realize how stagnant certain days can be. Nice to know how much I've moved each day.Trends Report - I found this feature to be really useful. The screen shows two reporting factors and you can choose from a selection of factors to compare. I liked comparing my Light Sleep chart to my Deep Sleep chart. This could be really useful, but in order for you to take advantage of this you need to enter data. It's all about data folks.CONS:Lack of Bluetooth -I initially thought perhaps manual syncing wouldn't be a problem. Unfortunately, I can tell you after weeks of using the UP wristband I wish it included BT. It's become a convenience issue; didn't mind at first until it became more and more of a nuisance.Workout logs - Entering your workout is too cumbersome using a four-step process to enter: Activity Type, Effort Level, Start Time, and Duration. If you have a multi-faceted workout, be prepared to enter all in the app. Realistically, it's just too time-consuming for all that I do.Sleep - One of the main reasons I wanted to use the UP for was sleep tracking. I have 3-month old baby and was curious to see how well I was sleeping overall. You have to press a cleverly integrated button to tell the band that you're going to sleep. Okay. If I get up for short durations, the band tells me I was "up 3 times". But when does the band sense you're awake fully and when you're just temporarily up? It doesn't. I've had the band tell me after a trip downstairs to prep a bottle that I only had 1.5 hours of sleep. Perhaps, but sleepy me assumed it was magically going to track my sleep again, when in fact it determined I was going to stay up. I've started to press the sleep button multiple times throughout the night after waking just to ensure I log my various sleep times after feeding, bathroom break, etc. I've forgotten on occasion to activate sleep and my graph shows a glaring gap in my log. Have to resort to several manual sleep entries in a night. Again, why am I doing this if there's I'm banded with a tracking device? Software could probably use a tweaking here and there in this area.Cap - The cap can twist where it's misaligned with the rest of the band. Bad part is the leading edges can be annoying sharp. Not cut sharp by any means. More like a the edge just rubs your wrist in an annoying manner. They should incorporate a non-twistable cap. Or, BT could solve this issue.Lastly, I learned I'm just not a wristband person. I'm tired of having it dangle around my wrist and found it more and more irritating. In the end when I look at the value of the data in the app and the act of wearing the band, I'm opting to return the thing because I simply don't find it useful over time. Others may find this device great for their lifestyle needs, just not me. I'd be interested to hear how others feel about the UP after some extended use because this version is still relatively new to market.Onto the Fitbit One.Avoiding the band-concept, I'm ready to move to the Fitbit. I already anticipate the act of tracking a little thing the size of a USB stick all day will be a chore and will have to come up with a process of keeping it with me all day and night somehow. I don't think having to put it in a neoprene wristband for sleep tracking will be fun with this thing. But, I'm hoping the data gathered will be more accurate and useful than the UP. I hope to update this review with my experience on that soon.UPDATED 12/22/12So far loving the Fitbit better than than UP. Having a screen to view simple relevant data any time is really inspiring, rather having to wait to manually sync UP with iPhone to view periodic updates. More on my experience later.UPDATED 12/26/12So far so good with the Fitbit! What a difference from the UP device and I mean that for the better. My concerns about the unit has been both realized and not. Keeping track of the Fitbit is a new mental task for sure. However, the routine of slipping the unit into a wristband for sleep isn't as bad as I first imagined.Simple features of the Fitbit really enhanced the user experience for me. Who would've thought that a simple display so small could be so important for this regime. I find clicking the button to see my steps taken, calories burned, steps climbed, and distance traveled very informative and useful. I don't always have to sync to my iPhone to see my data, unlike the UP. I just pick it up and cycle through the data and move on. If I need to, I'll pickup my iPhone and sync the data. Done. With the Jawbone UP I recall taking the band off and removing the cap to plug into the phone. Then sync. Then put the cap back on and place back onto wrist. Wash, lather, repeat. None of that with the Fitbit. Again, can't praise enough the simple features of the Fitbit that make such a big difference in my, and I would imagine also, any Fitbit user.Software is just as good. I do miss the charting features of the UP software though. Entering "activities" is vastly different from UP, good or bad depending on where you're coming from. Unlike the UP app where activities are broken down by specific categories, the Fitbit app is more casual in its definition. I just returned from a trip to an amusement park and was able to find an activity entry for "casual walking less than 2 mph" which best describes the activity. Then you enter a duration. I see this more practical. Whereas UP was more defined such as Activity > Cycle > Effort Level > Start > End. I think the Fitbit app needs an update so activities with a lengthy description can be fully understood, rather than being able to read only what fits on the iPhone screen width (need to be able to scroll to the right).Is sleep tracking better with the Fitbit? Yes and no. Sleep tracking is activated by pressing/holding the button for 2 seconds and then the screen displays a clock and timer that distinctly tells you "I'm counting now." When you wake, repeat the process to stop your sleep tracking. I like this much better than the UP. If you read my review above, you'll recall the UP the start by pressing a button but has no clear definition of when your sleep concludes. In my case, I had to activate UP's sleep tracking several times to ensure it tracked all my various wake/sleep cycles per night. With the Fitbit, the tracker counts and you have the ability to conclude your sleep cycle by stopping the counter. Since I wake to make my newborn periodic bottles, I now just keep my counter running until I designate to it that I'm fully awake. It offers a much easier way to track what is to me an approximation of my sleep time. I do find the "times awaken" deeply flawed. My unit tells me I was awakened 14x, 9x, etc. I find that excessive and inaccurate. But then again, how does the Fitbit calculate "awaken" activity? I don't know.Great product. Whole-heartedly recommend to anyone interested. Purchased one for my wife for Christmas and she's loving it too, effortlessly checking the display for a quick review or syncing to her phone. I can't stress enough how Fitbit's two differentiating features of a display and wireless syncing via Bluetooth makes all the difference between these two competing products!
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