Boasting a built - in heart rate monitor, easy - to - access onscreen workouts,
an accurate step counter, and an intuitive companion application, the Blaze looked to set a high standard in a crowded field.
While it's not breaking new ground as a pedometer, Runtastic provided us a detailed product development overview that claims it's extensive testing has produced the most
accurate step counter on the market.
Not exact matches
The
step counter doesn't appear to be very
accurate.
2) the stair
counter doesn't work well — gets very confused when I get on an elevator (I live on the 30th floor of my building and sometimes just taking the elevator up in the morning after a run gives me my full 10 story
step goal) 3) the heart rate monitor doesn't seem particularly
accurate 4) the sleep tracker doesn't do a good job of figuring out when I go to sleep and when I wake up.
A new study finds that many of the widely available wearable
step counters actually keep a pretty
accurate count.
Suggest that students use technology they already have, like FitBits,
step counter apps, or other wearable activity trackers, to take more
accurate measurements of their physical activity to record for their Carone courses.
So,
step one to trading like a professional is to fully accept that higher time frames display a much more
accurate and useful view of the market than their noisy lower - time frame
counter parts.
As long as it tracks, the
step counter, timers, as well as distance calculator is fairly precise, if not perfectly
accurate.
The Steel HR's
step counter proved very
accurate; it recorded a 1,000 -
step walk as 963
steps.