Microsoft Leaks its Own New Fitness Band and Health Software
Microsoft Band has more
health-tracking sensors than its rivals, and claims it will use
Microsoft's 'big data' resource to analyse fitness patterns
Microsoft
has officially unveiled a new fitness smartwatch and Health service
after accidentally leaking it through smartphone app stores hours
earlier.
The band was first revealed by mistake through
Microsoft's supporting apps for the iPhone, Android and Mac computers,
which allow the Microsoft Band to connect to smartphones, tablets and
computers beyond Windows.
The new fitness gadget is a Bluetooth
band that records the number of steps the wearer takes in a day, the
intensity of her sleep, exercise performance and calories burned. It
also tracks heart rate, location via GPS, skin temperature, perspiration
and UV exposure making it one of the most complete fitness trackers
available.
The Band has more sensors than almost any other fitness tracking band.Photograph: Microsoft
It will last around two days on a charge with 24-hour heart rate
monitoring, although use of the GPS during runs will reduce the battery
life, according to Microsoft.
'Combine health and fitness data to create powerful insights'
Four years in the making, the Band also has a microphone and connects
to a smartphone to display notifications and activate voice assistants
such as Windows Phone's Cortana, in a similar fashion to Google's
Android Wear smartwatches.
The Band will connect to Windows
Phones, iPhones, Android devices and Windows and Mac computers to sync
data. Fitness tracking is powered by Microsoft's new Health service,
which like Google's Fit and Apple's Health aims to collate fitness and
health data from third-party apps and services as well as the Microsoft
Band.
"The Microsoft Health platform includes a cloud service
for consumers and the industry to store and combine health and fitness
data to create powerful insights," said Todd Holmdahl, corporate vice
president at Microsoft in a blog post.
Microsoft's "Intelligence Engine" will process data from different
sources combining fitness information with data from a user's calendar,
email and location to build a more detailed picture of their health.
"Nobody else has the big data or machine learning to attack fitness and
productivity challenges in this way," said Zulfi Alam, Microsoft's
general manager of personal devices.
The Band will connect via Bluetooth to Windows Phones, iPhones and Android phones, as well as Windows and Mac computers.Photograph: Microsoft
The company said that the data would be securely stored in its cloud
service, and that users will be able to actively share that data with
medical providers using Microsoft's HealthVault.
Jawbone,
MapMyFitness, MyFitnessPal and RunKeeper will be some of the first apps
to connect to the new health platform, with more added later.
Lucrative health market
Microsoft is the last of the big three traditional technology companies
to enter the medical market with a new health service. Apple released
its Health app and service with the iPhone 6 and iOS 8.1 while Google released Fit Wednesday
- each of these apps and services are designed to both monitor fitness
directly and the allow third-party apps and service to connect and share
data.
Many in the technology sector are vying for a slice of
the healthcare industry, which is a potentially lucrative market worth
about 10% of the economy of developed nations. In Britain, more than
£100bn a year is spent on the NHS, according to the Department of
Health.
Fitness trackers and the "quantified self" movement
represent a small proportion of that market. But the personal data
trackers offer potential for setting baseline measurements against which
changes caused by disease could be measured providing better, more
personalised diagnoses from medical professionals.
The explosion
in the market has been fuelled by the intersection of biometric sensor
cost and capability, which has made devices such as heart rate monitors a
viable addition to consumer gadgets costing under £200.
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