02-15-2020 22:30 - edited 02-15-2020 22:32
02-15-2020 22:30 - edited 02-15-2020 22:32
On my charge hr I could enter an event after the fact- like I could put in that I ran X miles from 04:00 to 05:00 and it would utilize the data that it had previously recorded to give me details about my heart rate during the run. I did not have to remember to hold the button down to start the timer and then stop it after the run was over.
I assumed the One tracks sleep the same way the charge did- but I was wrong. It wants you to manually start and stop the timer.
I tried entering my sleep period the day after, and even though it tracked a bunch of "steps" during that period, the sleep pattern screen is blank.
So lets say I forget to start the timer, how do I force it to convert those "steps" it recorded while I was sleeping into restlessness/awake data?
(I know its absolutely crazy for me to assume they would have kept the features that worked so well on the charge hr, and bring them on board with the new model... It seems they are constantly making newer generations with worse features, from what I have been reading. I hope I am wrong)
04-01-2020 02:52
04-01-2020 02:52
Actually @cds333 the Fitbit Charge was released about 2 - 3 years after the Fitbit One.
The One being an older model did not have the auto sleep not the auto exercise detection.
Auto detection did not come out until, I believe the Blaze (7 Fitbit models after the Charge) then this was filtered down to earlier arm based units.
The Fitbit One being a clipon device would need a different algorithm.
To track sleep or exercise, simply hold in the button to start, then again to stop. This is the same way the Charge worked when it was first released.
You can read more about your features in your user manual.