Testseek.es han recogido 41 las revisiones expertas de el Garmin Vivomove HR y el grado medio es el 79%. Enrolle abajo y vea todas las revisiones para Garmin Vivomove HR.
May 2018
(79%)
41 Críticas
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Lightweight and comfortable, Lots of fitness features, Looks great
Logging activities can be fiddly, Smeary screen, Mediocre battery life
Slightly underwhelming battery life isn't reason enough to not buy the Garmin Vivomove HR, however. If you're looking for a hybrid smartwatch that logs your steps, sleep, heart rate and stress in a package that both looks great and is fairly priced, it's...
Publicación: 2018-11-21, Autor: Henry , crítica de: techadvisor.co.uk
Resumen: If you want a smartwatch that looks like a normal watch your options are limited. Hybrid smartwatches mix the looks of a classic watch with smart functionality and should really be more popular than they are. But thanks to limited choice and consumer disi...
Publicación: 2018-07-11, Autor: Henry , crítica de: techadvisor.co.uk
The Garmin Vivomove HR is a fine looking hybrid smartwatch that is best at being a very subtle activity tracker. It lacks GPS, but makes up for it with clever design, a heart rate monitor and great battery life.If you want to regularly track runs then you...
Publicación: 2018-05-04, Autor: Andrew , crítica de: techradar.com
Looks smart, Solid gym tracking, Decent battery life
Screen is not clear in bright sunlight, Fiddly touchscreen, No GPS
Is the Garmin Vivomove HR a hit or a miss? It depends on the kind of activity you want to track and, strangely enough, where you live.It doesn't have GPS, the top feature of many Garmin watches, so is not a great fit for serious runners. And if you live i...
Publicación: 2017-12-18, Autor: Andrew , crítica de: stuff.tv
Better at fitness than it first appears, Fairly good battery life, Supports notifications, including WhatsApp, Uses the same app as Garmin's advanced watches
No GPS, Screen visibility only okay in bright light, Design could do with more refinement
The Garmin Vivomove HR is a very smart take on a watch that initially doesn't appear to be smart at all. It's a minimalist watch that after a few taps turns into a surprisingly good fitness tracker. More than just a step counter, it has a barometer and a...
Publicación: 2017-11-22, Autor: Scott , crítica de: CNET.co.uk
Full fitness features on a regular-looking analog watch. The Vivomove HR includes heart rate, step count and sleep tracking, and smart functions like notifications. It works on Android and iOS and has 50-meter water resistance and a weeklong-plus battery
The tiny touch display is hard to navigate. There are no physical buttons. It lasts longer in watch-only mode but won't track fitness, and the glass body can collect scuffs
Garmin's heart-tracking blend of fashion watch and fitness watch is a great choice for everyday watch wearers who want a fully embedded fitness experience...
¿Le ha sido de ayuda esta crítica?
(70%)
Publicación: 2017-09-05, Autor: Britta , crítica de: pocket-lint.com
The Garmin Vivomove HR combines beauty with brains. It's a stunning device that appears to find the perfect balance between a classic timepiece you can wear with jeans or business wear and a smart device thanks to that hidden touchscreen.Its feature set i...
Publicación: 2017-09-02, Autor: James , crítica de: techradar.com
Premium feel, Innovative design
Limited notifications, No built-in GPS
Garmin's new and improved hybrid watch has a few minor upgrades, but the new design is a big improvement for anyone looking to hide fitness features on their wrist...
Publicación: 2017-09-01, Autor: Hugh , crítica de: wareable.com
Classic timepiece design, That hidden screen, Heart rate tracking
No GPS, Screen too small for notifications, Hard to read in bright sunlight,
Garmin carefully treads the line between fitness tracker and stylish timepiece, and the results are mostly good. The hidden screen is a useful and unique addition, even if it's not great for handling notifications. Serious athletes will still want to look...
Attractive design, Decent battery life, Wrist-based heart-rate monitoring, Some activities are automatically recorded, Offers several wellness features
Swiping motion can be finicky, Fit is challenging on smaller wrists, Poor screen visibility in daylight, Workout data accuracy is questionable
A quality hybrid watch that's best for general wellness tracking and basic smart features.The Garmin Vivomove HR isn't the watch to reach for when you want to accurately log running or cycling workouts, but if you want a larger bird's-eye view of your we...