Thinking about purchasing a FitBit...
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I love my Fitbit and find that the adjustment is quite accurate for me. I get in a lot of steps over the course of a normal day and found I was significantly underestimating my exercise earlier. I have the Zip, but would go with the One. The Zip doesn't count stairs, and I believe the One has a button you can use to mark start and end points for non-step exercise - can someone confirm that?
I just got a fitbit force and I love it so far. I set it up following some advice on the threads. I set my activity level to sedentary, MFP estimated that I burn 1913 calories just sitting around (I work at a desk job). I subtracted 500 calories (1413) plus I eat back the "fitbit adjustment" calories, which varies anywhere from 300-600 calories. My question is, how can I force the fitbit to update more often? I usually workout in the evening and it doesn't always update MFP, I know I can estimate how many calories I can eat back by using the fitbit app but is there a way to just manually update the fitbit info with MFP?
You should be able to go into the Fitbit app and click the Sync Now button.0 -
I have the force and have really liked it so far. I've seen a lot of posts claiming how inaccurate it is, and have been meaning to test it against a regular pedometer to see for myself.
I think the biggest thing I like about it is just the fact I can see what I'm doing and push myself to meet and beat my goals (and the people on my friends list). Even if it is off, it's off everyday, so if I do 1000 more steps than yesterday I'm improving.
If it will motivate you to move more, it won't be a bad purchase.0 -
My Fitbit was the best $100 I've ever spent in my life, ever. Easily. It has proven to be frighteningly accurate over the past year.
The wrist-mounted ones are trash IMO. The wrist is a poor place to measure body movement. The Fitbit One is the only real choice.
Hpow disappointing. I asked for the wrist one for Christmas! :sad:0 -
I got one as a gift. It's a $2 pedometer with $80 in bluetooth/wireless/software that comes along with it.
It's a fun toy.
Find me a pedometer that can actually estimate speed, which will produce over the course of a year a "calories burned" estimate that is within 1-2% of actual calories burned (as calculated using weight change and calorie intake).
Like I said, $2 pedometer with $80 in bluetooth/wireless/software.
Except pedometers don't do that.
The results speak for themselves. Over the past year, the Fitbit has estimated my daily calorie expenditure to within about 10 calories/day (as calculated based on my weight change and calories eaten).
I think you think that I'm disagreeing with you.
The heart of the fitbit is a little accelerometer, just like most cheap pedometers. And has all of the limitations on activity tracking thereof.
But is also capable of so much cool integration - and that's what you're paying for.0 -
How can I force the fitbit to update more often? I usually workout in the evening and it doesn't always update MFP, I know I can estimate how many calories I can eat back by using the fitbit app but is there a way to just manually update the fitbit info with MFP?0
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Because I've been contemplating purchasing one for myself and would like to follow other users tips and experiences.0 -
I have the FitBit Zip and I love it. Have never regretted it. I love the motivation to hit 10,000 steps/day.0
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How does a fitbit work? Do you wear it all day then log the calorie burn no matter what you did?
How does it work with what you consume each day?
I log all my food & drink (including water) in MFP, and all exercise and activity with the activity trackers. MFP sends aggregate meal data to the trackers. The trackers send my TDEE (total daily energy expenditure) to MFP.
When you set up your MFP account, you specified an activity level: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/account/change_goals_guided MFP used your answer, plus your age, sex & height, to estimate how many calories you burn every day (your TDEE). Then you set your weight-loss goal, and MFP subtracted the appropriate deficit to calculate your daily calorie goal.
Once you link an activity tracker to your MFP account (via the "Apps" tab at the top of every page), you start getting calorie adjustments. If your tracker says you burned more calories than MFP estimated, you get a positive adjustment (meaning more calories to eat). If you enable negative calorie adjustments and you burn less than the MFP estimate, you will lose calories. (But negative calorie adjustments will never drop your daily calories below 1,200.)
I wasn't losing much weight when I got my first activity tracker. At first, the adjustments didn't seem very accurate. But they got better, almost as if the system was "learning" my routine. It took a lot of trial & error to find the settings that worked best for me. But then everything clicked. I changed my MFP settings from sedentary to lightly active (even though I have a desk job), and now my adjustments are pretty minimal. And I'm losing!
Edited to add that I find my daily step goals really motivating. If I get home at night and see I'm thisclose to making goal, I'll walk around the block. A little bit more every day really adds up.0 -
another vote for the fitbit one. And I agree with what jonnythan said as well. In fact, it was his success sorry that led me to getting the fitbit.
I have been wearing mine and based on my numbers since getting it 7-8 months ago. the Fitbit has accurately estimated my calorie burn the entire time. I know this because my calorie deficit between cals in and cals out has been spot on (within 1 lb) of my weight loss. The plan was to lose 1 lb a week and I have done that each week.
I had the flex and did a side by side comparison and the One came up on top for accuracy. My husband had the Force and did the same thing. The One (worn on the body - pocket, clipped to bra) was for more accurate than the other devices.
BEST $100 I SPENT ON FITNESS --- EVER!0 -
I own both the One and the Flex. My biggest gripe with the One is that I was tired of moving it from the holder during the day, to the wristband at night, and half the time forgetting to put it back on after my shower. I like not having to take the Flex off except to charge it.
Out of curiosity I wore both of them for a week (opened a separate Fitbit account under a gmail for the second account) and they were within a couple hundred steps of each other every day. I average about 12K steps a day so that's a reasonable margin of error (and one wasn't always higher than the other). I have my Flex on my dominant hand and have it marked that way in my settings.0 -
Im getting the Fitbit Zip for Christmas and really look forward to trying it out! I'm looking forward to it syncing with MFP. I appreciate the tips on getting it setup accurately. I'd read another post on her about the Fitbits before choosing the Zip. It seemed more what I wanted since I didn't care about monitoring sleep and I'd seen some bad reviews of the Flex.
I'd seen a tip about Velcro to keep it from falling out of the holder, so I already have two of the Velcro dots ready to adhere to mine Thought that was a great tip I'd pass along from the other thread.0 -
That Velcro tip is actually pretty good.0
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I just got the flex about 3 weeks ago and I love it. It's helped me stay on track and I do find it to be accurate. I log weight training separately with my Polar HRM and let my flex log the treadmill. I think its a great investment as I've wasted more money on other things.0
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Everything everyone that likes their fit bit said plus I'd like to add one thing. I run and walk for exercise and use run keeper for GPS tracking and my flex is usually within about 8hundreths of a mile of my GPS after a 3 mile run. That is using the default stride length for my height. I was surprised and thought I would have to tweak that setting by trial and error a lot.0
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Has anyone else compared their fit bit distance to GPS? What were your results?0
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Not a lot to add here, most of the good information has been shared already. Just one or two comments.
- Worth it: Hell yes. It's the main thing I can credit with my weight loss and my new enjoyment of running. Not just for tracking, but also for feedback and motivation. There's no way I'd ever have gone out and climbed 100 flights of stairs just for the hell of it without this thing.
- Accurate: Hell yes. As long as the Fitbit app knows your stats. I have an Aria scale, so my Fitbit app knows my weight and (kinda-sorta) body fat percentage every day. I've been maintaining reliably for six months, and only started having weight fluctuations after I added heavy lifting to my routine -- something that the Fitbit isn't designed to track and that I'm still figuring out and fine-tuning for myself.
- Syncing with MFP: Uh, this is not as wonderful. It's sporadic. Sometimes the sync will be instantaneous; other times, it may be a full day or longer before MFP syncs up properly with Fitbit.com. This can be frustrating; however, if you're reasonably good at basic arithmetic, it's pretty easy to estimate your remaining calories by doing some quick mental math. That becomes second nature after a while anyway.
- How to use it with MFP: I'll just repeat... do what stumblinthrulife said, and profit.
ETA: I wear my FB One on the waistline -- either in the coin pocket, facing inside, or clipped to underwear. This is my second One; the first one fell off sometime during a sprint or stair climb. Its clip was worn out and it was attached to the thin sewn-in belt of my shorts; it came off, clip and all, and I never noticed until I tried to sync. I've been more careful about this one.0 -
My question is, how can I force the fitbit to update more often? I usually workout in the evening and it doesn't always update MFP, I know I can estimate how many calories I can eat back by using the fitbit app but is there a way to just manually update the fitbit info with MFP?
Inside the Fitbit App (at least on the iPhone/iPad), click on "Account", then click on your device (Flex, One, etc) and you should see a setting for "Background Sync". Turn that on. (green)
The explanation on that setting is "{device} will sync periodically when the app is running in the background".
It's not perfect, and it does require that you not actively kill the app (through multitasking) to leave it running in the background, but I find that mine syncs automatically every 30 minutes to an hour.
Since the Fitbit app is linked to MFP, it should -- in theory anyway -- update to your MFP automatically ever so often.
In practice however, some times that's a "hit or miss", so just remember to go into the app and manually sync it whenever you add your food to MFC (or after exercising) and you should be golden.
Wayne0 -
I got the Fitbit Zip maybe 6 months ago and I LOVE it! I bought the Zip because it was the cheapest and I wasn't sure if it would "take" with me or end up just sitting in a drawer. Also I rarely have stairs to climb (one-story house and work is on the first floor) and it doesn't matter to me that it doesn't track sleep; I sleep plenty. Love that it syncs to MFP and sends me weekly progress reports with stats including calories in vs calories out0
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Haven't read through all the comments yet, but if you've misplaced it, you can reach out to their customer service. I lost mine (it fell out of the holster) and they replaced it for free! It had to do with the holster not working correctly so I'm not sure if they replace any of them, but it's worth a shot.
To the OP - echoing what a few people said, I adore it! Like I said above, I lost mine and replaced it. When I was wearing it, I was losing consistently and when I lost it, I was simply less motivated and started gaining weight back. To me, it's less about the calories and more about challenging myself - "How can I get to my 30 flights of stairs goal today? Oh I'll go to the upstairs bathroom instead of the one down the hall", "I can take the long walk home", etc. It's definitely not for everyone, but maybe for the type-As among us, it works I wear mine on my bra for best reference and I had no problem syncing between my phone, the website, and MFP.
Feel free to message me or reply with any specific questions!0 -
I don't think you can get an accelerometer pedometer for $2 yet. Maybe a $40 pedometer with $45 of software (my One was $85). I don't much like the idea of not being able to see my historical steps/calories without manually logging them at some specified point in the day, so the software is worth it to me. No manual logging, full historical data.
I wear my One on my bra facing in, so even if it falls out of its holder, it'll fall into my bra. But I still have my Fitbit Classic from 4 years ago and those are really easy to lose, so I think I'm just careful.
I'm nervous about the case getting stretched out so I don't take it out except to charge it, every 7-10 days. And I will probably spring for a new case when this one shows signs of not being snug. Fitbit sells them for like $15. Some people stick the One in a velcro closure flash drive case but that's only handy for wearing it on your waist.0
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