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» Fitbit Versa review: The first non-Apple smartwatch that’s worth your time By Michael Simon
11:05 AMHigh Tech House Calls, Expert Computer Consulting
If you don’t remember Pebble,
it’s easy to write off Fitbit’s Versa as a cheap Apple Watch
knockoff. It has the same square body as Apple’s dominant wristwatch.
Its size strikes a perfect balance between the 42mm and 38mm sizes. You
can dress it up with a similar series of metal and leather bands. And it
comes in rose gold.
But spend a little time with Versa and you’ll
see that it’s not as much of an imitator as it is Apple Watch’s first
real competitor. Granted, that’s not saying all that much. Fitbit shut
down Pebble before Apple Watch hit shelves, most Android Wear/WearOS
watches have been dead on arrival, and Fitbit’s own Ionic smartwatch was
too buggy and expensive to seriously challenge Apple Watch.
But Fitbit’s new $200 wearable is the Pebble Watch we always wanted,
combining fitness acumen with technological smarts into a sleek,
attractive package.
Note: This review is part of our roundup of various Fitbit models. Go there for details on each product and our testing methods. Michael Simon/IDG
Fitbit Versa is small, light, and packed with features. It still has a heavy focus on fitness and health, of course, but Versa is a something of a watershed product
for both Fitbit and the smartwatch industry, a true lifestyle product
that rights many of Ionic’s missteps and proves that Apple Watch isn’t
the only game in town.
When
Fitbit launched its Ionic wearable last year, it was a bit of a
disappointment. While it predictably excelled at fitness tracking with
multi-day battery life
and on-watch coaching, it was more than a little underwhelming as a
smartwatch. Too big to appeal to anyone other than bulked-up athletes,
Ionic and its app-starved Fitbit OS was most certainly at the beginning
of what seemed to be a lengthy work in progress. Michael Simon/IDG
One button is probably enough to control Versa but it actually has three. But less than six months later. Versa is pretty much
everything Ionic isn’t. While Fitbit has thankfully stuck with its
square shape, the lugs that extended aggressively above and below
Ionic’s screen are gone, leaving a squat square body. Without the extra
frame, Versa’s bands attach directly to the edges of the watch body,
giving it a more natural wristwatch look. The similarities to Pebble
Time and Apple Watch are inevitable, but Versa is still very much its
own device.
Like Ionic, Versa comes in three colors, but the black,
silver, and rose gold here feel much softer than Ionic’s gray and burnt
orange. It’s both thinner (11.2mm versus 11.4mm) and shorter (37.6mm
versus 38.6mm) than the female-friendly 38mm Apple Watch, and its
decidedly non-athletic aesthetic makes it look more like a fashion
statement than a fitness one. Where Ionic is more at home on a treadmill
or triathlon, Versa is, well, versatile enough to be worn to a business
meeting or a night out. And perhaps most importantly, it won’t look
ridiculous on a tiny wrist.
At just 23 grams, Versa is also incredibly light, even when
using one of the heavier metal link bracelets. Swapping the bundled
sport band for one of the 16 leather or fabric ones Fitbit is selling is
easy enough, with a small lever that controls a standard 22mm watch
pin. Though Ionic’s snap-on system is far superior, as is Apple’s
slide-out mechanism, Versa’s band options are attractive and affordable,
particularly the metal link band that Fitbit is selling for $100. It’s
not as luxurious as Apple’s Space Black link bracelet, but it’s also $450 cheaper.
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Michael Simon/IDG
Versa's band-switching mechanism isn't as elegant as Ionic's, but it does the trick. Versa’s display is on the small size at 1.34 inches—and
slightly off-center due to Fitbit’s insistence on putting its name on
the front of the device—but it’s incredibly bright and crisp. The bezels
are a little chunkier than the ones on Apple Watch, and without a
black-friendly OLED screen, you’ll notice them a whole lot more on
Versa.
The sides of the frame feature the same three-button layout
as Ionic, which is probably one button too many. Two shortcut keys are a
bit of overkill, especially since you really don’t really need to use
the buttons for navigation anymore. Swipes and taps register much
quicker on Versa than Ionic, and Fitbit has tweaked the interface so
it’s much more intuitive and touch-friendly.
A fitness tracker with a focus on health
As
a fitness tracker, Versa is pretty much Ionic without on-board GPS, but
for the price, the lack of a dedicated tracking chip isn’t a surprise.
(Apple’s Series 1 watch doesn’t have GPS either.) More bothersome is the
absence of NFC on the base model. If you want to make payments using
Fitbit Pay, you’ll need to spring for one the $230 special-edition
models, available in graphite or rose gold with woven bands. Michael Simon/IDG
Versa's concave design cuts a nice profile on your wrist. Otherwise, everything else is here, including on-watch
training, specialized exercise tracking, and advanced heart rate
monitoring. It runs the same Fitbit OS as well, whose library of apps
have been greatly expanded from the early days of Ionic. While it’s
still nowhere near as robust as the Apple Watch store or even Samsung’s
Gear store, you’ll find a decent selection of apps, including Yelp, The
New York Times, Philips Hue, and Nest, as well as several
fitness-related apps. There are 550 apps and clock faces available for
Ionic, with about half of them available for this review and the rest on
the way, Fitbit tells me.
Like Pebble, Fitbit’s apps are decidedly specialized and
mostly single-featured—for example, the Starbucks app is still just a
place to store your loyalty card—but I can see a similarly passionate
community building around it as Versa grows. Fitbit has started the ball
rolling with its own Fitbit Labs section, which contains more
specialized, nonessential titles, such as Think Fast, a mental agility
game, and the upcoming New Parents app that lets moms and dads track
diaper changes and feedings.
Apps load far more quickly and
effortlessly than they did when Ionic launched, and I didn’t receive any
error messages when switching clock faces. That’s an important
improvement, because users are going to want to swap out their faces a
lot. While writing this review, I counted more than 50 styles to choose
from, many of which are professionally designed with smooth animations
and up-to-date stats, and Fitbit says hundreds more are on the way. Michael Simon/IDG
Versa's new Today screen will show your steps, heart rate, and other stats. Fitbit’s impressive sleep tracking is on display here too,
though the lack of a dedicated app means you’ll have to log into your
dashboard to see the results. Fitbit has added a nifty Today screen that
shows your daily stats by swiping up from the bottom of the screen.
While it isn’t as visually polished as Apple’s Activity app, it’s a
smart way to see steps, goals, floors, distance, and workouts. And
coming soon, women will also be able to track their menstrual cycle on
this screen, an important piece of Versa’s feature set that isn’t quite
ready yet.
Period tracking gives Versa an important distinction
over Apple Watch. While Apple gives women a way to track their cycles
using Health or various third-party apps on the iPhone, Fitbit will be
baking it more deeply into its ecosystem, pushing it to Versa and
prominently displaying it in the Fitbit app. Women have long been
underserved by the smartwatch, and Fitbit’s whole approach with Versa is
a breath of fresh air.
The killer feature is battery life
Versa’s
battery life is about the same as Ionic, but it’s even more impressive
in such a small package. I wore Versa along with an Apple Watch Series 3
while listening to an hour of music, two half-hour workouts, six hours
of sleep, and lots of notifications, and here’s what was left after 24
hours:
Fitbit Versa: 75 percent Apple Watch: 38 percent
That’s
not a small difference by any stretch. Those numbers put Versa's
battery life at exactly four days, but I reckon most people will be able
to push it into a fifth. The biggest battery suck was music playback,
but even then, I lost just eight percent after an full hour of
listening, as compared to 14 percent on Apple Watch.
When you need
to charge it, Fitbit has introduced yet another plug with Versa, and
this one is a little less portable than Ionic's magnetic cable. The
watch comes with a small cradle that opens when you pinch the sides and
shuts to hold the watch in place. It's a nice piece and I liked it
better than Apple's inductive puck, but some outdoors enthusiasts might
miss being able to toss a simple cable into their bag on lengthy
sojourns. Michael Simon/IDG
Notifications aren't interactive in Versa and sometimes you'll get duplicates. Notifications on Versa mimic the ones on your phone, so
unless you spend some time managing them on the Fitbit app, you’ll
probably be getting a pretty consistent stream of buzzes. You can set
default message, calendar, and email apps from the ones installed on
your phone, and notifications from those apps will receive a degree of
prominence, but the system isn’t nearly as robust or refined as Apple’s.
You can’t interact with notifications in any way (even if a Versa
version of the originating app is installed on your watch), and they
occasionally duplicated or didn’t show up at all.
Fitbit has at
least promised to bring Android quick replies in a future update, but
for the most part, notifications on Versa or any other Fitbit smartwatch
will never be central to the experience. I can live with that, though I
wouldn’t mind Fitbit adding voice control or teaming with Amazon to
bring Alexa to Versa. The lack of any sort of assistant is a glaring
omission in the age of AI, and it would make a great addition to Versa
2.
Should you buy a Fitbit Versa?
The
$200 Fitbit Versa is hardly a perfect smartwatch. It’s missing GPS and
NFC, has a small library of apps, and doesn’t have any sort of voice
control or AI assistant. However, it has three important things going
for it: it’s small, it’s attractive, and it has a great battery. Plus it
costs $50 less than the cheapest Series 1 Apple Watch. Michael Simon/IDG
Versa has decidedly softer aesthetic than Ionic, which should appeal to a broader range of buyers. If you aren’t an Apple devotee, Versa is a no-brainer, but
iPhone users who don’t want to spend $350 to $400 on an Apple Watch
Series 3 should take a hard look at Fitbit's new smartwatch. And since
it works across multiple platforms (iOS, Android, and any remaining
Windows Phone users) you won’t be stuck with a piece of costume jewelry
if you switch.
Back when Apple Watch was just a glimmer in Jony
Ive’s eye, Pebble was showing the world what a smartwatch could and
should be. That spirit can be felt all over Versa. And something tells
me it’ll make a much bigger dent in the smartwatch landscape than a
pebble would.
This story, "Fitbit Versa review: The first non-Apple smartwatch that’s worth your time" was originally published by
Macworld.
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