Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Android
  4. Health & Fitness
  5. Mobile
  6. News

Google’s completed Fitbit acquisition may help Wear OS more than Fitbit

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google’s $2.1 billion acquisition of Fitbit has been completed, following a lengthy regulatory process that began soon after the announcement of the deal took place in November 2019. Concerns over privacy and antitrust forced Google to agree to various rules in order to pass the deal in the European Union, and in the announcement of the deal’s closure, both Google and Fitbit have said it’s about devices, and not data.

Fitbit has become the brand most associate with fitness tracking, illustrated by how it has sold 120 million devices all over the world since the company’s inception in 2007. It has created a user-friendly, data-rich fitness platform, matched to simple hardware that appeals to many. Fitbit is the fifth largest wearable tech company in the world by shipments, according to IDC, behind Apple, Xiaomi, Huawei, and Samsung.

James Park, Fitbit’s CEO wrote about the deal:

Recommended Videos

“On our own, we pushed the bounds of what was possible from the wrist, pioneering step, heart rate, sleep, and stress tracking. With access to Google’s incredible resources, knowledge, and global platform, the possibilities are truly limitless.”

Good news for Fitbit, then. But it’s really Google that needs help on wearables. Google’s own software platform for wearables, Wear OS, is unloved and far behind Apple’s WatchOS and Samsung’s Tizen platform in terms of speed and usability. If the Fitbit acquisition truly is about devices, then it needs to leverage Fitbit’s knowledge and expertise in software and wearable tech hardware just as much as Fitbit needs to delve into Google’s artificial intelligence and software innovations.

Fitbit

At the very least, it would be great to see advanced health-related features and tech make it to more Wear OS smartwatches, including automatic workout detection, more advanced sleep tracking, and wide support for sensors such as blood oxygen monitors. Additionally, Fitbit’s algorithms could be utilized to improve accuracy. Google Fit has the right design and look, but it needs expert assistance to realize its potential to take on Apple Health.

What we’d rather not see is any of Fitbit’s generic smartwatch designs be used by Google to launch an often discussed and long-rumored Pixel smartwatch or other wearable. Just adding Fitbit’s platform to Wear OS isn’t desirable either, as it’s unlikely to make battery life any better, plus Fitbit also charges a subscription for access to its most detailed fitness data, which we’d rather not see introduced elsewhere.

While the Fitbit and Google partnership may end up producing some exciting new software and hardware, it’s not the first time our hopes have been raised by Google splashing out on wearable-related tech. In early 2019 it spent $40 million on some smartwatch tech and engineering talent from Fossil, but any advancements made from the deal have not been that obvious yet. Fossil has even launched its own Wear OS features, while Google drags its heels.

With so much money being spent on the Fitbit acquisition, and it apparently not being about data to feed ads, Google really should be well-positioned to improve Wear OS’s flow, and Google Fit’s usability and features.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
The HIFIMAN Ananda hits $249 at Amazon, and nothing at this price competes with planar magnetic drivers
HIFIMAN Ananda drops to $249 (38% off): open-back planar magnetic, Stealth Magnet drivers
HIFIMAN Ananda deal

Planar magnetic headphones used to be the kind of thing you'd spend $500 or more to get into. The HIFIMAN Ananda changed that conversation when it launched, and at $249, it moves that conversation further still. That's $150 off its $399 list price for a full-size open-back planar magnetic headphone that competes with options costing considerably more, and it's the deal I'd point any serious listener toward right now.

get the deal

Read more
Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses might soon get new Scriber and Blazer models
Meta is doubling down on AI glasses with new Ray-Ban variants.
The front of the Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses.

Meta's push into AI wearables isn't slowing down anytime soon.

A new FCC filing has revealed that two upcoming Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, namely "Scriber" and "Blazer". This listing hints at the launch being right around the corner.

Read more
Even Realities G2’s biggest software update yet brings an app store and a meeting prep tool that changes how you work
The G2 just got smarter, more personal, and a whole lot harder to put down.
Even G2 smart glasses and Even R1 smart ring

Even Realities rolled out its biggest software update since the G2 smart glasses launched, and it’s an update that makes the smart glasses useful and indispensable.

The big new feature is Prep Notes, a redesigned version of the company’s Conversate AI feature. Before any meeting, call, or job interview, you can now upload a PDF, a document, or type in notes directly from your phone. Once the conversation starts, it surfaces relevant information on the glasses’ HUD, giving you suggested responses and key facts.

Read more