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    Steep counter

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Suunto Vertical
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    • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
      Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager
      last edited by

      In general you are trying to achieve a decent step counter with something worn on the hand.

      Back in the days even htc had phones with step counters.

      While the basic need to know steps and calories is there , personally I prefer polars approach of activity instead of steps and calories that will always be so inaccurate.

      So sure, if you are demanding a fish to climb a tree and judge it’s swimming performance by the climbing performance (how can other metrics be accurate ) go ahead and garbage Suunto.

      Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
      Creator of Quantified-Self.io
      youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
      https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
      https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

      ? thanasisT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
      • pilleusP Online
        pilleus
        last edited by pilleus

        I keep reading tests about GPS watches and fitness trackers. They also compare and evaluate the accuracy of the pedometer. What kind of dilettantes are they?

        I have learned one thing in this topic: data that a Suunto watch does not record correctly is unimportant and is not needed for a real outdoor sports watch.

        And no, dear @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos, throwing the watch in the garbage is neither an argument nor a solution for me.

        EOF … 😊

        https://www.instagram.com/moves.are.life/
        Suunto Vertical Black Lime
        Suunto 9 Peak Pro Black
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        Zdeněk HruškaZ Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Brad_OlwinB 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • ? Offline
          A Former User @Dimitrios Kanellopoulos
          last edited by A Former User

          @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos I completely agree, but I think the value of a metric, whatever it is, has to be somewhat sensible for the context for which it was designed, and I mean, since we are talking about steps, that at least when you are sitting on the couch it does not start to increase almost spontaneously. Having said that even if I do not care about steps, I think if we had called it movement the issue would be more than resolved 😊.

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          • Zdeněk HruškaZ Offline
            Zdeněk Hruška Bronze Member @pilleus
            last edited by

            @pilleus Maybe you should read it again. That is definitely not what anybody here have said. There is no point in repeating the same arguments again.

            A little bit off topic, recently I have read reviews for new watches from Polar and Coros, both of them have a new shiny optical heart rate sensor. For some reason there are many situations where the OHR doesn’t work correctly or is completely off. Even Garmin watches doesn’t measure HR with the sensor on the wrist correctly for all the people in all the situations. Why is that I wonder. Maybe the wrist is not the best place where to measure heart rate (at least with the current technology it has some limitations). But it’s unreliable if you don’t know when it’s off or when it’s correct. According to your logic why did all the companies bother to implement OHR if the values are not correct and can be measured better with other devices? And OHR is quite important metric. Almost as important as steps I would say.
            Anyway…

            ? Mff73M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ? Offline
              A Former User @Zdeněk Hruška
              last edited by

              @Zdeněk-Hruška said in Steep counter:

              @pilleus Maybe you should read it again. That is definitely not what anybody here have said. There is no point in repeating the same arguments again.

              A little bit off topic, recently I have read reviews for new watches from Polar and Coros, both of them have a new shiny optical heart rate sensor. For some reason there are many situations where the OHR doesn’t work correctly or is completely off. Even Garmin watches doesn’t measure HR with the sensor on the wrist correctly for all the people in all the situations. Why is that I wonder. Maybe the wrist is not the best place where to measure heart rate (at least with the current technology it has some limitations). But it’s unreliable if you don’t know when it’s off or when it’s correct. According to your logic why did all the companies bother to implement OHR if the values are not correct and can be measured better with other devices? And OHR is quite important metric. Almost as important as steps I would say.
              Anyway…

              Are you seriously comparing wrist-based heart rate monitoring (extremely advanced and difficult, and highly individual based on anatomy and skin color) and counting steps (fairly easy to measure and not so individual)? Seriously?

              Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Zdeněk HruškaZ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @Guest
                last edited by Dimitrios Kanellopoulos

                @neonix I think he compared the importance of counting steps vs tracking HR.
                Which I would agree that HR is more important than just steps.

                Typically every person that starts with fitness looks at steps and later might become like other people that focus on athletics look at distance tss etc.

                Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                Creator of Quantified-Self.io
                youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                  Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @pilleus
                  last edited by

                  @pilleus how have you learned that ?

                  In all seriousness there are calories and other metrics that in 90% of the brands out there are not correct. Ie calories.

                  The absolute value is not important as it’s not correct. However the relative value is valuable.

                  Perhaps don’t jump into conclusions like I am trying to defend Suunto on step counting and because it’s not accurate it should not matter. I didn’t say that. I said that don’t jump into saying that if steps are not accurate on a diving watch then the decompression time ain’t as well example.

                  I remember the good old days with Google fit detecting a run in the middle of the night. Step target reached. Moto 360 sport.

                  Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                  Creator of Quantified-Self.io
                  youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                  https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                  https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • Zdeněk HruškaZ Offline
                    Zdeněk Hruška Bronze Member @Guest
                    last edited by Zdeněk Hruška

                    @neonix Yes seriously just using the logic “if it’s not perfect don’t put it there” because the point is the same. There are better ways how to measure heart rate and there are better ways how to count steps if it’s important for anyone.
                    Also the point is: For heart rate it actually matters if it’s accurate because there are training methods based on it for example. For steps it doesn’t because it has no use in real life and the body doesn’t care if you do more or less steps as long as you move enough.

                    I am probably blinded by my own view of training and fitness. For me the watch is something that should help me become a better version of myself. The step counter is not a tool to achieve that in any way. But ok, I get it. There are people watching that metric and probably thinking it has some value. Why not. There is no point to argue.

                    freeheelerF ? 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
                    • freeheelerF Offline
                      freeheeler @Zdeněk Hruška
                      last edited by

                      @Zdeněk-Hruška
                      that’s a good summary of what I wanted to say 🙂 👍

                      living sideways

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • ? Offline
                        A Former User @Zdeněk Hruška
                        last edited by

                        @Zdeněk-Hruška If the metric has no value, and especially when its proven to be very inaccurate, then it shouldn’t be there. And maybe the widget shouldnt be listed with steps and calories as prominently as it is. By comparison, my Garmin is actually more accurate counting steps. But even the Garmin widget is down-prioritized, and does not combined steps and calories like the Suunto widget does.

                        The way the widget is presented in Suunto make it seem like it is important. Especially when it combines steps AND calories (that is literally the name of the widget). My Garmin has a “steps” widget only, that is far down on the list, which indicates it is not as high priority as it is in the Suunto.

                        freeheelerF Zdeněk HruškaZ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • freeheelerF Offline
                          freeheeler @Guest
                          last edited by

                          @neonix
                          did you count the steps?
                          I just wonder how you know, because my activity summary shows an avg of 12.3k steps and sometimes days with well beyond 30k steps. I would be simply to lazy to count…

                          living sideways

                          Zdeněk HruškaZ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Zdeněk HruškaZ Offline
                            Zdeněk Hruška Bronze Member @Guest
                            last edited by

                            @neonix Ok, but more accurate doesn’t need to make everybody happy and still it’s an approx if it’s from the wrist.
                            For example here the guy is not so sure about Garmin step counter precision:
                            https://www.reddit.com/r/Garmin/comments/11nsqr4/garmin_forerunner_step_counter_what_a_joke/
                            And in no way I am using it to say that Garmin has it wrong. I know it’s one isolated case which doesn’t prove anything. But maybe the guy thinks the same as you do. Maybe Garmin should get better in counting steps… (again, this is just an example, I have nothing against the Garmin watch and don’t want to make any bad comments about them).

                            And regarding the widget - On my Vertical it’s disabled or can be placed down in a menu if you want. So the importance is up to you. That it’s showed on the watch faces that’s the different issue I guess. Some customization would be great in that regard I agree.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Zdeněk HruškaZ Offline
                              Zdeněk Hruška Bronze Member @freeheeler
                              last edited by

                              @freeheeler I think they really do count. Every single step!

                              freeheelerF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                              • freeheelerF Offline
                                freeheeler @Zdeněk Hruška
                                last edited by

                                @Zdeněk-Hruška
                                😱 that’s beyond my imagination!! 🙈

                                …steps and calories are disabled in my Vertical, too

                                living sideways

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • Mff73M Offline
                                  Mff73 @Zdeněk Hruška
                                  last edited by

                                  @Zdeněk-Hruška said in Steep counter:

                                  A little bit off topic, (…) doesn’t measure HR with the sensor on the wrist correctly for all the people in all the situations. Why is that I wonder. Maybe the wrist is not the best place where to measure heart rate (at least with the current technology it has some limitations).

                                  to stay little offtopic on that subject, i did a run few days ago, acting like a fieldtester ( 🙂 )
                                  2 watches + 2 phone softwares + 4 HR measurements tools placed at different places (hey, each one can have fun the way one wants 😉 )

                                  I wanted to check if HR measured on my wrist by Suunto OHR was due to my wrist or by sensor technology itself (or both, but then my unique test is not enough).

                                  Just one run with :

                                  • SV on wrist + OHR enabled

                                  • S9PP on upper arm with OHR enabled

                                  • Polar Veritysense (thus OHR sensor) on same upper arm

                                  • SuuntoApp recording with Suunto Movesense HR belt

                                  Result is : SV on my wrist has the worst and untrustable result, all other HR measurements are aligned with little offset probably due to blood delay+OHR technology.
                                  S9PP OHR results on upper arm are really comparable to VeritySense and to HRBelt --> S9PP technology is not in cause (for my wrist).

                                  Suunto Spartan Ultra (since 2016) FW: 2.8.24 (retired)
                                  Suunto Vertical all black
                                  Wife : S9PP
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                                  Android 13, Galaxy S205G

                                  Zdeněk HruškaZ pilleusP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • Zdeněk HruškaZ Offline
                                    Zdeněk Hruška Bronze Member @Mff73
                                    last edited by

                                    @Mff73 Very interesting test! Maybe that is why basically all the devices suffer to give stable results on a wrist. I wouldn’t think of wearing the watch on an upper arm 😄 And it’s surprising for me that it’s comparable with the belt or the Verity Sense (which I am often using myself). Thanks for sharing!
                                    Maybe wearing our watch on our ankles would give us better step counts as well… 😀

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • sartoricS Offline
                                      sartoric Moderator
                                      last edited by

                                      just as a reference … old but gold

                                      https://www.suunto.com/Support/faq-articles/suunto-3/how-are-steps-counted/

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                                      • thanasisT Do not disturb
                                        thanasis Bronze Member @Dimitrios Kanellopoulos
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos said in Steep counter:

                                        In general you are trying to achieve a decent step counter with something worn on the hand.

                                        Back in the days even htc had phones with step counters.

                                        While the basic need to know steps and calories is there , personally I prefer polars approach of activity instead of steps and calories that will always be so inaccurate.

                                        So sure, if you are demanding a fish to climb a tree and judge it’s swimming performance by the climbing performance (how can other metrics be accurate ) go ahead and garbage Suunto.

                                        I am just suggesting replacing the step counter widget on the new watchfaces with something more relevant to the vertical audience like : Altitude ,barometric trend or date.

                                        Dimitrios KanellopoulosD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                                        • pilleusP Online
                                          pilleus @Mff73
                                          last edited by pilleus

                                          @Mff73 said in Steep counter:

                                          Result is

                                          for me … the heavier the watch, the wider the strap needs to be.

                                          The SV with a 24 mm strap (I took the one from the S7) gives very accurate results on the wrist. A 26 mm strap would be the optimum.

                                          So there are simple solutions that would improve the results.

                                          https://www.instagram.com/moves.are.life/
                                          Suunto Vertical Black Lime
                                          Suunto 9 Peak Pro Black
                                          Suunto Spartan Ultra Stealth Titanium

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                                          • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                                            Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @thanasis
                                            last edited by

                                            @thanasis for sure.

                                            Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                                            Creator of Quantified-Self.io
                                            youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                                            https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                                            https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

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