Full description not available
A**R
Does Exactly What It Claims
Setting up this watch was relatively simple. It is a sharp looking watch, with a rose gold exterior and a dusty light pink band. The band is replaceable with other 20mm bands. The screen has some thick bezels around it, but it’s about what you’d expect for the price. It had about 25% battery when it arrived at my doorstep, and I unboxed it and downloaded the Zeroner Health Pro app onto my Samsung phone. The app prompted me to make an account, give my gender/age/weight/height and fitness goals, and then easily paired with my watch after I turned on my Bluetooth. As of 2 days, I have not had any issues with having to reconnect the watch to the app.To get the best access to this watch's features, you will need to allow it all necessary permissions (even if they seem a bit invasive). In the app, you can change the watch face to a customizable photo that you have downloaded onto your phone. You can also set multiple scheduled alarms, and sedentary reminders to get you moving. Under the option smart reminder, you can choose which applications you want to send you notifications (including messaging and phone) --- on Android, I was able to select practically all my apps for this, which is incredible. There is a camera option, where the watch can act as a camera remote for your phone-- this could be helpful when you are using a tripod. You can change the time from military to a 12-hour clock, and can set the format in which the date is presented. You can change languages and unit of measurement as well. There is a vibration remind option, which essentially allow you to personally edit all of your notifications from your phone that come in--- you can change the pattern of vibration for each notification, as well as the times it vibrates. One option called palming gesture allows you to flick your wrist and have the watch face light up to tell you the time. You can set the time period the palming gesture operates, which is very helpful if you don't want the watch to light up at night and wake you up. You can adjust how long the watch screen stays on, and the default in 5 seconds but you can definitely fine tune it. Lastly, you can set a time interval for do not disturb on your notifications (this must be done on the app), so you don't receive vibrations from your watch at night.Moving on to some of the features of this watch, you can turn on an automatic heart rate tracker which will record your heart rate 24/7 throughout the day. I have found it to be fairly accurate. This data is not only visible in a small graph on your watch itself, but it is also visible with more detail in the app. You can turn on heart rate guidance in the app, which you can adjust a 'safe' heart rate interval. If you go outside this interval, you will be alerted. You can also turn on the arrhythmia heart beat tracker on the watch, which uploads data to the app and allows you to look at a scatterplot called heart health while giving you a health score. I'm not sure how accurate this is, but I see a doctor every year and the watch did recognize that my heart is healthy and operating as it should.In order to track sleep, you will need to turn on the scientific sleep option on your watch. While I was a little confused as to how this works, the watch somehow senses based on your movements when you fall asleep. It will only work at night though, from a specific unedited interval, so don’t expect to use this for naps. To compare its accuracy, I used the scientific sleep option and compared it to a sleep recording app called Sleep Cycle. The two were very similar, and both sleep graphs looked like they were closely related to each other. The watch did say however, that I had slept for an additional 20 minutes, so keep in mind the time might be a little off. You can view all of your sleep data in the app, which provides you a detailed chart and grades your sleep each night. You can also tell the app information such as “ate late”, “had a stressful day”, “not my bed”, etc which can help it understand outside factors that may have impacted your night’s sleep.In addition to the heart rate tracker, you can view your steps in a graph on the watch or in the app. The pedometer is accurate if you move your hand while walking. If you don't do this, it will not pick up your steps, so bear that in mind. Your watch tells you how close you are to your goal and how many steps you have walked in miles (if you are not using metric that is). There is also a graph on the watch for a feature called ‘stand’, which I have yet to understand what this does. It does not appear to be measuring how many times you stand up (or it is doing that very poorly). There is also graph on the watch for an estimated calories burned, based on your exercise and steps during the day. Lastly, on the watch there is an option to pause/play audio that is playing on your phone, as well as increase or decrease the volume on your phone.In the watch, you can check your heart rate specifically, trigger on the heart health option which tracks arrhythmia, take a stress test (which is logged as fatigue index in the app, and doesn’t seem to be particularly reliable), and take your blood oxygen. For all those interested in this watch because of COVID-19, the blood oximeter seems fairly accurate so far. You can also view all notifications received on the watch in a folder called messages, view your set alarms, turn on a stopwatch or timer, and use a compass. Also on the watch are all the exercise settings—there are many that would definitely please a fitness buff. As someone who does casual exercise on a day to day basis, they work well and sync right to the app.In the watch’s settings, you can adjust the watch face, brightness, and reset the watch. There are 4 watch face designs that come by default with the watch, and remember you can change out a customizable watch face from your app. To be honest, one of the main reasons why I picked out this watch was the watch faces. They are some of the best I’ve seen from cheap smartwatches, and actually look pretty good. I’ve attached photos of them all to this review, so make sure they are ones you like because you’ll be getting used to them if you buy this watch. The last photo is the custom watch face option. Brightness for this watch can be manually set with a wide range of choices, or can be set to auto where the watch adjust itself. It is a pretty bright screen that is easily visible in direct sunlight.I will continue to update this review as time progresses, to give you a true perspective on how this watch handles day to day wear!UPDATE: UPDATE: It has now been many weeks since I got the watch and things are still going very well. I have had to reconnect the watch to the app twice, but I believe this was just a glitch on the app’s part and the watch reconnected when I restarted my phone both times. All my notifications have been coming through seamlessly. One thing to note--- the alarms you can set on the watch have a much softer vibration than the one used for notifications, so I found the alarms were only good for quick things like taking medication rather than waking you up from potentially deep sleep. Battery has been pretty good, and I find myself charging ever 4-5 days or so. I have done a few exercises with the watch, and it has operated perfectly. When you are exercising, it tells you the duration and your heart rate, which you can tap on to see other features like calories burned, steps taken, etc. All information is visible on the screen after a workout, then syncs to the app for you to look at in more detail at a later time.I did find that the silicone watch band irritated my skin a little. I found myself feeling slightly itchy on my wrist throughout the day during the week, which hasn’t happened with any of my other watches. Fortunately, this is an easy fix with another 20mm quick release watch band. I ended up buying a leather quick release watch band and I think it actually upgraded the look of the watch as well.I did notice that a lot of the reviews for this watch appear to be fake--- you can tell by the poor grammar and the vague way they describe everything. While this is irritating, I can assure you that this review is completely real so take them as you will.
X**Y
Info on how to charge below. Not great, not bad. Glad I have it. Purchased as "like new" item.
I purchased a "used" morepro V19 purple (not "light purple") band in original box w/ albeit crumpled 15%-directions which honestly were of VERY little help. The box was bulging slightly. The date was "Dec. 15th" w/ wrong time. Took forever to figure out how to remedy that (must load the free app on your phone, and follow the promps. Then go into every single setting to your preference. BUT FIRST, I HIGHLY recommend you go onto your phone after uploading app, go to your phone settings, choose "Apps & notifications", select "morepro", go into "permissions" and select everything you are okay with this gadget having access to. If you do not give it access, you may not get a feature to work instantly. But if you ask the gadget to set up that feature, it will give you a prompt on the gadget to authorize any change now needed). I personally do not want it to have access to my photos since I'm not taking or sharing pics on it. I also didn't need to share my phone name/# files with it as I am a skeptic and feel anytime you give an item access on WiFi/Bluetooth to private things, it could be used by those with bad intentions. I am FINE with it simply notifying me with a vibration that I got a text. I LOVE that feature because my phone is not reliable about notifying me of that. NOW I finally never miss an important text. VERY helpful especially as I move about a large wooded property and can't always hear the phone. SO that's ONE great working thing. The REASON I purchased it is bcuz it said it VIBRATES for low oxygen readings. Soon to be out in the "sticks", power outage will shut off my oxygen after and hour or so, and if I'm asleep, I won't know. This does NOT vibrate or make a noise. That's a lie. It flashes the low number. NOT helpful for a low oxygen person who's asleep MOREPRO. If we want these features to tell us how our VITAL health issues are doing... we REALLY want to be notified in a physical way: a loud alarm, a vibration, or a big beaming flashing light, or 2 or all 3 of those things. GREAT if you can add that for an update FYI. Save some lives with this thing eh? Next, my little wrist. I am 5'6" and for last 30+ years, whether in high school, huge and pregnant, or just your average wt woman, bracelets, watches and the like are always too big. I looked at the children's watches but NONE offered the OXYGEN (SpO2) feature w/ "vibration" (that now doesn't exist). So I found a used one to not invest TOO much in case it wasn't reliable or very sensitive to my O2 readings, at least I'd have a watch and text notifications while out wandering the new property. The directions I recvd did NOT include ANYTHING of HOW to charge this little badger. I thought they shipped it w/o a charger. I was upset. Absolutely thought for a full 2 days it didn't come with one. Then I took the watch apart because it came assembled. Both ends of the gadget have different end extensions that "plug" into the flexible silicone (?) bands on each end. So there was my clue. Somehow that was how to charge it. Again looked thru directions. NOTHING. I was a company new hire trainer, and I taught a medical course worth 3 years of credits to keep medical national certification. I'm not illiterate, and not below normal I.Q. So, it should have been in the directions. It's feasible that a page was removed from the the crumpled one I recvd. Idk. BUT FOR ALL YOU w/this prob, you PLUG the BLUE end with the gadget FACE UP into a USB charging port. Ta-da. I let it set over night to be sure it was fully charged. I've asked it to monitor my sleep. Twice it has not. The ECG looked liked it worked well. The SpO2 once DID flash that I was low when I took of my oxygen support and held my breath w/o doing other stuff. Otherwise it ALWAYS read that I was in normal range, even with my O2 off which is wrong. I'm missing half a left lung and NEVER read over 86 after 5 minutes w/o oxygen support on. So it's inaccurate. When I need an accurate reading I hold pull the band firm but not tight to my lowest part of my wrist which seems to yield the best response, it does better as it shows my O2 levels dropping, but then it's not reading under 92 which I know it is lower. That's enough to tell me "go inside and check it for the real number". It's not enough to rescue me with an alert, which was the one reason I really wanted it. I'll have to get a different device for that. If I paid full price for this, I'd return it. But for the $20-ish, I like it enough to keep it. AND I hope these directions helps YOU if you're having trouble :) Happy healthy outings to you!!!
J**B
Plastic band is warm
The watch is heavy to wear. It does keep Heart rate and BP which I wanted. I have been unable to figure out how to save a measurement I take with the watch but it is capable of recording Bp hourly and HR every 10 minutes automatically
C**Y
Please DO NOT rely on the health metrics given by this watch
I have compared the bp, pulse and steps with a separate bp monitoring machine, and my own counting of pulse and steps.Only the pulse is anywhere near accurate.The blood pressure monitoring function is frankly laughable.There is one line in the instruction doc saying that you may have to tighten the strap to get a better reading.I think you would need to get it tournique tight to even stand a chance of a proper reading.My true bp is 30/15 at least higher than the watch says, even with me pressing the watch to my wrist (inside or outside of wrist makes no difference). That means that my very variable true bp is reading 140/90 while my watch bp reads 110/75. Then the watch bp stays very static, while my true bp on an approved monitor is much more variable.I really do hope that no one is using the watch figs as an indication of their actual health!Regarding the other features, the watch faces are clear and since there are around 50 of them, you are sure to find one that suits,The sleep tracker is pretty useless too.If I wake at 4 or 5 for a trip to the bathroom, it tends to tell me that I only slept 5 hours, and woke at that time - when in reality I went straight back to sleep for another 2-3 hours. There is no facility to amend the times, so you are stuck with this incompetent misinterpretation of events.I do like the battery life - nearly a week.I found the silicone strap very clingy and sweaty and uncomfortable, so I swapped it for a fabric strap within around 3 days.All in all, I wish I had spent 1/3 of the price, and accepted that watch tracker metrics are a waste of time, at this price, and this level of technology. Maybe in another 5 years, for one of the giants like apple or huawei.
R**G
going solid
This is an expensive looking watch from the get go with all the features i was looking for. It has all the health features , count my steps and get my my notifications. Battery is going solid for a week so no problem there
A**X
Good for fitness enthusiast
I bought this for my wife who is a fitness enthusiast that love to keep records of all her workouts especially running and biking.First this tracker is very easy to use and a special good point to the fact that there is a touch metal surface just under the screen makes you control the watch easier instead of touching the screen and leaving fingerprints. I found it easier to switch between modes workout and starting stopping than some other competitors I could try. Also, its color touchscreen is clear and responsive, it comes with a nice band that is very easily replaceable.The mobile app is user friendly and nicely made, as the charts and stats data that you obtain after your workout are clear and easily understandable. You'll have different information as the activity time, steps number, avg steps frequency, calories consumption, average pace and heart rate chart. The first setup is pretty fast forward as you just have to download the app, add/create an account, then it will directly search for the nearest watch to link with, I liked the fact that it show you a picture of the watch that you want to add. Some options are nice like the possibility to change the UI style, adjust the brightness, a workout reminder is also available and you can select which messaging app you want to connect to in order to get notified of new messages.Overall, this is a good fitness tracker with honest functionalities for the price you paye.
D**O
Good battery, easy to link to your phone - UPDATED Comments after two months of use
Liked how easy it was to link to phone however you must have a phone to program it. battery life seems good so far, it notifies on every email to me still which i cant seem to be able turn off just yet... working on that. I get over 100 business emails per day and this thing is on day 4 at 50% power now with almost everything turned on so wow for battery life! its smaller then i thought which is actually better for me as i don't particularly like Apple watches due to their size. had a problem with changing watch face but it simply started to work after a couple days... strange. support is slow and vague (i guess expected for the price and location of vendor). Honestly if this thing keeps running after a few months i'd give it five stars.***********Update after two months************The charger is SHORT and STIFF and is driving me crazy cause the magnetic attachment is not strong to hold up or allow the watch to sit on something while it charges. thanks to the cable being rigid it often stops charging from disconnecting itself after you lay it down.Program face changes is not working even after at least 6 factory resets... obviously bad code and so i leave it on the standard face which i am okay with just sad that there is no choice to see activity face when i am out walking or running :(The face will randomly light up at night if wearing it and not moving, kind of annoying if your having a light sleep. The data download to your smart phone MUST be manually triggered else it simply dumps the data which is disappointing if you want to take a review of what's been going on with sleep and exercise and you forgot to push a sync daily!I would now say its overpriced for all these bugs and failures as at the start all i wanted was something to track steps and health to my phone as my fitbit/loop did, and for $30 more i could have bought another one of those with similar battery life but fully functioning. Tech support is via email and not good so on your own with this thing basically
L**Y
Garbage... Save your $$$
Absolutely useless. Might as well be a childs fancy watch. My oxygen levels cab be mid 70s and this will say 98 or 99%. BP is pretty close but has told me i sleep 16 hours per day... I wish. Not impressed. Returning and will order a decent one as this one sats i have not tajen 1 step in 5 days. Absolute garbage. Save your time and money. Battery is a bigger to charge and lasts 2 days. Never again.
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