Samsung Watch7 In-Depth Review: There are some catches!
Description
While the new Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra and new Samsung Galaxy Ring got all the attention during Samsung’s trio of fitness products launch, the reality is that most people are going to end up buying the more affordable Samsung Galaxy Watch7. That’s especially true when it’s bundled as part of various phone deals, or offered as a trade-in for a mere $75 or so depending on the model. Normally, it’ll retail for $299.
Still, it’s designed to be Samsung’s mainstream smartwatch product. And in reality, it does virtually everything the new Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra does, except with a smaller battery life and no emergency siren. It’s got the same new optical heart rate sensor, the same new multi-band/dual-frequency GPS, and the same new Energy Score and other fitness-related metrics/features. The question then becomes, are there other shortcomings that aren’t as obvious in the marketing bits?
Thus, I’ve been using both the Samsung Galaxy Watch7 and the Watch Ultra essentially side-by-side (wrist-by-wrist) over the last 3+ weeks, digging into what works well, and what falls short.
0:00 Quick Intro & Pricing
0:46 Detailed Battery Testing
3:18 Sleep, Energy Score, AGE's and More
6:38 Sports & Workout Features
10:00 Heart Rate Accuracy Testing
11:56 GPS Accuracy Testing
15:34 Final Recommendations
Full written review and datasets: https://www.dcrainmaker.com/2024/08/samsung-galaxy-reviewaccuracy.html
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