The UI is much more-friendly, pulling in some of the design cues from Material You, and I'm a big fan of the changes, even if it's not core to what Fitbit has done in the past. With the release of the Versa 4 and the Sense 2, Fitbit also introduced a brand new interface, aligning these wearables with what we've seen with Wear OS 3.5 on the Pixel Watch. (Image credit: Andrew Myrick / Android Central) To be fair, I haven't enabled the Always-on Display, and my workouts have been minimal (#SedentaryLifestyleFTW.) But as I started using the Versa 4 following my Google Pixel Watch review, it's pleasant having a wearable that can last for more than a day, a day and a half, before it needs to get some juice. Fitbit claims this will last for at least six days on a single charge, and I'm happy to say that it's still trucking more than a week later. In my time with the Fitbit Versa 4, there is one thing that I've come to absolutely love about this new wearable - battery life. Or, you can just rely on the various tiles for things like viewing the current weather, daily activity, how much you slept, and more. And while I still yearn for Wear OS-like customizable watch faces, you'll probably be able to find something to show off all of the different metrics that you want. The AMOLED display is also big enough, measuring at 1.58-inches, to easily display most of the notifications that come through. NFC (Fitbit Pay/Google Wallet), Bluetooth, Wi-Fi (turned off)īlack / Graphite, Waterfall Blue / Platinum, Pink Sand / Copper Rose, Beet Juice / Copper Rose GPS + GLONASS, optical HRM, altimeter, accelerometer, ambient light, gyroscope
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