製品型番 | FB102P |
---|---|
色 | ピンク |
サイズ | 1 |
電池付属または内蔵 | はい |
製品サイズ | 5.08 x 1.27 x 0.95 cm; 45.36 g |
Fitbit(フィットビット) Ultra ワイヤレス 活動量計 Pink [並行輸入品]
スタイル | スマート |
色 | ピンク |
画面サイズ | 1.81 インチ |
特徴 | 活動量計 |
対象年齢 | 大人 |
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Amazonより
The new Fitbit Ultra Wireless Activity Tracker makes every step you take a step toward better fitness, even on your busiest days. The Fitbit Ultra monitors your all-day activity to provide you with real-time feedback on steps, distance, calories burned, and stairs climbed to encourage you to walk more and be more active. It wirelessly uploads your data to Fitbit.com so you can gain deeper insight into your daily or monthly fitness and sleep levels with free online graphs and charts. On Fitbit.com, you can earn fitness badges, connect with friends to share and compete on fitness goals, or join the Fitbit community for advice and encouragement.
At a Glance:
- Tracks steps, distance, calories burned, and stairs climbed with a 3D accelerometer and altimeter
- Measures how long and how well you sleep
- Wirelessly uploads data to Fitbit.com
- View charts and graphs for daily and monthly progress online or with the free
iPhone app - Log food and workouts online and with iPhone app.
- Access Food Goal, a weight management tools that dynamically changes targets based on daily activities
- Small, discreet design fits into a pocket or clips to a belt or bra
- Backed by a limited one-year warranty
View larger. The Fitbit Ultra shows you how many steps you've taken, number of stairs climbed, and calories burned.
View larger. Log onto Fitbit.com to keep track of your progress, workout goals, or create a fitness network. View larger.
Track All Day Activity
Using a 3-D motion sensor, Fitbit Ultra tracks all the details about your daily activity that conventional pedometers would miss. When worn close to the body, this device tracks daily steps, number of stairs climbed, distance traveled, calories burned, and overall intensity of the activity level. Fitbit Ultra also contains an altimeter to track stairs or hills climbed. The compact design of the Tracker makes it easy to wear tucked into your pocket, clipped to a belt or bra all day.
Track Your Sleep
You can also wear the Tracker at night with the included Fitbit wristband to monitor how long and how well you sleep. Fitbit Ultra will monitor when you fall asleep and how many times you woke up throughout the night to provide a sleep efficiency index.
Achieve Real Results With Fitbit
Fitbit Ultra can help you reach your exercise, diet and overall wellness goals. In fact, Fitbit users increase their daily steps by 43 percent and have lost an average of 13 pounds.*
Wirelessly Uploads Data to Fitbit.com
To help you gauge your progress, Fitbit Ultra wirelessly uploads your fitness data to Fitbit.com automatically whenever you're within 15 feet of your computer--no need to take time out of your busy day to enter stats.
Track Your Fitness Trends and Goals Online
At Fitbit.com, you'll enjoy free online tools that show how your activity measures up over time and keep you motivated, with no monthly fee required. Your dashboard quickly shows you how close you are to achieving your weekly goals on calories burned, steps taken, and other fitness goals.
Fitbit makes fitness fun by translating your real accomplishments into real life examples. For instance, tracking that you've climbed 22 floors is the same as climbing to the top of the Statue of Liberty. To keep you motivated, you can earn badges for daily and lifetime fitness activities.
Social and Community Tools For Encouragement
Invite friends through email or through Facebook to connect on Fitbit.com to build a fitness network. Set collaborative or competitive challenges together, or tap into the growing Fitbit.com community to access tips and receive encouragement. With Fitbit, it's like working out with a group of virtual friends every day.
Log Food and Workouts
You can build a complete picture of your overall fitness by logging foods and workouts. The Fitbit database has over a 100,000 specific food items for you to select from. Enter workout specifics from yoga, Pilates, elliptical workouts, boot camp, spinning, kickboxing, and even Wii games from the workout database. Fitbit's Food Goal feature shows you the range of calories you should stick to every day to reach your weight loss goals, and dynamically adjusts based on your day's activities. You can also track your weight and other health indicators like blood pressure, glucose, and heart rate.
Click each image to view a different Fitbit online toolFree Mobile Tools
Much more than a pedometer. Click to see how the Fitbit compares to other fitness-tracking devices.View larger.
With our mobile website and our free iPhone App, you'll be able to log workouts, food, water, weight, and much more, plus check your stats while on the go. Log workouts and food even when offline, so no detail gets forgotten.
Integrates with Other Apps
Fitbit can also integrate with many nutrition and fitness apps to make it easy to sync your stats with programs such as LoseIt!, RunKeeper, and Microsoft HealthVault.
The Fitbit Ultra Wireless Activity Tracker is backed by a manufacturer's limited one-year parts and labor warranty.
What's in the Box
Fitbit Ultra Tracker (Black/Plum), sleep wristband, belt holster, and base station with charger.
*This information was taken from a large-scale fitness study conducted by ThreeDefined in January 2011.
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Die Einrichtung wird auf der Webseite von FitBit gut erklärt. Anmelden kann man sich auf der Webseite auch schon vorher. Die Einstellungen des Trackers kann man dort ebenfalls vornehmen. Alle Daten werden drahtlos an die Station und von dort aus über den PC und einen Internetverbindung zu FitBit übertragen. Dort hat man umfangreiche Auswertungsmöglichkeiten zur Verfügung und kann auch zusätzliche Informationen wie Blutdruck, Gewicht, Nahrungs- und Wasseraufnahme etc. bei Bedarf dokumentieren. Falls man einen Waage von FitBit besitzt, so wird auch das Gewicht automatisch übermittelt.
Der Tracker selbst gefällt mir sehr gut. Vom Aussehen denkt jeder es ist ein USB Stick. Auf Knopfdruck kann man die Daten abrufen, welche auf der Oberfläche leuchtend erscheinen, ein Display ist jedoch nicht sichtbar. Der Tracker zählt vor allem die gelaufenen Schritte. Bei Bedarf wird auch die Strecke in KM, der Kalorienverbrauch, die absolvierten Stockwerke und die aktuelle Zeit angezeigt. Zusätzlich gibt es eine Aktivitätsblume, welche bei hoher Aktivität Blätter bekommt die bei niedriger Aktivität wieder "abfallen".
Von Zeit zu Zeit muss der Akku des Trackers aufgeladen werden. Bei mir hält der Akku mindestens 8 Tage und länger. Hängt sicherlich auch davon ab, wie oft man die Anzeige des Trackers abruft. Die Genauigkeit der Distanzanzeige habe ich nicht überprüft und ist mir eigentlich auch egal. Wenn ich Distanzen messen will, benutze ich ein GPS-Gerät. Mir kommt er vor allem auf die Aktivität hinsichtlich der Schritte und auch der Stockwerke an und da misst das Gerät sehr zuverlässig. Sicherlich gibt es auch Fehlmessungen wenn man Auto fährt oder in öffentlichen Verkehrsmitteln usw., aber diese halten sich in Grenzen. Beim Schlafen benutze ich den Tracker ebenfalls zur Schlafüberwachung. Dazu schnallt man sich den Tracker um das linke Handgelenk und aktiviert die Stoppuhr. Wenn man morgens aufsteht deaktiviert man die Stoppuhr und dann wird die Zeit auf der FitBit Seite ausgewertet. So kann man überprüfen ob man gut oder schlecht geschlafen hat und wie lange man überhaupt so im Durchschnitt schläft. Die Empfindlichkeit kann man einstellen, habe sie jedoch auf der Normal-Einstellung gelassen.
Auf der FitBit Webseite kann man seine Ziele definieren. Mit 10.000 Schritten pro Tag habe ich angefangen. Jetzt sind es 12.000 pro Tag und 15.000 Schritte pro Tag sollen es noch werden. Morgens gehe ich zu Fuß zur Arbeit und wieder zurück und abends muss ich dann auch noch mit dem FitBit Gassi gehen, bis die Schritte zusammen sind. Das mache ich auch eisern jeden Tag. Bin schon gut abgehärtet und eine Erkältung hatte ich diesen Winter dadurch auch noch nicht. Man muss sich natürlich immer schön warm anziehen.
Der FitBit ist sehr gut haltbar und stört auch nicht beim Tragen. Steckt bei mir in der Minigeldtsche in den Jeans. Hat auch schon einen Sturz in das Klobecken mit Wasser darin gut überstanden. Aber ganz wasserdicht ist er nicht, daher immer Vorsicht mit Wasser.
Ich stehe auch schon im Wettbewerb mit Freunden, welche sich den FitBit ebenfalls gekauft haben. Über die FitBit Seite kann man den Stand jederzeit abrufen. Ebenso gibt es eine Community, der man sich anschließen kann.
Also ich bin total begeistert, nutze das Gerät jeden Tag und konnte mein Fitnesslevel dadurch enorm steigern. Ich kann es allen Stubenhockern nur wärmstens empfehlen.

Here are the pros:
1. Simple, simple, simple. This is so easy to set up and use that it makes tracking your activity a breeze. You just charge it, download the software, create your profile and then clip this to your pants (I stick mine in the little watch pocket of my jeans) - and GO. You never have to think about it, and no one needs to know you're wearing it (unlike a lot of bulky pedometers). It's so small that you can - and will - wear this every day.
2. Inspires you to be more active. Like most, I'm trying to get in my 10K steps a day. This is so easy to check throughout the day, but better yet - you can track your progress on the fitbit.com website and see how you're doing over time. If you're set it up this way, Fitbit will also email you to let you know that you've hit certain milestones ("10K steps!"). Laugh all you want at such feedback; for me, it's addictive.
3. LoseIt.com integration. Through some voodoo, once you're connected the accounts, your LoseIt account will automatically take into consideration the number of calories you're burned, thanks to FitBit.
4. Left handers rejoice! Through the settings on the FitBit site, you can change the orientation on the screen so left handers don't have to read it upside down. Thoughtful and much appreciated feature.
Cons (and why this isn't a 5 star product - YET):
1. It's an estimate of your workout, and not terribly precise. While you can enter your actual stride length on the FitBit site, the device will start by guessing your stride based on your height. Not perfect, but not terrible either. This obviously has no bearing on the number of steps you're taking but it will skew the miles you think you're logging and can be substantially off. (I recommend using the GPS-enabled Strava app on your iPhone if you want accurate mileage.)
2. It logs false steps - sometimes a LOT of them. I drive from SF to Palo Alto every day, and I estimated that I'm getting anywhere from 1000-1500 extra steps due to bouncing in the car.
3. It only does what it does. It's not a heart rate monitor, nor does it allow for integration with one (you have to enter that stuff manually through the FitBit site). It's not going to give you lap times or beep at you when you're walking too slowly (or beep at you when you've hit a goal).
However, what it does, it does very well. Even though I know that the Fitbit steps aren't 100% precise, I still find that I'm much more motivated to log in some activity whether I'm checking my progress on the excellent FitBit app (or seeing a giant goose egg under Activity on my LoseIt app), or just seeing a pathetically low number of steps on the FitBit itself. I strongly, strongly recommend that you use the Fitbit app along with LoseIt - an effective combo that will inspire you to keep moving.
Finally, a bit of a warning for folks who are looking into a heart rate monitor. There is apparently a known issue for Mac users who are also using the ANT USB stick for Garmin HRM's. As soon as I installed this on our iMac, the FitBit stopped syncing and I had to uninstall the Garmin s/w and reinstall the FitBit s/w. After a reboot, it fired right up. (Google Garmin, Mac and FitBit to learn more.)
Overall: highly recommend.

I was absolutely addicted to the thing. Several friends also used one (or bought one after my recombination) so that started to make me even more enthusiastic. Face it, when you see how much you move or how little you move, you get very motivated to move more. You immediately start noticing patterns, slight activity around 7:00 AM, one huge surge around 8:15, pretty much nothing until 10:00. Around 11:15 another surge, slight activity until 1:00. Nothing until 3:00 - you get the idea. And then there's the total steps each day. You set a goal of say 15k a day, you see it's 3:00 PM and you only have 7k steps, you decide to take a quick walk. Do this enough and it starts making a difference. Everything about it really lends itself to motivating you more and more. You can track pretty much anything health related on the site with the default software, or you can pay for premium which gives you quite a bit more functionality. Everything from what you ate, to how much water you drink can be tracked. This is particularly helpful if you are meticulous b/c you can really see what triggers hunger throughout the day. It also smacks you in the face when you see that you have high caffeine intake every night at 9:00 pm but then constantly complain you can't fall asleep at 12:00.
I was constantly talking about it to my wife and she had the typical "Glad you like it hon" response. I had a feeling she'd really like one so I bought it for her as a surprise. From day 1 she became a hard core addict. We have a very benevolent competition about it and affectionately talk smack about who's winning or going to win for the week. She actually tracks a lot more than I do - I mainly use the activity monitor, she really tracks all her calorie intake. We also bought the Fitbit scale and have linked it to our accounts (although the accuracy of it seems really questionable - but that's a different product).
I started out tracking my sleep with it and my wife uses it each night to track hers. This is the weakest feature and doesn't really track sleep- it tracks lack of motion which implies that you're sleeping. However you can easily have a night where you don't fall asleep and the sleep monitor will indicate you slept well. It does accurately indicate interruptions and if you have no problem falling asleep, it's probably helpful. For me, it didn't do much good at all - I'd have nights I barely slept an hour and it would show I slept great. I ended up getting a Zeo sleep monitor which I love. However my wife uses the sleep tracking and it's worked great for her, so I guess it largely depends on you. For me though, it's essentially worthless on the sleep tracking note. Sleep tracking is something i have covered so I love my fitbit even with this 'issue' and i'd have gladly bought it anyway if they didn't' advertise it as a sleep tracker.
If you carry the thing around and actually track your activity, i can just about promise you it'll motivate you to move more. If you get the ultra, it'll track floors as well as distance which is a huge motivator for me (any chance I have to take the stairs instead of the elevator within reason, I take). Both my wife and I have lost a good bit of weight and got in much better shape and b/c of the immediate feedback (well, immediate pursuant to how frequently you sync it) your behavior changes quickly unless you have the ability to ignore that you're inactive for much of the day. This is by far my favorite gadget purchase in a long time and my wife feels the same. Everyone I know who's' got one loves it and for the price, you can't go wrong. I'm not sure the $49.99 premium service is worth it, but i need to use it a little longer before I say much either way - so your mileage may vary).

The FAQ's and information on the website is very helpful... I have had nothing but a great customer experience with the product and the website.
I recommend getting a pedometer leash so you don't have to worry about losing your pricey investment though (mine got caught on the dog's leash once and almost came off, but the leash would have kept me from losing it).
I wear mine 24/7 except for showering (I put it on the charger while I shower). I have worn it to amusement parks, horseback riding, driving in my car, working, everywhere I go. If I am doing an activity that involves upper body movement, I add that activity in with "Track Activity" in the website or app. For horseback riding I add that activity in so it tracks my calories more accurately. The stopwatch function is very helpful for flagging the data while you're doing a specific activity so you can see what data it logged later and how your activity affected it.
There are even "Trainers" and staff members who respond to questions in the community forum in case you run into trouble...
I have had the Fitbit for a month now and I've lost over 5 lbs. just by being more aware of my activity level and adjusting my eating habits accordingly (haven't even started going running yet)!
So far I'm a happy camper and recommend this to anyone who is a very data-driven, visual person (the graphs are a good visual for my progress).
Cons: The price tag is a little steep... and they need to work on making a waterproof version so then there would be no worries about getting wet or too sweaty.
Overall, a great product that, when combined with the tools on the website, help you develop a plan to keep a calorie deficit and work towards a goal of losing weight while maintaining an even rate of weight loss.
I LOVE my Fitbit toy!
~~ UPDATE 8/19/12 ~~ Over the Fourth of July I got my fitbit soaked, not just wet with sweat, but in the pool soaked... and fitbit replaced it... for FREE! Great customer support and I had a new one one week after I damaged the first one... I told them that I got it wet, that it was my fault and I wanted to know if there were any tricks to reviving it... they offered to replace it and ship it to me for free! They sent a whole set with a new charger and all... told me to keep them as back-ups!
As of mid-August (two full months + of having my fitbit) I have lost 12 lbs just by changing my eating habits! I have not had any issues with my replacement fitbit either.

Great things:
- Tracks steps, miles, stairs climbed, and calories burned.
- Lets you enter the things you've eaten that day so you see if the calories you're consuming equals the calories you're burning. Also lets you enter how many cups of water you've had.
- Tracks sleep.
- No subscription fee.
- Can set weight and fitness goals.
- Phone App that lets you see your progress and enter your activity/food logs.
- You can add friends and compare how you're doing, and control what your friends see.
Needs some work:
- The sleep app just tells you how long you've been asleep, and how many of those sleeping hours you're "awake" (meaning high movement, I assume). It'd be nice if it were more like the Android Google Sleep app. The sleep app can calculate "deep sleep" percentages and set sleep goals and calculate sleep debt, while the FitBit sleep app cannot do that. It does tell you sleep efficiency though (which is #sleeping hours asleep divided by total sleep time).
- The base station needs to be plugged in to the computer for the wireless syncing to work. This seems like a weird design to me, but I guess there's no bluetooth device or anything installed inside the fitbit. [My wireless syncing either doesn't work or I'm not patient enough to wait for it to sync (I'm not on my computer much at home), so I just manually plug it in and charge it once a day and it syncs while it's plugged in.]
Overall, a really great product. The website is easy to use, setup is super intuitive, and it's really easy to wear it inconspicuously.
Hardware Note:
The boy and I each bought a Fitbit and while mine has worked splendidly, we've had some hardware issues with his. His battery drains unnaturally fast. Mine survived a 3-day weekend trip and his died after 1 day. I charged mine everyday since we purchased it, while he waited to drain his battery before charging. Maybe that affected his battery life. Also, his Fitbit was a little oversensitive on detecting motion and recording steps and would even record steps when we drove on rougher roads. You can reset the Fitbit by placing it on the charging station and pressing the small button on the bottom of the charging station.
With the Fitbit hardware problems we had, I contacted Fitbit customer support. Customer support is only available via email and they gave me many canned responses and no real answers. Minus 2 stars for the lack of customer support.