Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “This Smart Ring Shines! Living with Evie at CES”.
I’M wearing the Eevee a brand new health tracking smart ring, that’s launching soon and to best understand it, I thought, let’s put it through the ultimate Tech reporter test wearing it, while covering CES. This annual Tech show is massive and exhausting. I’Ve been working out of Las Vegas for a week running across multiple Conference Centers and getting in a crazy amount of steps, doing a lot of hand shaking, and that means a lot of hand, cleaning meaning not to mention I’m having to track my terrible hotel room. Sleep Eevee is different than other smart Rings, because it’s designed, especially for women and it whole purpose, is to take all this Health Data. We’Re collecting on ourselves and be able to use that data for the individual and have it mean something, because my bad day is different than your bad day. It’S able to track Trends over time to help you reach better health goals, and that can also mean you have to do things like log when you’re having a per period or tell the app when you’re not feeling well, and it can help you see, patterns in Your activity and then make suggestions CES keeps me busy, but I’m not using it long enough to get that kind of picture about my health, Nicole, I’m bridg hi, it’s so nice to meet you. I got set up with this demo on the show floor and pairing with my phone was very fast.
I was genuinely impressed at first sight. I mean it looks like real jewelry, with a nice little Arrow, design sort of looks like a k. The only way you know that this is a piece of technology is because sometimes there’s a little blinking light on the biometric sensors from the inside. Let me tell you some of the big challenges that Eevee was up against. First off there’s step counting. There is a lot of walking at CES.
Eevee was tracking me at 18,000 steps. Just on the opening day of the show. It was interesting that my Apple watch didn’t pick up as many steps, but clearly the Eevee is picking up on my activity.
So, let’s talk about Comfort, this ring is pretty comfortable. I got it sized before the show and it slips on and doesn’t feel too tight, not too loose. You can also switch it up to different fingers and have it track data just the same.
At the show. There are so many people you meet that it’s easy to get sick, so I am always using hand sanitizer and I’m washing my hands. It held up perfect fine, the whole time it doesn’t feel any different than when you have other rings on. I wasn’t fidgeting with it to dry or anything there’s no time for that here.
Let’S talk about sleep tracking, my sleep on this trip. It’S been terrible with the Sleep change. I keep waking up at odd hours, but the ring tracked all those moments through the night. Now I don’t normally track my sleep with an Apple Watch. I’M usually charging my watch at night, but this ring battery, I am told, lasts several days before it needs a charge, so you could just wear it and not think about it. I charged it 3 days ago and it’s at 59 % charging is fast and simple.
You just pop it in a case like you would a pair of earbuds and it snaps in magnetically. You know I really like how you can just track your health without even thinking about it, there’s no screen or something pinging you all the time. It just works, the Eevee costs about $ 270 and it does not need any subscription. Obviously, I need to live with it longer for a true review, but for now Eevee held up through the tech Journal Gauntlet and it looks cute to boot.
So let me know what you think in the comments. Would you wear it? What do you think about the price and what questions do you have for the more in-depth review, thanks for watching .