Apple Health:
Since its debut in 2014, it has upgraded a great deal. Now, it works with more sources of data, collects more data than before, and works in great harmony with Apple’s wearable.
It is basically a health hub that lets you monitor all your health records in one place as you integrate other health apps with it. It takes data from your smartphone, fitness trackers, your watch, sleep trackers, and other fitness apps, putting it in one place. It provides you with a quick snapshot of all your activities so you don’t have to view each app individually. Of course, it offers you the liberty to edit and customize your data. From keeping the most relevant to skipping on the least important information.
Apple Health eliminates the need for a device as the app takes data from your iPhone’s motion sensors and GPS. What’s more, its API allows the third-party apps like Nike + Run Club, Strava and MyFitnessPal to contribute their key features to Apple Health.
Google Fit:
Apple Health’s rival in the market. Like Health app, Fit allows Android users to bring together data from multiple devices into its own health app or transfer them to the third party apps. The idea is to let users track health metrics, such as hours of sleep, weight loss, steps taken, and set fitness goals.
Although in the beginning it only provided the basics but the app, since then, has gone through a major redesign on Android and Android Wear platforms.
What’s more, it has a web-based interface and is accessible from anywhere. You can also check your data on the official Google Fit website.
Using the GPS, sensors in your phone and your input it keeps track of your activities, distance traveled, estimated calorie burn and weight.
Google Fit is the default fitness app for Wear OS devices (unless a company includes its own fitness app), so you can expect to use Google Fit if you pick up a Wear OS smartwatch.
Common Features:
While both are in a heavy competition they still bear some similarities. What are those? Let’s go through them individually.
- Both Apple Health and Google Fit are the primary platforms to the wearable tech: Android Wear and the Apple Watch respectively
- Both were developed to facilitate the development of health apps
- Both allow you to connect with third-party apps to adopt their attributes or funnel health-tracking data into your phone
- Both address the humongous issue of compiling a variety of data and providing it on your device
- Both apps are your personal fitness trackers that allowing you to track your fitness procedures
- Using your smartphone’s GPS sensor and accelerators, the apps keep track of your daily activity on the basis of height and weight, type of activity and total distance travelled as well as calories burned etc.