Skip to main content

Your Fitbit app is getting a big AI upgrade later this year

AI in Fitbit app.
Google

Google says it is bringing what it calls a “Personal AI” across its product portfolio, thanks to generative AI advancements and the development of models specifically for health care. Fitbit is a part of that vision and will rely on the experimental Fitbit Labs, where users will be able to access features later this year as part of a trial phase.

At Google’s recent The Check Up event, the company said it wants users to understand better the wellness data collected by the sensors on their bodies, both smartwatches and smartphones. An AI tool in the Fitbit app will assess that data and present it in an easy-to-understand format, like charts.

Of course, the AI will also offer actionable insights to users based on their workout and lifestyle routines. But there’s a chatbot twist here. Google has built an AI assistant that users can talk to about their health data and gain more detailed insights.

For example, users can ask it questions like, “Is there a linked pattern between my sleep habits and daily activity metrics?” In such scenarios, the AI will review the sleep and activity log and give users the required insights, such as telling users how they sleep better on a day when they are more active based on their daily active minutes data.

Personalized AI recommendations in Google Fibit app.
Google

Down the road, it will be able to establish links between more biomarkers such as heart rate activity, exercise intensity, heart rate variation, and more. The experience will be available for “a limited number of Android users” who have signed up for Fitbit Labs testing. Google is also developing a Personal Health Large Language Model to bring such health-focused AI features to life.

Google says it will be a fine-tuned version of the company’s Gemini model, which is already running natively on devices like Google Pixel 8 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S24. The ultimate goal is to create an “on-demand personal coach” that can not only offer valuable insights but also guidance that can help users make changes and improvements wherever necessary.

The Check Up with Google Health

In the near future, these AI-driven health experiences will be delivered via Pixel phones, Fitbit and Pixel Watch wearables, Pixel smartphones, and Pixel earbuds.

Of course, there’s a standard disclaimer here. “It is not meant to diagnose, treat, mitigate, cure, or prevent any disease, injury, or condition,” says Florence Tang, Google’s Director of Product. Instead, it is simply meant to help users reach their fitness goals with more information and guidance than ever before, thanks to AI.

You can read more about Google’s Personal Health Large Language Model and the AI-tethered health innovations while The Check Up event is embedded above.

Editors' Recommendations

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
The Google app on your Android phone is getting a helpful new feature
Google app on Android beta showing Notifications.

The Google app for Android phones is getting a helpful new feature to make search even better. The latest beta has a dedicated "Notifications" feed in its bottom bar. The feature was first introduced on the mobile version of Google for Android earlier this year. The app feature was first noticed by 9to5Google.

The app now includes a Notifications option at the bottom, next to Discover, Search, and Saved items. The Notifications section displays a continuous list of alerts from Google Search, weather conditions, flight information, sports scores, movies and TV shows, and more. The notifications are grouped under “Today” and “Earlier." This feature should prove handy if you miss a notification from the Google app, as it provides a more focused view than Android's system-level history.

Read more
AI gadgets are dead
Gemini, ChatGPT, Humane Pin, and Rabbit R1.

Ahead of Google I/O 2024, there was little doubt that Google would talk about AI. The event started on a fittingly rowdy note. YouTube sensation Marc Rebillet started the show adorned in a bathrobe after popping up from a giant cup.

The social media star set the tone for the rest of the event by asking audience members for wild musical ideas that came to life via Google’s AI DJ software. The host couldn’t have asked for a better start. In the words of CEO Sundar Pichai, Google executives uttered the word “AI” 121 times.

Read more
This is the one AI feature from Google I/O 2024 I can’t wait to use
Google Photos app on a Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Google’s main I/O 2024 keynote was jam-packed with a ton of new AI features that are coming to desktop and mobile, thanks to Gemini. There will be new ways to search Google through video and multimodal prompt requests, while smartphones eventually get AI superpowers through the camera with Project Astra.

But there’s one feature that really stuck out to me: Ask Photos with Gemini in Google Photos.
First, what is Gemini?

Read more