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The Fitbit calculates steps by the motion you take in your walking stride and other motions; i.e. moving your arms. Here's an article from the Fitbit website you might want to read. https://help.fitbit.com/articles/en_US/Help_article/How-does-my-tracker-count-steps However, this is my third Fitbit; and as with all of them, the steps calculated are not always accurate. Motion plays a big part when recording steps. I thought the Blaze would have solved this problem for me, but it did not. For example, I like to garden. When standing still or kneeling and using any type of arm motion, it is recorded as a step. If you are doing a 90-day, 10,000 Step Challenge, your steps taken might not be accurate. Mine were not, and I had to disqualify myself. The Fitbit Blaze is nice, but it's not accurate enough for me.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The Blaze tracts your movement. Tapping on the face shows your progress.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.By default when you raise your wrist to look at the watch, the screen will illuminate. If you tap the screen you can rotate between steps, heart rate and calories. Alternatively you can also view all this on the smartphone app. You can also use the app to select different clock faces. Currently there are four clock faces to choose from.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.You swipe the touchscreen to the left then tap on "today". Your heart rate, steps, miles, calories burned and number of floors you have climbed are displayed on this screen. It also alerts you with a vibration when you reach your goal.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Two ways you can tap until you see steps displayed or you can look at the ring around the time display. The ring is a graphical version of how many steps you have until your goal.
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