0/5
Overengineered app, just let me take the measurements that I want. Will return this trash product (body smart).
Yes, Withings is free to download, however it contains in-app purchases or subscription offerings.
⚠️ The Withings app has poor ratings and negative feedback. Users seem unsatisfied with its performance or features.
Withings has several in-app purchases/subscriptions, the average in-app price is €59.99.
To get estimated revenue of Withings app and other AppStore insights you can sign up to AppTail Mobile Analytics Platform.
4.12 out of 5
6,697 ratings in Finland
Overengineered app, just let me take the measurements that I want. Will return this trash product (body smart).
The app isn’t very user friendly. It has all sorts of clutter instead of just showing the main things, the measurements. Also, the watch itself could be perfect for older folks who don’t want a full scale smartwatch, but instead a stylish and simple way to monitor their health. However, the limited language support destroys this idea.
The ap steels time and attention a simpler one would do better. Simply hare this.
It is useless as most of festures need that it recognises you, but despite Im the only user, it does not!
App works most of the time but contain silly achievement (gamification) that are forced to users. Some sports are missing from activities such as crossfit? End-users should be listened more. Editing activity jams the app most of the times.
Can’t even measure blood pressure if you don’t fill in all your information. Useless, will be returning the device for full refund.
Hey team, the app is good, but I can’t accept the invitation from my wife. Please help to fix it.
The abbreviation for minutes is “min” not “m” which confuses time with distance. I open the app and see a swimming session with “40 m” next to it. What do I think? It looks like I have swum 40 metres!! I stand on the scale each day and each time I have to tell it that it is me and not my wife who is 10 kg different in weight to me. Can’t it work it out by now? The way it separates different user profiles is amateurish. I could go on…
It’s a fairly good app with lots of features. If you sync with Apple Health, you can actually get a better interface for watching the heart rate of your exercises. All of the long term graphs have a big issue, since they tend to be mostly empty. If you look at a weekly graph on a Tuesday, there’s not much to see. If you look at a monthly graph on the 9th there’s not much to look at. Budgets work on monthly, quarterly and yearly basis, but your body doesn’t. Why would you look at biological measurement data as if it’s financial data? The right way to use this app is to never look at any of the data unless it’s the end of the week or the end of the month etc. Those are the kinds of times when you can see what’s going on in your body. For some bizarre reason the devs didn’t go with a rolling 7/30/365 day period. That would have made the graphs useful regardless of when you’re lookin at them. If your body works like the quarterly economy of a company, then the current system is great for you. Everyone else would probably benefit from having the data plotted with a rolling period instead. Pretty much everyone else uses rolling graphs, so what’s the deal with Withings…
I wish you could manually choose to see only muscle mass and fat without bone and adjust the timeline to for example past 13 days or past 56 days instead of this quarter or this week. On monday the first day of quarter you only see one data point which is useless.
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26
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44
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