Very disappointing
Doesn’t really do much more than Apple’s built-in Health App. Wish I hadn’t wasted my time trying it. Now deleted.
Ja, PulseTrackr:Heart Rate & HRV ist kostenlos herunterzuladen, enthält jedoch In-App-Käufe oder Abonnements.
🤔 Die Qualität der PulseTrackr:Heart Rate & HRV-App ist gemischt. Einige Nutzer sind zufrieden, während andere Probleme melden. Ziehen Sie in Betracht, einzelne Bewertungen für mehr Kontext zu lesen.
PulseTrackr:Heart Rate & HRV bietet mehrere In-App-Käufe/Abonnements, der durchschnittliche In-App-Preis beträgt £38.49.
Um geschätzte Einnahmen der PulseTrackr:Heart Rate & HRV-App und weitere AppStore-Einblicke zu erhalten, können Sie sich bei der AppTail Mobile Analytics Platform anmelden.
4.35 von 5
85 Bewertungen in Vereinigtes Königreich
Doesn’t really do much more than Apple’s built-in Health App. Wish I hadn’t wasted my time trying it. Now deleted.
Drammeh
I downloaded this app after seeing advert knowing full well it was likely a fake or scammy app and I was correct, it is. Not only is the technology flawed and the advert a misrepresentation of the features and usefulness of the app you can’t actually use any of the main advertised features of the app without signing up to a subscription. Not a normal “oh okay, I won’t see ads and they have to pay for their servers” subscription but a scammy WEEKLY subscription. Apps that charge weekly subscriptions (excluding certain streaming apps etc) are usually scams. 3 day trial and then weekly overpriced subscription for the foreseeable future. As well as this the app is inconsistent sometimes its asks you to pay £2.99 a week, and other £8.99 a week which is equivalent to $4 & $12 Us Dollars respectively, & that’s PER WEEK. So a years worth of subscriptions ranges from £155 to £467 for the whole year or roughly £12.95 to £38.95 a month. To put that in perspective at the “cheaper” £2.99 a week you could get Netflix AND Disney+ and still have £2.95 left over to buy drinks or snacks whilst you watch multi-million pound TV Shows and Movies. If you’re unlucky enough to not only subscribe but subscribe to the more expensive £8.99 a week package well for that you could get: Netflix, Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, Disney+, and NowTV & still have £1 left over for a snack. Alternatively, you could round up the £12.95 a month plan by £0.05 to £13 and you could get yourself a new iPad. The expensive plan you can literally get yourself an iPad and MacBook Pro for £37 leaving you with £0.95 left over. So you could either do that or pay for an app that can’t tell the difference between my finger and the various inanimate objects I used to test whether the app is indeed real or not. Spoiler alert, it isn’t. I’d usually not write reviews this long but this is a medical app, this is dangerous and it is an obvious scam, so obvious I fail to see why it’s allowed to continue to be on the App Store and deliver ads directly to people’s devices when playing games, etc. As well as this, the app itself isn’t even well designed, it’s not optimised and at times behaves like a webpage. The reason for this presumably being that they didn’t expect or want anyone to actually use it, they’re just hoping people sign up by mistake or forget to cancel that all important “3 day trial” and they can rake in the cash week by week, which is why they do the weekly subscriptions, hoping that even
I am a medical professional. I don’t know how you people who create apps like these are allowed to get away with it. In your disclaimer you all state that this is not to be used in place of real medical advice, but your advert says different. There is a 30% chance of saving the life of someone who has a cardiac arrest in the street or their homes and that isn’t going to happen if someone wastes time messing around with stupid apps. CPR must be started straight away, no time to waste opening up or downloading a poorly constructed app. START CPR AND CALL THE PARAMEDICS! I think the that these apps should be illegal and I Genuinely believe that the people who Made it (and other similar apps) have no soul. They don’t care about your health, they care about making money. The worst thing is I had to download the app to be able to write this review. Be sure that I will delete it immediately afterwards.
Very impressed with this app at first I was a little hesitant to weather to download it or not I thought it was a bit of a gimmick so I thought I’ll have a bit of fun with it but it has amazed me it’s wonderful how my iPhone which I have been using since 2008 when it came out I haven’t change Ed to any other brand’s of phone s since then I have not seen much major innovations come into the iPhone it self other then few tweaks in some model s now and then but to my recollection apple was bringing out blood pressure measuring capability how long is with something else which I forgot but this is a wonderful app it helps me keep track o my blood pressure I need to keep track of it all the time as I had a stroke a while ago this help s me stay on top of things
I went to try it as it said free in the advert, I t’s not, and it won’t give results until you’ve paid. The other problem was it showed my heart rate at one point as low as 75 bmp and it’s not been that for years so wouldn’t trust it.
Total rubbish it’s a con
Very useful tool for tracking your health.
Seee
As a medical professional myself, the overpriced subscription is a complete ripoff. You can not measure your blood pressure, spo2 or blood sugar with this APP, you need a proper medical device or at least certified sensors. With that price for a week you are better off buying a proper médical equipment than this gimmicky app. The advertising claiming to measure blood sugar through the phone should drag you to a lawsuit for false advertisement
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