For a couple months now we've been hearing about Apple's plans to
release a new fitness tracking system in the near future called
Healthbook. This morning, 9to5Mac reports a lot of details
about the rumored health-monitoring app for iOS. The app is
impressively exhaustive. How is all of this possible? We're loathe to
say an iWatch might be coming...but maybe?
From the screenshots reported by 9to5Mac,
Healthbook takes its core design from the existing Passbook app for
ticketing. Instead of a repository for everything from boarding passes
to concert tickets, this time, the file box will store a variety of
health metrics that tell you about everything from fitness to nutrition
to sleep to new metrics we've never seen before like hydration.
\
For
each of the above categories, Healthbook is capable of charting a lot
of metrics, which altogether paint an impressively comprehensive picture
of your health. Like existing fitness tracking software, the app will
help you monitor your weight weight, activity, and nutrition. Like some
of the newer products we've seen released over the last year, Healthbook
will also help you keep an eye on your heart rate and blood pressure.
Healthbook also wouldn't be the first piece of software to help you
monitor your sleep.
Curiously,
the app tracks metrics we haven't seen done in a practical or mass
market way yet on mobile devices. Tracking bloodwork, oxygen saturation,
and blood sugar would be a revolution for people who need to monitor
those metrics on a daily basis. Hydration, as we mentioned before, is
also totally new in this sphere. It's a metric a lot of us aren't
keeping an eye on, buy we'd probably be happier if we did.
The
final question is will Healthbook be integrated directly with a
Cupertino-produced piece of fitness tracking hardware. We've been
hearing about the "iWatch" for years. Sure, much of what Healthbook
tracks could be data from the iPhone's on-board sensors, the M7 Motion Co-Processor introduced last fall, as well as information gathered from third party wearable devices. But there are enough new metrics that nobody is tracking that maybe the iWatch is closer than we think?
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