23-08-2020 10:37 PM
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23-08-2020 10:58 PM
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I've took quite a few and not 1 has failed
25-08-2020 05:26 AM
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14-09-2020 09:49 PM
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and btw, you might want to pick another name if you want to be taken seriously.
14-09-2020 09:53 PM - last edited 14-09-2020 10:33 PM
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I don't think it's a worthy feature on what is arguably the best smart watch available.
14-09-2020 10:18 PM
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14-09-2020 10:32 PM
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21-09-2020 03:46 PM
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I have just posted this reply on my experience to another poster with a similar question. It seems my experience is similar to yours. Let me know if you get better results with a rubber strap please, although if that is a pre-requisite for it working then it would be clearly stated by Samsung I would have thought.
The function is extremely sensitive to movement and requires you to stay incredibly still. I have often given up without achieving a reading. Also, when it seems to be in a more co-operative mood, the reading provided leads me to question the accuracy . I have had oxygen levels of 88% one minute and (on checking!) 95% the next. One day the watch gave a reading of 81% and the phone at the same time (from the index finger on the other hand) gave a reading of 94%. One of them is wrong, and I suspect the Watch 3. Quite honestly I don't bother any more as it seems so arbitrary.
22-09-2020 11:49 PM
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Thing is, I'm not a fan of Apple, but I bet the blood oxygen check works on their new watch, which is sad to say the least how Samsung quite happily put junk out there. if it doesn't work as advertised, it shouldn't be there until it does.
This is my third Samsung smart watch, S2, Galaxy Watch 1 and 3, and each one has had issues that Samsung have either introduced half way through or just not worked from the start. With the first Galaxy Watch the inactivity notifications stopped working for months, it took lots of hounding to get them to fix it, which they did to be fair, but not proactively.
I could write a whole list if bugs for them as I'm sure we all could but they won't listen. sad but true.
23-09-2020 11:12 AM
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Also, just whilst I'm moaning.
I see a lot of people say that these things are unavoidable and that Samsung aren't perfect. Well those people know nothing about software development, and that is the problem here.
At no point, should Samsung be pushing live, auto-updates to peoples £400~ watches that stops them working. There are well defined methods to prevent this kind of thing from happening. Take Windows for example, you have different branches of updates you can subscribe to, if you want bleeding edge stuff that regularly breaks, that's your call, but by default you should get the stable branch, that's not only had automated unit tests run against it, but also weeks if not months of real world testing, done by real humans against it.
Thing is, everyone wants everything today, with no delays, and if Samsung implemented something like the above, they could make both camps of people happy, people who like their nice expensive watch to work as advertised *all* of the time, and those that want it doing crazy new things every other week.
Samsung, please take note. In the EU, if a device is not fit for purpose, i.e. does not work as advertised, without any fault of the user, within the first 3 years you can get it refunded, by law. My watch isn't a play ground for your awful developers.
