The Best Fitness Trackers for Sleep and Recovery

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This post is part of Find Your Fit Tech, Lifehacker’s fitness wearables buying guide. I’m asking the tough questions about whether wearables can really improve your health, how to find the right one for you, and how to make the most of the data wearables can offer.

A fitness tracker’s job isn’t done when you finish your workout, or even when you take your last steps of the day. There are devices that excel at tracking how long and how well you slept, and devices that attempt to tell you when you’re well-recovered and ready for your next challenge. Here are my picks for the best of this category. 

What to look for in a sleep/recovery tracker

Where our other buyers’ guides are almost entirely about which smartwatch to pick, the recovery-oriented devices are different. Some come in the form of a watch, but the two standouts in this category—the Oura ring and the Whoop band—aren’t watches at all. Neither has a screen for you to look at. They merely gather data and present their conclusions in a smartphone app. They also aren’t (necessarily) worn on the wrist. That’s great news for people who want something minimalist and distraction-free. But that’s not everyone. Here are the questions to ask yourself when you’re shopping around.

Do you want a sleep tracker, or a smartwatch that can track sleep? 

Before you start looking at sleep-specific devices, it’s important to ask yourself whether you want sleep tracking as a feature of a device that does other stuff, or if you truly want a device that’s dedicated to sleep and recovery tracking. 

Most general-purpose smartwatches can do adequate sleep tracking. They’ll give you a decent idea of how late you went to bed, how many hours of sleep you tend to get, and they’ll often report some recovery metrics as well, like your resting heart rate. Here are a few smartwatches and fitness watches that can track your sleep well:

If you want sleep tracking in addition to other features, check out our other guides for health tracking and for running. You may find the watch you really want in one of those categories.

Are you OK with paying for a subscription? 

My two top picks both require a subscription to make the most of your data. Whoop sells the subscription as its primary product, with the band as a thing thrown in to go with it. Oura, meanwhile, will sell you a ring and give you sleep and recovery scores for free; but to get the detailed information you probably came for, you’ll need to pay up. 

Do you need accurate activity tracking? 

All of these wearables say they can track your heart rate during exercise, but that doesn’t mean they do it well. 

Oura’s niche use as a sleep tracker evolved from the fact that it’s really hard to get accurate heart rate data from a ring while you’re moving. (Longtime readers will recall that I reviewed the Motiv ring in 2018, and found that it was useless for exercise, but great as a sleep tracker.) Oura turned its ring’s weakness into a strength: Since it needs you to be very still and quiet to take readings, it’s now positioned as a sleep tracker, which needs to do that exact thing really well. 

But that means that when it added activity tracking later on…well, it’s not great. It’s better than I would have expected, to be sure. But it would definitely not be my choice for tracking exercise. I wear an Oura ring every day, but I’ll actually strap on a watch when it’s time to go for a run. 

Whoop does a better job than Oura, but it still has its issues. I’ve found it can easily get confused about my actual heart rate; the numbers will seem low, and then I’ll wiggle the band, and suddenly I’m seeing a 160 heart rate instead of 140. That’s a pretty big margin of error. Many people find that the Whoop is good enough, most of the time, but if you need really accurate exercise metrics you’ll probably be happier with a more traditional fitness tracker instead.  

Best for minimalists: the Oura ring

This one is my personal favorite; I fell in love with the Oura ring when I reviewed it years ago. If you hate wearing wristwatches and don’t really care about activity tracking, this is the device for you. (You can also read my four-year retrospective on what I’ve learned using it daily over the years.)

The Oura gives accurate resting heart rate (RHR) and heart rate variability (HRV), two metrics that come more or less directly from its sensors, with minimal layers of interpretation. Both can tell you something about your stress and fatigue levels. Generally, if you’re well-rested and not under too much stress, your RHR will be low and your HRV will be high. I routinely see an elevated RHR if I’m sick, if I’ve been drinking or staying up late, or if my weightlifting training has been putting a lot of stress on me. On the flip side, RHR can lower over time as you improve your cardio fitness. 

Oura’s app then uses those metrics, and other data it’s collected about you, to give you sleep scores, readiness scores, and gentle recommendations for supporting your health. The sleep score gives you an idea of how long and how well you slept. The readiness score is highest when you’re under the least stress (low RHR, high HRV). But I find these scores less useful than the raw data they’re built on. An Oura ring without a subscription only provides these scores in the app, without the raw data. The hardware alone is not worth it. 

Oura is supposed to be the best wearable for tracking sleep stages, and that may be true, but no wearable is actually tracking your sleep stages accurately. Pay more attention to your total sleep time, which it’s relatively good at detecting, not the time in each stage or the overall sleep quality.

One more, important note about activity tracking: you will not want to wear this during workouts where you’re lifting weights or hanging from a pull-up bar. The ring is chunky enough to interfere with your grip and dig into your skin. You won’t be able to do your best lifts while you’re wearing it. And if you care about the ring’s appearance, lifting weights will definitely scratch it up. I lift a lot, so I leave my ring on the charger when I head to the gym.

So if you can’t lift in it, and it’s not great at activity tracking or sleep staging, why wear one? Honestly, because I can forget that it exists and still get all the benefits of knowing what my RHR and HRV have been, pretty much every night, for the last three and a half years. (I never stick with a wearable that long.) The metrics help me to understand whether I’m recovering well enough from my daily training, and remind me to pay a little extra attention to my sleep and stress when training gets tough.

Two generations of the Oura ring are currently being sold. The newer gen 4 ring has a wider range of sizes, a more comfortable fit, and a more accurate sensor setup. The older gen 3 has all the same core features, but is available at a significant discount. I have a comparison of the gen 3 and gen 4 rings here, if you’d like to consider your options.

Oura rings start at $199 (gen 3) or $349 (gen 4), plus a $5.99/month subscription.

Best for athletes: Whoop band

If you want something that can track activities, but works with an app that is recovery-focused rather than exercise-focused, you probably want a Whoop band. 

If you’re happy to strap a gadget to your wrist, great—that’s the easiest way to wear a Whoop. It will look like a watch, except with no screen (the fabric band covers the spot where the screen would be). If you don’t want a wristband, the Whoop device can also be strapped to your arm, between your deltoid and bicep (they call it a “bicep band”). This was my favorite way to wear it, since it doesn’t interfere with wrist wraps while I’m lifting. You can also buy clothing, including sports bras and branded boxer shorts, that have a little pocket to hold the device against your skin without a strap.

One of Whoop’s characteristic features is that you can wear it 24/7. Instead of plugging it in to charge, there is a little detachable battery that you plug in. Then, for an hour or so every couple of days, you slide this battery onto your Whoop band like a tiny backpack. When it’s fully charged, the indicator light will change colors and you can slide it off. 

Besides tracking your sleep, the Whoop can also track activity—although, as I noted above, it’s not as accurate as some of the more traditional gadgets. (If you really want the most accurate heart rate, you’ll want to get a chest strap anyway.) 

The app models sleep and activity—which it calls Strain—as two sides of the same coin. If you did a long or hard workout, your Strain will be high, and the app will recommend an amount of sleep that will help you to recover. In the morning, it will tell you where your Recovery stands and recommend an appropriate amount of Strain for the day’s workouts. As I’ve written before, I don’t think it’s very smart to adjust your long-term training plan based on short-term fluctuations in recovery, but how you use the data is up to you. The Whoop app also has some really excellent features for tracking your “sleep debt” and planning when to go to bed and wake up for various levels of restedness.

Whoop doesn’t sell the band as a product, exactly; it sells a subscription that runs $30/month or $239/year, and you get the device with a plain black wristband for free. Other colors and styles cost extra, and you get free hardware upgrades when a new model comes out.

Best smartwatch option: Garmin Venu 3

All of Garmin’s running watches include recovery metrics, including my fave, the Forerunner 265. These include resting heart rate, HRV, training readiness, “body battery,” and calculated recovery times for each workout.

The non-athletes I know tend to love the Body Battery. Like Whoop’s approach, this sees exercise and sleep as sort of opposite forces. Your Body Battery will be closer to 100% if you’ve been sleeping well and haven’t done much strenuous exercise lately. It will drain as you exercise, or if you’re under a lot of stress. Sleeping fills it back up again. 

You can get some or all of these features on almost any Garmin watch. But if you’d like to buy a new smartwatch just for sleep tracking, I’d suggest the Garmin Venu 3. 

The Venu 3 has the Body Battery feature, as well as a Sleep Coach that will tell you how long you slept compared to how much you needed, and it will recommend how much you should try to sleep tonight. The recommendations are based mainly on your HRV (one of those recovery metrics it can read from its sensors) and your recent sleep and activity history. The Venu 3 also has nap detection, by the way, so you’ll still get credit for falling asleep watching a movie—but it also won’t confuse that with your regular night’s sleep.

I’m choosing the Venu 3 (or the 3S, which is the same thing in the smaller size) for a few reasons. It has the newest generation of Garmin’s Elevate heart rate sensor, making it potentially a smidge more accurate than other great watches like the Forerunner or Vivoactive lines. It also has skin temperature sensing, which not all Garmins do. But if you’d like a more budget-friendly watch that’s still great for tracking sleep, the new Vivoactive 6 ($299) has most of the same sleep-tracking features, and also has a smart wake alarm that aims to buzz you awake during a lighter stage of sleep.

College Students Can Get a Two-Month Free Trial of ChatGPT Plus

If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve used ChatGPT. But have you paid for ChatGPT? OpenAI offers a number of ways to do so, but the cheapest plan is $20 per month. It’s pretty steep, especially since the company continues to offer premium features for free users.

However, there are still plenty of features and perks exclusive to paying customers. If you’re interested in these options, and you happen to be a college student in the United States or Canada, good news: ChatGPT Plus is now free for you, for a very limited time.

Who is eligible?

You can only take advantage of this offer if you are a full or part-time student at a degree-granting school in either the U.S. or Canada. Don’t be dissuaded if you don’t see your school when attempting to sign up for the offer: OpenAI has a support link to help find or add your school to the list. This tool may also confirmed whether your school is ineligible. You need to be physically present in the U.S. (and its territories) or Canada to sign up for this offer, too—VPNs will not work, unless its a whitelisted educational VPN.

OpenAI says it’ll confirm your student credentials through a service called SheerID. If the service is unable to verify you through your school’s registrar office, or via your school’s single sign-on service, you may need to provide SheerID with extra documents to prove your eligibility. SheerID says it only uses this data to authenticate your eligibility for this promotion, and does not sell or share your data with third parties.

While you are eligible if you have an existing ChatGPT Pro account, you are not eligible if that account is through Google Play or Apple’s App Store. You’ll need to make a new account in order to get ChatGPT Plus for free. ChatGPT Pro users are also not eligible.

What do you get?

If you are indeed eligible for the promotion, you can claim ChatGPT Plus from now through May 31, 2025. Once you make your claim, you get two months of ChatGPT Plus for free. So, if you sign up on May 31, you’ll have free access through July 31. Once that period is up, OpenAI will charge you the typical $20 per month rate.

As said above, this applies to existing ChatGPT Plus subscribers, too. If you verify that you are a student, OpenAI will credit your account for the two month promotional period.

This promotion includes the full ChatGPT Plus service. That comes with all of the features of the free plan, including GPT-4o mini access, GPT-4o and o3-mini access, web search, file uploads, data analysis, image generation, and voice mode. In addition, Plus offers extended limits on things like messages, file uploads, analysis, and image creation, advanced voice mode with video and the ability to share your screen, deep research for more analytical queries, GPT-4.5 preview access, custom GPTs, tasks, and limited access to OpenAI’s Sora video generator.

How to get ChatGPT Plus for free

If you think you’re eligible, head to OpenAI’s official promotional site here. Once it loads, click either “Claim offer” button you see. Log into your account, then follow the on-screen instructions to verify your identity as an eligible student.

How to Play Original Switch Games on the Switch 2

Around November of last year, when readers were certainly not paying attention to anything else, Nintendo briefly shared that the Nintendo Switch 2 would be backwards compatible with games for the original Nintendo Switch. Fast forward to this year, and it turns out that’s not so clear cut. According to Nintendo, the Switch 2 can play the vast majority of Nintendo Switch 1 games, but there are some caveats to keep in mind.

The Switch 2 uses emulation to play Switch 1 games

As Nintendo posted to its site yesterday and confirmed in a developer roundtable I attended, the Switch 2 does not have any Switch 1 hardware inside. This means that, unlike the Nintendo DS did with the Game Boy Advance, it can’t play Switch games “natively,” meaning it’s not able to run them exactly as they might work on original hardware. Instead, it uses what Nintendo said is a mix of hardware compatibility and software emulation to essentially trick these games into thinking they’re running on the original Switch.

This comes with both downsides and upsides. The good is that, because the Switch 2 has more powerful architecture than the original Switch, you might see some slight benefits from simply running your game on the new console, like faster loading times. The issues start to pop up when looking at game compatibility.

Switch 1 compatibility with Switch 2

Credit: Nintendo

Not every game, it turns out, plays nice with this translation to the new device. According to Nintendo, the vast majority of Switch 1 games should work without issue, with some select games getting free patches to help bring them up to snuff, but the company has encountered problems with over 120 titles, some of which won’t even start up. These include popular games like Doom: Eternal and Rocket League, so if you depend on your Switch to play these, don’t expect the new console to be able to replace your old one right away. It’ll likely take some time for Nintendo to work out all the kinks here.

Nintendo Switch 2 Edition games

So how is Nintendo getting around these problems? Well, aside from painstakingly checking each Nintendo Switch game (more than 10,000) “one-by-one,” it’s also releasing new versions of certain Switch 1 games that are built to run on the Nintendo Switch 2 from the ground up.

These Nintendo Switch 2 Edition games will essentially be enhanced ports of certain Switch 1 titles, including The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild; The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom; Kirby and the Forgotten Land; Super Mario Party Jamboree; and even as-yet-unreleased games like Pokémon Legenda: Z-A and Metroid Prime 4: Beyond.

Switch 2 Edition games will come with improved graphics, higher resolutions, and much smoother framerates, as well as new content in the case of Kirby and Mario Party. You’ll also get new control modes when applicable, as Metroid Prime 4 will be able to use the Switch 2’s mouse controls.

The catch: you have to pay for these upgrades. While your Switch 2 should be able to play the above games just fine if you pop your Switch 1 cartridge into it, you won’t get any of the enhancements that let you use its extra power unless you pony up, and will instead be playing via the same emulation as every other Switch 1 game.

Luckily, if you already own the Switch 1 version of a game, you can get an upgrade pack (sold either at select retailers or via the Nintendo eShop) to get the Switch 2 Edition at a discount, as opposed to buying the Switch 2 Edition for full price (which, of course, is also an option). Even better—Nintendo has confirmed that your upgraded game will still be playable on Switch 1, just without the enhancements that come with the Switch 2 Edition. Plus, subscribers to the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack will at least get both Zelda upgrades included with their plan.

Official pricing for these Switch 2 Editions or their upgrade packs has yet to be revealed, but keep in mind that when you’re shopping for a Switch 2, you shouldn’t necessarily bank on the system being able to “play your Switch 1 games, but better.”

How to play a Switch 1 game on Switch 2

Now that I’ve broken down the ins-and-outs of backwards compatibility on the Switch, let’s talk about how to actually play your Switch 1 games on the Switch 2.

The first method is pretty simple. If you own a compatible physical Switch 1 game cartridge, you can just put it into your Switch 2 to start playing it just like on the original console.

Alternatively, if you want to move all of your game saves, wifi details, parental control settings, and digital games over to the Switch 2, you can use a System Transfer to do just that. Specific steps for the transfer system haven’t been published yet, but you’ll be able to use it to conveniently move pretty much everything from your Switch 1 to your Switch 2 all in one fell swoop.

Virtual Game Cards

Credit: Nintendo

Finally, for a more piecemeal approach, there’s Virtual Game Cards. This is a new way of categorizing digital games that’s set for release in April. Essentially, it’ll add a new icon to the Switch’s home screen, where you’ll be able to see your digital games as a series of “virtual game cards.” You’ll then be able to load these cards then and there to play them on the system you’re currently using, or click “Load on Another System” to move them over to another console linked to your Nintendo Account. With that, you can move your Switch 1 games over to Switch 2 on a more case-by-case basis.

The Garmin Instinct 2 Solar Smartwatch Is $170 Off

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Anytime you’re looking for a good smartwatch, Garmin’s name is bound to come up. The Garmin Instinct 3 came out very recently, and that means the Garmin Instinct 2 has dropped in price—and even though that model is now a generation old, it’s still an incredible fitness and outdoor smartwatch. With this latest price drop, the Garmin Instinct 2 Solar is now $229.99 (originally $399.99), the lowest price it has reached, according to price tracking tools.

The Garmin Instinct 2 Solar is a serious smartwatch, visually represented by its no-nonsense, black-and-white display. It puts all of its chips on functionality over other aspects a health smartwatch might offer. As the name implies, it’s a solar-powered watch. Three hours of being in the sun gives you about 24 hours of juice or one hour of GPS battery life. Even without sun, a full charge gives you 28 days of juice. The GPS and the heart rate feature are very accurate, so if that’s what you care about, the Instinct 2 Solar will not disappoint.

The Instinct 2 Solar has a lot of different sport profiles you can choose to track, making it great for triathlon athletes or people who like to practice many different sports. It also has Connect IQ app support, which opens the doors to many third-party apps for extra features, face watches, and widgets. And if you need some motivation or guidance with your fitness goals Training Status can suggest workouts for running and cycling. The watch also includes helpful tools like a built-in compass, altimeter, and barometer, making it great for hardcore hikers. Finally, since the Instinct 2 Solar has Connect IQ, you can configure your watch with the app instead of painstakingly doing it on the watch.

The Nintendo Switch 2 Might Be Compatible With the Webcam You Already Own

As someone who’s planning to buy the Nintendo Switch 2, I’ve had my eye on the accessories I’d need to get with the console. Since Super Mario Party Jamboree, which is getting some new mini-games in its Switch 2 port, is one of the games I’m very interested in, the Switch 2 Camera accessory caught my eye. After all, who doesn’t want to make dramatic faces while playing with their friends? You can even use it for chat, too. However, I’m not sure I can justify spending $50 on an accessory that’ll probably gather dust after I’m done with Mario Party. Fortunately, it looks like the Switch 2 Camera is not the only way to play camera-based games or video chat with your friends on the Nintendo Switch 2.

How to check if the Nintendo Switch 2 supports your USB-C camera

Nintendo Switch 2's accessories settings page, with the Test USB Camera option highlighted.

Credit: Nintendo

A quick look at Nintendo’s Switch 2 Camera webpage reveals that you can use third-party USB-C cameras with the console, even ones that aren’t made with it in mind. Like me, if you already have a USB-C camera lying around, you can plug it into the Switch 2 and the console will tell you if it’s compatible. Whenever you end up getting the Switch 2, just go to the console’s settings and navigate to the Controllers & Accessories section. Once the camera is connected to the Switch 2, select Test USB Camera and the console will let you know if the camera is compatible with the system.

Why you might want to consider an alternative USB camera

I don’t want to discourage people from buying Nintendo’s Switch 2 Camera right away, since I haven’t tried it yet. But I won’t be buying it immediately, because it’s too expensive for me. Yes, you get guaranteed compatibility and a useful stand that lets you place it on any flat surface, but that doesn’t necessarily justify its price. At the time of writing, you can buy good USB-C webcams for as little as $20 each. These cameras ship with a privacy cover and adjustable stands that can be mounted on top of a TV or placed on a flat surface, and there’s a good chance you already own one. If you can use one for the Switch 2 instead, it might be worth opting for that instead of spending extra cash. 

Apple’s Latest Update May Be Installing Previously Deleted Apps on iPhones

It’s not difficult to delete an app off your iPhone. In fact, it only takes a few taps at most. If you’re so inclined, you can even remove purchases from your Apple Account entirely. So it might come as a bit of a surprise if you see that app randomly reappear. As it happens, some users are seeing just that.

MacRumors spotted multiple threads across both Reddit and Apple’s Community Support site, all featuring the same complaint: users noticing apps they did not choose to download appearing on their iPhones. Some of these affected users had previously deleted these apps months or years ago, and didn’t understand why they were back. Others, however, had no memory of ever downloading the app in question in the first place.

The account Someandroiduser started a Community Support thread, claiming a previously deleted app “Last War Survival” ended up on their iPhone again. Redditor dURDENN7 posted the same, without naming the app in question. It’s worth noting some of the commenters on that thread said their iPhones had downloaded “Last War Survival” as well, including one who said they had never downloaded the app before.

Reddit user illyyas posted that they had discovered the game “Ingress” installed on their iPhone, despite the fact they don’t play games at all on their phone. Another commenter said their iPhone downloaded “Cooking Mama” to their Home screen, even though the App Store still showed the option to “Get” the app—implying the user had never actually installed the app before. Another user shared a similar story with the game “Bit City.”

Is iOS 18.4 responsible?

While it isn’t totally clear what is behind these app downloads, one through line does appear to be iOS 18.4. The update officially dropped on Monday, adding new features and security patches for compatible iPhones. Unfortunately, Apple might’ve missed a bug in beta testing, since many of these user complaints note these apps mysteriously appeared after installing the latest iOS update.

MacRumors notes that Automatic Downloads—the feature that installs previously downloaded apps on other connected Apple devices—doesn’t seem to be at fault here, since many of the affected users only have iPhones. In addition, the outlet identified that these devices were not jailbroken and were not using a third-party app marketplace.

To Apple’s credit, this hasn’t been my experience with the newest update. I installed iOS 18.4 on my iPhone, and, as far as I can tell, no new or previously downloaded apps found their way into my App Library. However, it is a problem: You shouldn’t expect to see apps you previously deleted reappear on your device, and you definitely shouldn’t see apps you never downloaded to begin with.

Apple has not made a public statement about this issue, nor is there really much you can do to prevent it. If you happen to notice an app you previously deleted—or never actually downloaded in the first place—your best bet is to simple delete it, and hope it doesn’t show up again.

Nine Ways to Make Your DIY Paint Job Look Professional

Paint is the cheapest, easiest renovation you can do: it makes everything fresh and new, it covers defects, and it’s something almost anyone can do to a reasonable level of quality.

If you just read that last part and started shaking your head because your paint projects always turn out terribly—patchy, or with visible sheen or brush strokes, or a final color that doesn’t seem to match what you chose in the store at all—the cause probably isn’t your work ethic, or an evil spirit inhabiting your house. The problem probably lies in your prep work. If all you’re doing before you start slapping paint on the walls is applying some painter’s tape and covering the furniture, the chances that the final paint job will look terrible are actually pretty high. Here are all the things you should take into account before you dip that brush.

Consider temperature and humidity

The weather can affect the quality of your paint job. Extreme temperature or humidity can have an adverse impact on the drying time. At colder temperatures, paint can thicken, extending its drying time. At hotter temperatures, it can dry too quickly, affecting adhesion. High humidity that leaves moisture on the walls will also result in a sub-par paint job.

Your home is probably climate controlled, so painting inside even during extreme weather is certainly possible—just make sure the temperature is between 50 and 90 degrees and the humidity levels are between 40 and 60%.

Prep the walls

It’s usually a good idea to wash your walls before painting them to ensure there is no dust or dirt that could adversely affect adhesion. While you’re at it, look for cracks, dents, peeling tape, or other defects and patch everything up (including crayon or grease stains that will probably show through your paint unless they’re scrubbed off). A small flaw that isn’t noticeable now might become a glaring problem when a fresh coat of paint brings it to the forefront.

Cleaning walls with a dry microfiber cloth followed by warm water and a sponge is usually sufficient, unless your walls are really dirty. If you’re worried about it, add a small amount of dish washing liquid or trisodium phosphate (if your walls are greasy and very dirty)—but avoid colored soaps that might leave a tint behind.

Choose the right rollers

One big reason paint jobs look like crap? The nap on your roller cover. The nap of your roller describes the thickness of the fibers. Generally speaking, the smoother your wall surface is, the smaller the nap of your roller cover should be. Painting kitchen cabinets? Go with a 1/4-inch nap. Painting a brick wall? An inch or even a 1 1/4-inch nap is best. Smaller fibers pick up less paint, while thicker fibers hold more paint—a too-short nap can result in a patchy finish on rough surfaces, while a too-long nap can add unwanted texture to smooth surfaces. Most interior paint jobs will call for a nap between 3/8 inch (very smooth walls) and 3/4 inch (textured walls, like stucco).

Apply a separate primer coat

These days you can buy paint and primer together, which is a terrific time saver. But if your walls aren’t in great shape, even after cleaning and patching, you will usually get a much better result with a separate primer coat. This step might not be 100% necessary on your walls, but taking the extra time to prime properly will guarantee the best possible outcome.

Identify the paint’s undertones

Almost all paint has an undertone (its base color )and a masstone (its overall hue). The undertone can be subtle and difficult to suss out, which is why it’s so important to paint a few samples on the wall before you commit. The paint’s undertone will interact with everything else in the room in ways that aren’t always obvious in the store. You brought home a beige paint, for example, but it has a green undertone, and suddenly it looks all wrong on your walls because your wood floors have yellow undertones.

You can ask about the paint’s undertone at the store where you’re buying it. You can also use a color wheel to compare it to primary colors to get a sense of the undertones involved.

Combine multiple buckets of paint

If you’re painting a small room and using just one can of paint, you’re good to go. If your project is larger and you’ll be using multiple cans of the same color, you should combine all your paint into a larger bucket and mix it up—a process called “boxing.” This is a good idea because even if you bought your paint from the same store at the same time, there can be subtle variations between cans. Maybe the pigments dispersed incorrectly, or the mixing process was slightly off. Whatever the reason, even the tiniest variation between cans will be incredibly obvious when you switch to the new can. Boxing it eliminates the danger.

Check out your window tint

Your windows can throw a wrench into your paint colors. This is because many windows have a very subtle green tint due to the presence of iron oxide in the glass. This isn’t noticeable in any way to the naked eye, as a rule, but it can cast a greenish tint on your paint that’s just strong enough to make it look inexplicably wrong in the daylight. Putting samples on the wall to judge the color is a great idea—but make sure you paint those samples in a spot where the light from your windows will hit them. Samples that look perfect in a more shadowed area may suddenly look weird when light hits it through the window.

Figure out the color temperature of your lights

Another lighting issue is your light bulbs. All the bulbs you’re using in your light fixtures have a color temperature, and that can affect how your paint looks. Generally speaking, bulbs with higher color temperatures will brighten darker paint and mute lighter colors and vice versa. This means that a paint color that looks terrific in daylight can suddenly look grim or faded at night when the lights come on. It’s best to check your samples in all kinds of light to make sure you’ve chosen wisely—and change your bulbs to support your paint if necessary.

You should also check the color rendering index (CRI) of your bulbs. This is a rating between 50 and 100 that indicates how accurate the color rendering of the bulb will be. A CRI of 90 to 100 will show your paint as accurately as possible, reducing the chances that it will look worse when the sun goes down.

Load your roller up

Finally, when actually painting, don’t be shy with your roller. When initially “loading” paint onto a dry cover, take your time and work paint deep into the nap. This can take a few minutes, so don’t rush—you want a nice, wet roller when you hit the wall. When painting, don’t roll until the roller is exhausted—reload frequently and keep the nap damp. Exhausting your roller will just leave streaks and faint spots that may or may not get covered by a second coat—and may or may not haunt you for years afterward.

The 50 Best ’80s Movies You Can Stream Right Now

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Imagine, if you will, a time of wild economic inequality, global conflict, and Donald Trump every freakin’ time you turn on your TV. But all of that in neon, and with a way cooler soundtrack. I’m talking, of course, about the ‘80s: the decade that gave us Spike Lee, Hayao Miyazaki, Tim Burton, John Hughes, and Cher (but, you know, the serious actress). Arnold blew up a whole bunch of stuff; Michael J. Fox went back in time to avoid sleeping with his mom; Eddie Murphy made cops seem fun and approachable; and people went around asking “Where’s the beef?” for reasons that remain unclear even to historians. It was quite a time.

It was also an era when beloved blockbusters could come in all shapes and sizes, and there were nearly 100% fewer Marvel movies. The massive hits of the decade include action movies, but also romantic comedies, horror movies, and family dramas. It doesn’t have the reputation of the 1970s as a cinematic golden age, but there’s something to be said for the sheer volume of enduring classics that the decade’s filmmakers produced. Here are some of the very best, and where to find them.


Steel Magnolias (1989)

Mention this movie in the right crowd and watch the tears start to well up in eyes—but it’s also very funny, thoroughly quotable, and full of great performances from the all-star team of Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, Julia Roberts, and Daryl Hannah. You can stream Steel Magnolias on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


Moonstruck (1987)

Cher won an Academy Award for her performance as an Italian-American widow Loretta Castorini, deciding whether to settle into comfortable middle age with the man her parents want for her—or` go wild with his brother, played by Nicolas Cage. You can stream Moonstruck on Prime Video, The Criterion Channel, The Roku Channel, and Pluto TV.


Do the Right Thing (1989)

Director Spike Lee had his greatest triumph with this funny, quotable, and ultimately explosive film about the racial tensions percolating in a Brooklyn neighborhood on a hot summer day. You can stream Do the Right Thing on Netflix or rent it from Prime Video.


Beverly Hills Cop (1984)

Eddie Murphy was never hotter than in the first film of this action comedy that rocketed him from comic genius to international superstar. If you grew up in the 1980s, try listening to anything on the soundtrack without being transported. You can rent Beverly Hills Cop from Prime Video.


Desperately Seeking Susan (1985)

Rosanna Arquette stars in director Susan Seidelman’s cult classic as a bored New Jersey housewife who sets out in pursuit of a free-spirited punk chick (Madonna) who’s she’s become enthralled by, eventually taking on her persona to find fulfillment. Madonna was on the cusp of megastardom, but the film also provided breakout roles for Laurie Metcalf, Aidan Quinn, John Turturro, and Giancarlo Esposito. You can stream Desperately Seeking Susan on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


The Terminator (1984)

James Cameron broke into the big time with this smart, satisfying sci-fi action movie about a robot assassin from the future (Arnold Schwarzenegger) sent back in time to murder a waitress before she can give birth to humanity’s savior. (As if you didn’t know all of that.) Arnold is the marquee name, but Linda Hamilton’s beleaguered Sarah Conner steals the franchise. You can stream The Terminator on MGM+ and The Roku Channel or rent it from Prime Video.


Beetlejuice (1988)

Tim Burton was at his weirdest and wildest in this tribute to the afterlife, in which the ghosts Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin team up with Michael Keaton’s raunchy poltergeist to scare a living family out of their home. You can rent Beetlejuice from Prime Video.


Top Gun (1986)

Tom Cruise feels the need for speed in this fast-paced movie about sweaty jock pilots who are definitely into girls. Definitely. You can stream Top Gun on Paramount+ and Prime Video.


My Neighbor Totoro (1988)

This gorgeously animated Hayao Miyazaki favorite follows sisters Satsuke and Mei as they move to an old country house with their father to await their mother’s hoped-for recovery from an illness. What they find in the house are playful spirits who lead them on an adventure. You can stream My Neighbor Totoro on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


Desert Hearts (1985)

An about-to-be-divorced professor, Vivian (Helen Shaver) goes to stay on a cattle ranch where she meets Cay (Patricia Charbonneau), the ranch owner’s daughter who helps to bring Vivian out of her shell. A charming romance, it’s also, refreshingly, one of the few LGBTQ+ movies from the era that doesn’t lean to tragedy. You can stream Desert Hearts on Max and The Criterion Channel or rent it from Prime Video.


Back to the Future (1985)

Great Scott! Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd are brilliantly paired in this time-travel comedy that sees Marty McFly visiting the ‘50s and exploring the lives of his parents when they were in high school. And finding that his mom has a crush on him. Heavy. You can rent Back to the Future from Prime Video.


Child’s Play (1988)

The progenitor of one of our most enduring slasher franchises (seven movies and a TV series, all written and/or directed by Chucky creator Don Mancini), Child’s Play works in large part because it knows how ridiculous the premise is. Brad Dourif voices killer Charles Lee Ray, who performs a spell to transfer his soul into a doll before he dies. It’s got solid thrills and a self-aware sense of humor that would serve the series well over the decades, even as it got much weirder. You can stream Child’s Play on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982)

In a sea of teen slacker comedies that were popular in the early 1980s, Fast Times is something different: Director Amy Heckerling and writer Cameron Crowe’s capture the dumb minutiae of high-school life. There’s plenty of raunchy humor, but, at its heart, it’s a coming-of-age movie about the awkwardness of budding sexuality. You can rent Fast Times at Ridgemont High from Prime Video.


Dirty Dancing (1987)

Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze are on fire here in what is, without a doubt, the sexiest movie ever to be set at a family vacation resort in the Catskills. But also still heartwarming, somehow? You can rent Dirty Dancing from Prime Video.


Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

I’m sure nobody way back at the beginning of the 1980s thought that we’d still be going to Indiana Jones movies—but Raiders of the Lost Ark is just that good. Sequels might have diluted its power a bit, but this one is pure adventure. You can stream Raiders of the Lost Ark on Disney+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Lean on Me (1989)

Morgan Freeman plays the real-life Joe Louis Clark, principal of Eastside High School in Paterson, New Jersey. The true story might have been a bit more complicated, but Freeman’s Clark is electric: a tough, no-nonsense educator willing to do whatever it takes to bring his students to the movie’s rousing finale. You can rent Lean on Me from Prime Video.


Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)

Star Trek had a broader pop culture moment in the 1980s, capped by this heartfelt and genuinely funny time-travel adventure in which the crew has to travel back in time to save the whales. The result feels both like a time capsule of the era and a timelessly charming fishes-out-of-water story, filled with colorful metaphors and nuclear wessels. You can stream Star Trek IV on Paramount+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Batman (1989)

Travel back with me to an era when we weren’t all sick to fucking death of superheroes. Tim Burton’s weird and stylish take on the comic book crimefighter is weird, funny, and sexy in ways that would scare the hell out of today’s branded blockbusters. You can stream Batman on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)

Johnny (Daniel Day-Lewis) and Omar (Gordon Warnecke) are a thoroughly mismatched couple: Johnny’s a former right-wing skinhead, while Omar’s a Pakistani-British man from a well-off family. Despite the trials of being a gay interracial couple in Thatcher’s Britain, romance blossoms when the two set about fixing up a run-down laundrette. You can stream My Beautiful Laundrette on Prime Video and Pluto TV.


Return of the Living Dead (1985)

This horror comedy with punk style is both a knowing parody of zombie movies while also managing to be an impressively gory thriller in its own right that moves the whole genre forward. Plus, it’s got a great death-rock soundtrack. You can stream Return of the Living Dead on MGM+, Tubi, and Pluto TV or rent it from Prime Video.


I’m Gonna Git You Sucka (1988)

Prior to creating the iconic In Living Color in the 1990s, Keenan Ivory Wayans directed this deeply goofy, but frequently hilarious, spoof of blaxploitation films of the previous generation. The cast includes not only up-and-coming (at the time) actors like Chris Rock and Dawn Lewis, but many of the stars of the movies that it parodies (Bernie Casey, Isaac Hayes, etc.) You can stream I’m Gonna Git You Sucka on Pluto TV and The Roku Channel or rent it from Prime Video.


Body Heat (1981)

Kathleen Turner stars in Lawrence Kasdan’s essential neo-noir as one of cinema’s ultimate femmes fatale, playing a very dangerous (and very frequently naked) game with William Hurt. A super steamy erotic thriller classic. You can rent Body Heat from Prime Video.


The Color Purple (1985)

Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of the Alice Walker novel is both a deeply intimate story and an epic. The life of the poor, abused, abandoned Celie (Whoopi Goldberg) plays out like a hero’s journey, as compelling as any in cinematic mythology, set agains the backdrop of the larger crisis of slavery and prejudice in the young United States. The recent musical adaptation is great, but there’s still plenty of room for this quieter adaptation. You can rent The Color Purple from Prime Video.


Hollywood Shuffle (1987)

Robert Townsend directs himself as Bobby Taylor, a satire about the perils of navigating the Hollywood system for an actor simultaneously too black and not black enough for the tastes of studio bosses. Through elaborate fantasy sequences and parodies of popular movies, Townsend creates a sharp and often extremely funny sendup that’s sadly still relevant. You can stream Hollywood Shuffle on Prime Video, Tubi, The Roku Channel, and Pluto TV.


Stand By Me (1986)

One of the best Stephen King adaptations doesn’t qualify as horror at all, instead being a coming-of-age drama set in the 1950s about four best friends setting out on a quest to see a dead body. The movie captures both the real and imagined trials of growing up. You can stream Stand By Me on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


Purple Rain (1984)

The plot is thin, sure…but not really the point. Prince plays The Kid, who fled an abusive home to make his mark in the music world, and faces off against a rival trying to steal the spotlight and his girl. Part narrative, part concert film, and part music video, Purple Rain was conceived as a showcase for Prince’s talents, and it absolutely captures him at the height of his purple powers. You can rent Purple Rain from Prime Video.


Field of Dreams (1989)

One of the most beloved sports films ever is also a dreamy fantasy about a farmer (Kevin Costner) building a baseball diamond in the middle of a cornfield in order to attract a bunch of ghosts who might want to play a few games there—but who really just wants to play catch with his dad one last time. A silly premise? Maybe, but it plays out like a fairy tale, and generates real emotion. You can stream Field of Dreams on Netflix or rent it from Prime Video.


The Karate Kid (1984)

The movie that kicked off not only a mania for karate in the 1980s, but also a franchise that’s had a surprisingly long life, this one has everything you need in a rousing underdog sports movie: Nerdy loser Daniel (Ralph Macchio) comes to a new town where he’s the immediate target of bullies (including William Zabka’s Johnny)—until he meets up with mentor Mr. Miyagi (Pat Morita). It all builds to a cheer-worthy finale with some rousing ‘80s tunes. You can stream The Karate Kid on Hulu or rent it from Prime Video.


The Empire Strikes Back (1980)

The second Star Wars movie remains the best of the entire series. Building on the Flash Gordon-inspired original, Empire goes deeper and darker, finding real emotional resonance among its core characters while also putting truly kick-ass space action front and center. This is a high the franchise (and perhaps all of blockbuster filmmaking) has been chasing for decades. You can stream The Empire Strikes Back on Disney+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Spaceballs (1987)

Maybe you’re getting a little bored with Star Wars-style outer space action? No better antidote than the Mel Brooks classic that effectively skewers not just the sci-fi tropes on which that series leans, but the vast merchandising empire to which it gave birth (“Spaceballs: The Flamethrower!”). Even George Lucas loved it. You can stream Spaceballs on Prime Video.


Cinema Paradiso (1988)

In a war-torn Sicilian town, young Salvatore escapes from, his alternately mundane and terrifying everyday and life into the movies, befriending an old projectionist who later encourages him to pursue his love of filmmaking. It’s a lovely ode to the power of cinema, packed with memorable, colorful characters and with an all-time great ending. You can rent Cinema Paradiso from Prime Video.


Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)

One of John Hughes funniest (and—bonus—least problematic) movies is a joyous tribute to the power of blowing off whatever you’re supposed to be doing in favor of much cooler stuff. There’s no way that the movie’s core trio (Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara, and Alan Ruck) would have learned nearly as much if they’d gone to school. You can stream Ferris Bueller on Pluto TV or rent it from Prime Video.


Elvira, Mistress of the Dark (1988)

The beloved horror host stepped onto the big screen for the first time with this gloriously silly movie involving Elvira (Cassandra Peterson) traveling to the small, conservative town of Fallwell, Massachusetts, where her revealing clothes and sassy attitude quickly turn most of the town against her. It’s like Footloose with black magic and boobs. You can stream Elvira on Tubi, Pluto TV, AMC+, The Roku Channel, and Prime Video.


The Dark Crystal (1982)

Jim Henson and company followed up The Muppet Show with this rich, dark fantasy following a couple of gelflings on a quest to restore balance to their world. The endlessly covetous Skeksis are the stuff of nightmares, but they also feel like a warning about the dangers of unchecked greed that we should have taken seriously. Henson wasn’t afraid to challenge viewers of any age with a complex moral message. You can stream The Dark Crystal on Prime Video, Hulu, Peacock, Pluto TV, and Shout Factory TV.


Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (1988)

A technical triumph from director Robert Zemeckis, Roger Rabbit is also a fun tribute to Hollywood of yore, and to the hard-boiled detective movies that were once a ubiquitous genre unto themselves. Bob Hoskins plays Eddie Valiant, a boozy and embittered gumshoe hired to investigate allegations that the wife of cartoon star Roger is having an affair. Cartoon luminaries from Bugs Bunny to Betty Boop pop in for cameos. You can stream Who Framed Roger Rabbit on Disney+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Police Story (1985)

The plot is nothing new: Jackie Chan plays a cop who singlehandedly puts away a major Hong Kong drug dealer, but then has to protect the man’s secretary with some help from his own girlfriend (Maggie Cheung). No matter: The action comedy includes several of the most breathtaking sequences of Chan’s career (which is really saying something), including a legendary sequence during which the actor falls several stories through a series of exploding light bulbs and fixtures. You can stream Police Story on Max and The Criterion Channel or rent it from Apple TV.


My Dinner with Andre (1981)

A casual dinner conversation between André Gregory and Wallace Shawn gets wildly existential in director Louis Malle’s endlessly fascinating classic. “Boring” in the best way. You can stream My Dinner with Andre on Max and The Criterion Channel or rent it from Prime Video.


Highlander (1986)

Immortal beings wander the earth, forced to fight each other to the death with swords—because there can be only one. Or something. The goofy premise is played with absolute seriousness by Christopher Lambert as the title’s highlander. As a result, the film works both as a sci-fi action epic as well as pure camp, ably assisted by Sean Connery’s Ramirez, an Egyptian immortal from Spain who, for some reason, sounds entirely Scottish. The Queen theme song, “Princes of the Universe,” kicks ass. You can stream Highlander on Tubi, Peacock, Prime Video, and Pluto TV.


The Untouchables (1987)

Brian De Palma’s very loose history lesson on Elliot Ness (Kevin Costner) as he forms the title’s team (with help from Sean Connery) to bring down Al Capone (Robert de Niro). It’s a crowd-pleasing crime thriller that also offers up some brilliant performances and artful, smart direction. You can stream The Untouchables on Peacock and MGM+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Harlem Nights (1989)

Eddie Murphy directed and stars in this period piece set in a Prohibition-era speakeasy full of gangsters and gamblers. It doesn’t entirely work, but this is a once-in-a-lifetime cast that includes Murphy, Richard Pryor, Red Foxx, Della Reese, Jasmine Guy, Arsenio Hall, etc., and it’s a lot of fun to see them all share the screen together. You can stream Harlem Nights on Tubi, Paramount+, and Pluto TV or rent it from Prime Video.


Ghostbusters (1984)

There was a craft to ‘80s comedies that I’m not sure still exists: Take something like Ghostbusters, or Back to the Future, sci-fi comedies that don’t feel excessively bombastic, and with jokes that land at least as often as they don’t. There’s a reason why we’re still watching them. You can stream Ghostbusters on Max or rent it from Prime Video.


The Little Mermaid (1989)

As much as there is to love about the recent live-action remake, it’s unlikely to entirely replace the original, gorgeously animated Disney classic. With its subtly subversive themes and massive box office, it’s also the movie that almost singlehandedly revived a then-flagging Disney and made it the company it is today (with all the good and bad that implies). You can stream The Little Mermaid on Disney+ or rent it from Prime Video.


Blue Velvet (1986)

David Lynch’s neo-noir starts with a college student finding a severed human ear in a field and leads to a world of weird sex and violence. It introduces several of the director’s major themes, particularly the idea of a small town that seems completely normal until you pull back the curtain, at which point it looks like, well, a David Lynch movie. Isabella Rossellini, Kyle MacLachlan, Dennis Hopper, Laura Dern, and Dean Stockwell lead the impressive cast. You can stream Blue Velvet on Max or rent it from Apple TV.


Akira (1988)

Set in a dystopian 2019, this beautiful cyberpunk classic finds biker Kaneda forced to face down his friend Tetsuo after he gains telekinetic abilities in an accident. The wildly kinetic movie and its highly detailed world set a new standard for anime—we’re still living in the animation world that Akira gave birth to. You can stream Akira on Crunchyroll.


They Live (1988)

The metaphor isn’t particularly subtle in this John Carpenter classic, but that’s all for the better. Roddy Piper plays a nameless drifter who comes to understand that there are secret subliminal messages everywhere: telling us to shop more, to stick to the status quo—in other words, never question American-style capitalism. It all comes under threat when our lead gets a pair of glasses that allow him to see the truth all around him. You can rent They Live from Prime Video.


Clue (1985)

An all-star comedy murder mystery? Clue was doing the Knives Out thing before that movie was even a glimmer in Rian Johnson’s eye, and it’s delightfully silly. It wasn’t terribly popular upon its initial release, but it’s become a cult classic in the years since. You can stream Clue on Pluto TV or rent it from Prime Video.


The Running Man (1987)

It’s the future as visualized in the 1980s and, well, it’s not all that far off, actually. Starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as a framed criminal forced to compete in a competition program, the movie foresaw our reality-driven television culture, the use of AI and other technologies to alter perceived reality, as well as our ever-increasing willingness to let entertainment distract us from what’s really going on around us. This fun little action movie feels almost prophetic. You can stream The Running Man on Paramount+ and MGM+ or rent it from Prime Video.


The Princess Bride (1987)

A flawlessly entertaining fantasy, The Princess Bride works on almost every level: as a quotable comedy, a soaring romance, and a Robin Hood-style action movie that has fun with the tropes of those kinds of movies. Just a delight. You can stream The Princess Bride on Disney+ and Hulu or buy it from Prime Video.


Raising Arizona (1987)

It’s not always the first movie that comes to mind when we talk about the Coen brothers, but this deliriously over-the-top crime comedy about a kidnapping (by Nicholas Cage and Holly Hunter) is, as deranged as it is, ultimately, pretty sweet. You can rent Raising Arizona from Prime Video.


Die Hard (1988)

It’s the Christmas movie that came along and kicked It’s a Wonderful Life right off the 35th floor of Nakatomi Plaza tower. A brilliantly entertaining action classic. You can stream Die Hard on Prime Video and Hulu.

Garmin’s Paid-Tier AI Doesn’t Seem to Be Doing Much

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Garmin unveiled a subscription tier for its app last week featuring an AI that promises to provide insights on your training. I liked the company’s policies around training and privacy, but hadn’t seen much of the actual AI output when I wrote about it. Now, I’ve spent a week with the feature, which Garmin says is still in beta. Here are my impressions.

The AI insights are just one of the features that rolled out with the new $6.99/month Garmin Connect+ subscription. Some of the other add-ons look a lot more useful, like the Live Activities feature. I have a full rundown here on what you get if you pay for the upgrade. The subscription only covers new features—not existing app features, and not specific features that come with the watch you buy.

AI insights only appear in one limited part of the app

I’ve been poking everywhere in the Garmin Connect app, and I can only find AI insights in one place. That would be the home screen, where I get a little “active intelligence” paragraph right at the top, above my usual workout and health metric cards.  

If you don’t check your Garmin Connect app frequently, you’ll miss out on most of the insights. They don’t pop up on your watch or in notifications on your phone. There’s no chat interface like with Whoop or Oura, where you can ask questions about your data. 

I expected the AI to be more like Strava’s, where a little description/motivational message appears on each activity you do. Strava’s AI is notorious for restating the data from the run description, with added errors, though, so perhaps it’s best they didn’t try to mimic that. 

Three screenshots of the Garmin AI giving basic-ass advice

Credit: Beth Skwarecki

The AI “insights” aren’t very insightful

My first few insights were pretty basic—just comparing my intensity minutes to a goal that I didn’t realize I had—but I figured more interesting analysis was yet to come. 

After a week, though, I haven’t seen it. The most exciting moment was when I caught the AI in a flagrant math error. “You logged two activities today: running and indoor cycling for a total of one hour and twenty-seven minutes,” it said. My activities were noted in their usual place, immediately below this “insight,” and the run was 40:10 while the bike ride was a quick test of this gadget that took less than three minutes. That’s 43 minutes, silly robot. (I’m not the only one who has encountered some bad math: Two scuba divers posted on Reddit that the AI told them they spent more than a month underwater in a single day.)

The AI’s obsession with intensity minutes may be to blame in my case. I can’t make the math work out for this example, but in some other cases, the AI seemed to be adding up intensity minutes and not always including the word “intensity.” (One minute of vigorous exercise counts for two “intensity minutes,” an idea that comes from public health exercise guidelines.) 

Otherwise, the messages were just basic summaries of data that was already viewable elsewhere in the app. I did my best to screenshot every insight I saw, and here’s the tally of topics: 

  • 5 messages about intensity minutes, either comparing them to my goal or weekly or daily averages

  • 3 messages about my stress level or “sleep stress,” a metric I’d never heard of and still can’t figure out what it means

  • 2 messages about my Body Battery (a number that goes up with sleep and down with exercise or stress)

  • 2 messages about steps

  • 2 messages about run activities (with my mileage, pace, and/or time)

  • 2 messages about bike activities (with my time, heart rate, cadence, and/or power)

  • 1 message about my training status being in “recovery”

After a sentence or two with the metrics it’s describing, there would be a sentence generically encouraging me to keep up the good work. I could give feedback as to whether the insight was interesting or not, but there was no way to ask questions or get more information. I still don’t know what “sleep stress” is, or how to get a quick overview of my intensity minutes if I did want to keep track of them. 

It doesn’t seem like anyone is enjoying the AI feature

I’m always the wet blanket on AI hype, so I checked Reddit and Garmin forums to see if anybody is having a better time with it than I am. I couldn’t find anyone who admitted to liking Active Intelligence or gleaning any useful insights from it.

“There is so much that could be done with AI and training software, but all Garmin does is using AI to simply rephrase existing data,” a Garmin forum user said. “Seems like ‘Active Intelligence’ is basically just the most basic summary of your workouts possible,” said a redditor, adding, “I was really hoping that it would be an actual chatbot that you could discuss training with etc to create plans.”

Other redditors wondered why the AI doesn’t create or adjust training plans, possibly even analyzing users’ data to find which workouts tend to correlate with fitness increases. Garmin hasn’t publicly said what future plans they have for AI, just that the feature is currently in beta. 

“I received messages from AI throughout the day and I can say that they have no practical or informational benefit for me,” one redditor said. I’m afraid I have to agree.