
While Lumo claims to offer personalised recommendations to help fit more activity into your day, we’ve seen no evidence in our time using it. There’s no third-party app support or social sharing to speak of, either. When the coaching session ends, it’s not all that easy to find out where the data goes and how it’s used to make improvements. Throughout that session, the sensor will buzz when your posture drops and won’t stop buzzing until you correct it. They allow you to set up timed posture monitoring, whether it’s for 5 minutes, 15 minutes, one hour or four hours. Everything feels very general and casual.Ĭoaching sessions are the Lumo Lift’s big play here. It’ll simply tell you whether you’ve been slouchy or your posture’s been remarkable. Unfortunately, it doesn’t really break down activities such as running, cycling or gym, instead giving those periods of exercise an ‘active’ score. Which can also be viewed in the menu tab. Tapping the posture data circle generates a log of your good posture hours, and the active circle provides your step count versus step goal, along with distance and calorie count.Ī tap on the small arrow below the circles brings up posture data broken down into hours, The first is there to indicate posture state and the second to illustrate how active you’ve been. Once inside, the misty blue user interface is dominated by two large circles.
#LUMO FLOOR PROJECTOR PRICE BLUETOOTH#
Syncing with the Lift is done over Bluetooth 4.0, and it’s a pretty simple process getting everything set up.

App, Performance, Battery Life and Verdict ReviewĬompanion apps for activity trackers are as important as the hardware, and while the iOS-only Lumo Lift app certainly makes data easy to digest, there are question marks over the data tracking and how effectively it analyses that information.
