The Contenders:įirst, let’s do a quick overview of the three brands that make WiFi scales, giving you a total of four units to look through. As you’ll soon see, it’s not about the scale you choose, but rather it’s about who your scale company sleeps around partners with. More importantly – to talk about what you need to know beyond the model. My objective here is to talk through the major WiFi connected contenders (and explain why I’m not going into the non-WiFi models). Some great, some overpriced, and some crap. That’s the core difference here: A graphical and automatically logged chart of what your body weight is really doing (whether your goal is loss, gain, or constant).īut there are a lot of connected scale options. Only to realize a month later nothing has really changed. But if you’re like me – it’s really easy to pretend week after week that the weight will go down soon when you step on the scale. I tested that previously – they are actually pretty darn accurate in terms of weight. And you know what? It’s going to work just fine. Sure, you can get an inexpensive $15 bathroom scale pretty much the world around. So as you rolled out of bed this morning perhaps regretting yesterday’s Turkey festivities, let’s talk about how to decide on a WiFi weight scale. More importantly though, they make it hard to pretend nothing happened. And for good reason – they make it easy to log your weight. If you don't put the right total # to download them all, just navigate to the last one it got and re-run from there.Connected scales are all the rage these days. It goes from most recent back downloading each one. SetTimeout(getMore,downloadTimeoutLength ) Var cnt = 1, ttl = 100 /*Change ttl from 100 to whatever # of activities you want to download*/ If your connection is too slow to do a full download in less than 3 seconds every time, change the downloadTimeoutLength from 3 * 1000 to whatever number you want (it's 3*1000 because that's 3000 milliseconds = 3 seconds). If you want a different format, change the "tcx" part of the URL to the appropriate format acronym if garmin supports it. Can change ttl from 100 to whatever # of activities you want to download. Then paste the below code and hit enter to run it. You'll want to pre-set a download location in your browser settings to some folder, name it TCX or something, and tell your browser to auto-download there, or else you'll get a ton of popup save dialogs.įirst Navigate to the last (most recent) activity you have in Garmin Connect (as in ), then hit F12 (should work in chrome/IE) to open dev tools to get to the Javascript Console. Here's javascript that can be run in any modern browser fairly simply in javascript.
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December 2022
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