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Here’s what’s going on (Update: Back up) Samsung Gallery starts quietly ending OneDrive support ahead of schedule Here’s a first look at custom wallpapers in Google Messages Rivian is pretty sure customers want AI, not Android Auto Leaked iPhone 18 Pro dummy units may have just shown the next Android phone color trend A company spent $500 million in one month after forgetting to set AI usage limits Now even MediaTek’s cheap chips are embarrassing the Tensor G5 in one major area Pixel 10 Pro XL user says Google returned their phone worse than dead The best robot pool cleaners of 2026: Top picks for all budgets and pool sizes Claude Opus 4.8 is more honest, less deceptive, and considerably cheaper Roborock’s Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is ready to mop up the competition — and your filthy floors Google is making it easier to share Gemini chats, media, and more with your team One UI 9 borrows one of the iPhone’s most useful call features This is the biggest mistake Oura is making with the Oura Ring 5 This Verizon user owed $400, but the carrier made an unexpected move Google’s Fitbit Air makes a strong case for minimalism and ditching your smartwatch Survey says a Windows-powered streaming device could be a surprise hit with many How I created personalized Spotify playlist covers to spruce up my library I’m a long-time iPhone user, but these Android 17 features are tempting me to switch This company wants to clean your house for free, to train AI and robots As an Oura Ring 4 user, here are 3 reasons why I can’t wait to buy the Oura Ring 5 Google Photos could soon give you more tools to make your Memories shine Google may have fixed the issue that was exhausting your Gemini usage limits This cheap, swiveling Android handheld is a blast, but it literally hurts my hands ChatGPT is working on a slew of new features for Android users The Galaxy Z Fold 8 could be creaseless after all From Siri revamp to new tools: Here’s how Apple could rival Gemini (with Gemini) in iOS 27 Google Photos could finally be giving its automated edits a proper home Google Contacts on Wear OS is trying out a smart photos-first redesign A bizarre Chrome bug is locking some Android tablet users out of their browser The Chrome browser is getting a big safety upgrade — if you use Windows This new projector lineup is all about summer sports and outdoor viewing Samsung Galaxy Watch 9 codenames suggest there will be a new Classic this year This open source app lets you free your Oura Ring from its subscription Save $300 on the Samsung Freestyle 2nd Gen portable projector Proton Mail is making it easier to say goodbye to Gmail Spotify’s new features make it easier to manage and listen to your music The Pixel Buds app is getting a new look — in more ways than one AYN Thor goes full Nintendo DS with an official stylus add-on Survey shows you’re not buying the Googlebooks hype just yet YouTube Premium gets three new features for an even better podcast experience Google Messages mostly walks back SIM switcher change everyone hated Google Meet’s latest update puts Gemini right where you need it Having issues with T-Mobile’s fiber internet? 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Fitbit’s new health coach is worse than my mom
Rita El Khoury · 2026-06-14 · via Android Authority

Google has teased its new AI-powered Health Coach in the Fitbit Google Health app for several months now and started testing it publicly with users who opted into the experiment. I’ve been wanting to take it for a spin and see how good it was, especially compared to Oura’s excellent insights and Advisor, but I couldn’t because it hadn’t rolled out to my account just yet.

A few weeks ago, just before I was about to head on a week-long trip, I got the notification asking me if I wanted to try the new health coach, and I instantly agreed. For the first week, I was running around Romania, pushing myself, and keeping an eye on how insightful the coach is… or not. Then I came back home and had to see how it adapted to a different rhythm. I admit, most days when I opened the Fitbit a.k.a. Google Health app, it felt like I was listening to my mother tell me I’m not doing things right.

Have you used Fitbit's new AI-powered Health Coach?

0 votes

The health coach talks a lot, even when it shouldn’t

Google Health Coach

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

Since I was moving a lot during the first week due to my travel, Fitbit’s new health coach was trying to catch up to me after almost every stretch. Wake up? The coach is there to tell me — more accurately, berate me — about my bad sleep. Take a walk from my hotel to downtown Bucharest? A new message from the coach. Another walk around downtown after lunch? One more message. Another walk back to the hotel after grabbing a coffee? You guessed it, a message.

The more I moved and paused, the more notifications I got from Fitbit. It was funny at first, but it got annoying after a while. I don’t need an update after a 13-minute stroll or every other little walk that didn’t move the needle all that much for my health. I wish the coach could have been actually smart and contextual, and understood that I was doing a lot of small walks throughout the entire day. If I’d been sedentary most of the day, then went for a quick 15-minute walk, then sure, interrupt me, but if I’m moving a lot, only something more substantial (say longer than 30 minutes) should warrant a notification.

What’s worse is that the “insight” it gave me wasn’t particularly insightful. You walked at a brisk pace, or you maintained an easy pace. Your heart rate didn’t rise too much — yeah, I was strolling. Or maybe it rose too quickly — I was going uphill, and I’m asthmatic, what do you want my heart rate to do?

By notifying me about every little activity I did, the Health Coach conditioned me to ignore its feedback. Too much noise versus signal ratio.

A proper “intelligent” coach would know when to shut up. But Google has built the new Health Coach to try to interpret every little thing it detects. A nap? Sure, let’s send a notification saying that was a refreshing nap. A few stairs climbed? Again, we’ll notify them about that, too. Please, I am living my life, I know what I’m doing. I don’t need feedback on every little thing I do.

The problem with this approach is that it made me feel like the Coach was all over me, and too much noise meant the actual important signals got lost in the middle of them. By the time my trip had ended, I was almost conditioned to not look at the Coach because I knew it talked a lot and didn’t say much most of the time.

The coach insists and doesn’t get a hint

I’ve been having a lot of terrible nights of sleep over the last month or so, and a lot of active days too, a combo that Google’s Health Coach doesn’t appreciate. But sometimes life imposes these things on you, and you don’t have a choice. I first found the coach’s advice funny and endearing, like a mom who just wants the best for me. You should turn off screens and rest earlier tonight. You’ve done more than enough today; you can rest. Dim the lights and give your brain a rest. It’s time to call it a day and get some actual rest.

Soon, though, the repetitiveness of the same advice became more and more annoying. Like a happy but nagging voice that always wants the best for me but doesn’t know when to shut up or take a hint. I know what a healthy lifestyle looks like, but not everyone can afford to live like that all the time. Sometimes, circumstances force you to move more, like when you’re traveling, or sleep less when you’re having anxiety issues.

I tried to reply to the AI and explain these, but it didn’t adapt all that much to my answers. It’s like it got the message one time, then after a couple of walks or hikes or bad sleep nights, it went back to nagging me about doing things right — its version of right.

Google should look at that aspect of the coach and help us tailor it to what we want. More feedback or less, more nagging or less, and maybe those can change throughout time, too. There are weeks when I’m much more receptive to feedback and willing to implement it, and weeks when I just want to be left alone. If I were paying for an in-person coach, they might have the right to constantly nag me, but an app on my phone should just follow my cues and tone it down when I don’t seem to be heeding its advice. Or, at least, I hope it could.

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