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ProfessorGAC

(74,643 posts)
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 09:18 PM 7 hrs ago

Smart Watch Glitch?

In my debates with xfinity, I was mollified by them giving me a Samsung Galaxy Watch8.
I wouldn't have bought a smart watch, but free is good.
I wore it to the golf course yesterday to play in the senior scramble. (Every Wednesday)
I only play nine because 18 takes too long, so I was getting ready to leave.
Back to the watch:
I got a message on the watch congratulating me on all the steps I took in the last few hours.
Problem is, I hate wearing a watch when I play.
So, the watch recorded my steps while it was in my golf bag? On a cart? Then, it congratulated me?
Methinks there is a programming glitch.

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Smart Watch Glitch? (Original Post) ProfessorGAC 7 hrs ago OP
Probably using GPS coordinates(nt) amerikat 7 hrs ago #1
Probably not Bernardo de La Paz 7 hrs ago #2
Yup. buzzycrumbhunger 7 hrs ago #3
With a bum knee, you probably mount steps slowly with few or no jolts. . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz 7 hrs ago #4
I don't think so... buzzycrumbhunger 6 hrs ago #8
In swivelling, there is acceleration and deceleration. A jolt is just the latter. . . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz 6 hrs ago #9
I don't have a smart watch, nor would I wear one EYESORE 9001 7 hrs ago #5
Mine records steps when I crochet. Lars39 6 hrs ago #6
That's exercise I can get behind, MLAA 6 hrs ago #7
Truly! Lars39 5 hrs ago #10
I'm giving up the treadmill and taking up knitting...with two needles I should get twice as my steps as crocheting! 🧶 MLAA 5 hrs ago #11
lol Lars39 5 hrs ago #14
That would be on your wrist, not in your pocket, right? Thus it is accelerometer, not GPS. . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz 5 hrs ago #13
I was right, it is accelerometers Bernardo de La Paz 5 hrs ago #12

Bernardo de La Paz

(59,143 posts)
2. Probably not
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 09:34 PM
7 hrs ago

I think they count steps with an accelerometer. That basically means jolts to the body when a foot hits the ground.

So I think the watch may have counted practice swings and actual swings.

I reread and it was in the bag. So each time a club goes in and out: a jolt. Each time bag is moved: a jolt. Each time cart bounces: a jolt because there is little or no cushioning in the bag.

buzzycrumbhunger

(1,378 posts)
3. Yup.
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 09:34 PM
7 hrs ago

I track my steps at work and there are times I run a few steps short of my goal, so I’ll stick my phone in my pocket around the house after work to keep tracking. I’m sure the watch works the same way, simply by locating your change in position. It does not seem to count walking up inclines as climbing steps, which kind of pisses me off. Me and my bum knee earned those extra points!

buzzycrumbhunger

(1,378 posts)
8. I don't think so...
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 10:29 PM
6 hrs ago

I’ve got no cartilage left in the left knee, so it’s a one-step-at-a-time deal, which should register. I avoid stairs as much as possible but when walking up wheelchair ramps or in the parking garage, even big slopes don’t count as stairs.

If I’m a few steps short of my daily goal, I can just twist left and right in my swivel chair a few times before bed and easily get those last few steps to register, so there’s no jolt to it. It’s simply using the GPS to track my position.

EYESORE 9001

(29,106 posts)
5. I don't have a smart watch, nor would I wear one
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 09:48 PM
7 hrs ago

It’s just personal preference as a matter of safety while using power equipment. I don’t wear rings either for the same reason. If I ever give up working with my hands using bitey and pinchy and burny things, I may give it a try. Still no ring. I’m worse than a kid with one of those fidget-spinner things that were a fad around a decade ago.

The accelerometers in your phone may have taken the motion of the golf cart as walking. The suspension of a golf cart isn’t really tuned for the most comfy of rides.


MLAA

(19,529 posts)
11. I'm giving up the treadmill and taking up knitting...with two needles I should get twice as my steps as crocheting! 🧶
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 10:53 PM
5 hrs ago

Bernardo de La Paz

(59,143 posts)
13. That would be on your wrist, not in your pocket, right? Thus it is accelerometer, not GPS. . . . nt
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 10:56 PM
5 hrs ago

Bernardo de La Paz

(59,143 posts)
12. I was right, it is accelerometers
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 10:55 PM
5 hrs ago
https://www.livescience.com/how-do-step-counters-work
Stephen Intille, an associate professor of computer science and health sciences at Northeastern University in Boston, told Live Science that the vast majority of step counters use accelerometers — a type of motion sensor.

The accelerometers, which are often strapped to a person's arm in the form of a watch, look for change in acceleration, said Intille. As a person moves, the acceleration of their body moves.

"If you think about that as a little curve, you are going to get little peaks and valleys every time that you step and go," Intille said. "That's your body going back and forth." He said that the algorithms inside the step counter look at those peaks and valleys to try to figure out the frequency that they occur.

"After the accelerometer sees some amount of frequency of movement that looks like walking or stepping, it starts to count each of these peaks, which end up being a step."


A different site (that in my estimation is a bit muddled including making spelling mistakes) says some use GPS and some use accelerometers, but then it has this:

There are lots of pedometer apps for cellphones that make use of built-in accelerometers. 1) This one's called Pedometer 24/7, runs on the Apple iPhone and iPod Touch, and seems to get good ratings from its users. As you can see here, it displays steps, average speed, total distance, and calories burned. You have to key in your height and weight to start, to give it a rough idea how long your steps are, and you can fine tune the sensitivity as well. 2) Google Fit is a more sophisticated excercise tracker that can figure out how much exercise you're taking for 120 different activities, including several different types of walking.


One way to check which is which is to run in place. If it counts steps running in place or doing jumping jacks or running on a treadmill, then it is not GPS. Another thing is that vehicle travel (car, bus, train) do not count as steps.
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