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Google Map How is Siri my Apple Is it possible to change to the AI health coach required for Watch?
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The partnership with Google could raise his health offer to a new level. I've been wearing the screenless Fitbit Air from now on for a few weeks Go, and although there are many comparisons with its luxury counterpart, the Whoop, I fell by testing Google’s health tracker instead its biggest competitor, Apple one. While I would be happy to bring Apple to the market its own screenless health tracker, I would rather wish to upgrade its own health suite – and this starts with the software. Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference starts on Monday and the software presented there will be delivered to Apple's next-generation products. It may not seem like that, but the WWDC could mark a turning point for the technology giant, with the focus being on the mundane syrup revision. Find out why. Twins will be driving the next Siri
Google's Gemini will drive the next generation of Siri, as the two companies announced at the beginning of the year. Companies are constantly using other software – but Apple is not an average company. Steve Jobs kept Apple's hardware and software well-known closed and had little interest in its products in Android- integrate devices or integrate Google products into the Apple ecosystem. Unfortunately, we write the year 2026, the AI has flooded the Android hardware and Apple has no longer grown. It was time Apple made a deal. As a health editor of ZDNET, I am most intrigued by the health and fitness facilities that result from Google's Siri revision. Even though it's not perfect, my experience in testing Google's AI Health Coach has convinced me that Health AI is a useful tool. By simply having a chatbot calling my sleep, training and stress data, I can ask health-related questions that take into account my specific conditions and receive personalized answers and recommendations. In addition, I’m curious how Apple will integrate this software into its devices to create something that stands out from the competition. I would be happy to have a new health app (and a new chatbot). I would like to see a review of the health app similar to Google made it with its Fitbit app, now Google Health. It is high time that Apple uses the data it already collects from Apple Watch to create new daily readings, link information across apps or deliver new insights. A health chatbot could be implemented so easily into the health app, but Apple would have to configure Google’s Gemini to be as private, secure and encrypted as its own products. This is one of the many reasons why people flow to Apple via Android devices, and it is a great challenge in this collaboration: Will Apple give up some of its own privacy measures to integrate a functioning AI into its products? I hope that Apple mentions this when it reveals this alleged health-related AI assistant. The health assistant could interact between apps such as the Health App, the Journal and the Apple Watch Fitness app to log information without a user having to manually enter it in all apps. So, suppose a user logs a mood in the journal app: The Health AI could link this mood with physiological information in the user's health, sleep or training apps. Building on the sleep score Apple introduced in September, I would also like Apple to integrate more data from the smartwatch into daily summaries that you can check. When testing Fitbit Air and Google Health Premium, I enjoyed getting a small summary of my daily activities, recommendations for sleeping time and suggestions for more movement. Apple's position within the health ecosystem places emphasis on data protection and scientifically sound solutions. I would like to see the research-based approach for a readiness score, a stress monitoring or a more robust wellness recommendation machine. Interactive and easy to digest data
Apple apparently developed its health app with interactivity afterwards. That makes sense. It is not a game or streaming app; It is not an app where people should not spend more than five minutes exploring them. But the apps Oura and Google Health have proven that people actually get more out of their health device when data is displayed in an interactive and comprehensible way. Oura manages this best with tabs for daily sleep, activity and stress levels; a short-term, aggregated tab with important biometric data; and the ‘longitudinal health’ tab showing information such as stress management, sleep health and heart health. When Apple redesigns its health coach and health app, the company is well positioned for all future wearables it develops.
