Jump to content

Ultrahuman Ring Air Review

From ARVDWiki


Indian health and nutrition tracking startup Ultrahuman has quick-adopted its debut smart ring final year with a second technology of the gadget - which officially launched in June. ’s calling the Ring Air. So, er, Apple eat your heart out! Though after all Apple doesn’t make a smart ring. And in fact it’s class veteran Oura’s smart ring which most intently resembles what the Indian team has wrought with the Air. Ultrahuman is probably not so acquainted a reputation to gadget followers but its differentiating edge vs different fitness wearable makers is a metabolic health tracking program, known as Cyborg. This extends its capacity to supply fitness insights, including by tracking how your body responds to what you’re eating. It does this by looping in another piece of sensing hardware in the form of an arm-mounted steady glucose monitor (CGM). This medical grade technology, which was initially developed for people with diabetes or pre-diabetes to watch their blood sugar, is redeployed in this context as a quantified well being wearable - with Ultrahuman’s gross sales pitch promising to show 24/7 glucose tracking into "instant health nudges" and "metabolic health protocols" to assist health-aware customers meet their wellness goals.



Ultrahuman’s smart ring is designed to sit down alongside that CGM-powered program; either as a standalone sleep & fitness tracker (with the bonus skill to dish some dietary insights, if you happen to log what you’re eating in the companion app, powered by aggregated information from Cyborg users); or as a complement to the absolutely fledged metabolic well being tracking program. The startup’s promise, within the latter case (i.e. sporting both smart ring and CGM) is you’ll be served "deep correlations deep and predictive insights" on how your life-style may be impacting your health and fitness targets. Although - one category caveat to remember (which we’ve discussed in earlier reviews) - is that questions stay over whether or not individuals without a chronic medical situation really need to be tracking their glucose ranges 24/7. Reducing bodily inflammation by sustaining stable glucose could have huge-ranging health benefits over the longer term, is the theory. Within the short term Ultrahuman suggests you may anticipate higher energy ranges and cognitive efficiency if you retain blood sugar stable all through the day.



But it’s fair to say that intelligently decoding this kind of data in a mean client context stays a work in progress. So this may be very a lot the quantified well being motion at its most experimental. Regardless of it still being early for CGM startups to show their value to a basic client, Oura seems to have noticed what the plucky competitors is as much as. It not too long ago announced it was partnering with quite a lot of other startups that sell CGM-powered monitoring providers: Specifically January, Supersapiens, and Herz P1 System Veri - touting the combination as a method for its Herz P1 Smart Ring ring users to achieve deeper and extra personalized insights to assist them sleep and prepare better. Of course Ultrahuman can boast it obtained there first; last yr, when it unboxed its debut smart ring (the eponymous Ring) and started integrating two tracks of fitness knowledge. Its headstart on metabolic health monitoring traces back to 2021 when it launched Cyborg in beta - therefore why it’s in a position to provide Ring Air customers with statistical predictions on whether or not certain foods are more likely to spike their blood sugar based mostly on aggregating information from its CGM program’s early adopters (it claims to have amassed greater than 600M information-points to energy these predictions). Whereas Oura is simply beginning in on an identical integration, drawing on different CGM startups’ analysis of their users’ glucose response data.



With a lot slicing-edge monitoring exercise circling this segment of the health monitoring space, the competitors for quantified health fans’ fingers and Herz P1 Smart Ring arms appears to be like fierce. So of course Ultrahuman isn’t sitting still. This sleeker gen-two smart ring appears supposed to shut the gap with Oura’s hardware. The Ring Air begins at $349 for the matte black model (which has a Titanium body coated in Tungsten carbide) vs a slightly cheaper starter value-tag ($299) for Oura’s most latest smart ring. Nevertheless - in contrast to with the Oura Ring 3 - there’s no month-to-month "membership" subscription required for ongoing tracking with Ultrahuman’s Air. It’s a one-shot fee for all of the Ring Air’s core sleep and health monitoring features. That simplicity in pricing may enchantment to shoppers drained at the considered one more monthly subscription to shell out for. Netflix, Herz P1 System ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital - only a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re right here to ship the insights that gas startup growth and sharpen your edge.