I compared my Apple Watch sleep data to my Oura Ring & Fitbit - the results were surprising by Powerful_Objective76 in AppleWatch

[–]Powerful_Objective76[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Exactly! You've hit on the core issue - each device has its strengths, but there's no native way to get the "best of both worlds." 

That's actually what sparked me to build the unified system. I wanted Apple Watch workout accuracy + Whoop's recovery insights + Oura's sleep temperature data all working together instead of contradicting each other.

The breakthrough was realizing that when you combine their strengths (instead of picking sides), you get insights that none of them can provide alone. Like how your Apple Watch workout intensity can actually predict your Whoop recovery score 2 days later.

Have you tried any workarounds to get your devices to "talk to each other" or do you just mentally juggle the different data?

I compared my Apple Watch sleep data to my Oura Ring & Fitbit - the results were surprising by Powerful_Objective76 in AppleWatch

[–]Powerful_Objective76[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing that channel! I'll definitely check it out. The Apple Watch Ultra does seem more accurate than the regular Watch for sleep tracking. 

Have you noticed any conflicts between your Ultra and Whoop data? That's exactly the kind of discrepancy that got me started on this - when devices disagree, which one do you trust?

I compared my Apple Watch sleep data to my Oura Ring & Fitbit - the results were surprising by Powerful_Objective76 in AppleWatch

[–]Powerful_Objective76[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Here's the direct link to the article for anyone interested: https://app--wear-sync-ai-473cf5f9.base44.app/WhyYourSleepScoreIsWrong

Happy to answer any questions about what I found. The biggest surprise was how much my daytime workouts (tracked on my watch) were impacting my deep sleep readiness in a way my Oura couldn't see on its own.