Is there an easy way to remotely monitor another person's pulse?
My partner and I are getting older, and sleep in different rooms at different times. We've both worried about the other dying unbeknownst. I wear a pulse watch, but don't know if it will do what I want. Any ideas, friends? I'd like us to be able to glance at a screen and see a heartbeat, ideally without spending more than a couple hundred dollars, and without too much hassle or cumbersome equipment. I appreciate any suggestions. (edit - we use android and Linux.)
If you have an iPhone, you can get an Apple Watch and set it up using the other person’s phone. The health app will tell you what the person’s heart rate is. It will also do sleep tracking and check blood oxygen levels. It will also notify you if the person falls. It can also be used to contact 911 if it is in range of your phone, or if you buy the cellular version and add it to your cell phone plan.
If you live near an Apple store, stop in and ask about it. The trick will be to set up/link your spouses watch with your iPhone so you can continuously monitor the other person.
Thank you. As a former IT guy, I've been trying to keep my family away from Apple products. They're way overpriced for their limited and locked down functionality compared to everything else out there.
My dad had Parkinson's late in his life and my sister replaced his Android with an iPhone, specifically so she could give him this fitness tracker. He spent the last few years of his life struggling to figure out a new phone, and we could never get the damn app to work anyway. He fell all the time and it never once reported it.
I spent 20 years in the IT field and getting my computer-illiterate family to consult me before buying computer tech is like pulling teeth. I offer them free consultation and support all the time and they just go out and buy spyware-riddled junk on their own. They only come to me when their stuff is no longer useable.
My sister finally stopped buying iPads... only for her to go and buy Amazon Fire tablets for her kids. I had to go in and lock them down because they were constantly shoving ads into every function of the tablet. Her kids kept trying to buy games because they were constantly being advertised to them. And guess who left their credit card credentials on the tablet?
There are quite the number of fitness bands and watches that can do this too for android. No reason you cant set up a device to the opposite partners phone.
To add to this iirc all cell towers will take 911 calls even if a phone has no sim. So if you truly only will ever use it for 911. You should be able to buy the cellular version of the watch and not even have to add it to your phone plan.
Found this article. It looks like this is the easier way to set up an Apple watch for somebody else in your family that you can monitor. There’s probably something similar for android watches.
I'm afraid I can't offer any recommendations but I just wanted to say how beautiful it is to think of you keeping track of each others heartbeats while you're apart. That's love
Awwww, thanks. Isn't life just full of these messy, scary, oddball realities that no one ever tells you? I found so many of them in parenthood. Aging looks like more of the same.
I remember seeing this ring built specifically for this purpose. It was an unobtrusive metal band and you could synch it up to its pair and it would squeeze your finger in time with the pair's heartbeat sensor, I'll see if I can find it again
I don't believe this is the one I came across but was all I could find with a quick search. The website seems a li'l sketchy based on grammatical errors so I'd do some double checking into it but it seems like what you're looking for. https://my.thetouchx.com/hbring/howto-use-hbring
I don't have an end-to-end solution, but I will say as a former Pebble user that I'm delighted with my BangleJS watch. It's inexpensive, I charge it once a week, and it has the usual activity tracker hardware including heart rate monitor. There are a ton of apps. It's less "hacker" and more polished for non-technical users than you might expect; if you're running Linux, this is absolutely within your comfort zone. It also has a temp monitor, so it can detect when the watch it being worn or not.
The customized GadgetBridge Android app is good, most of the programming is in JavaScript, and the developer community is active and responsive.
A quick glance through the app "store" (they're nearly all free) shows there's a heart alarm app, which seems aimed at notifying the wearer. Another app publishes heart rate over bluetooth, so someone must have a pair device that monitors heart rates.
I didn't see anything obvious in the ecosystem, but since the data is going to GadgetBridge already, it's most of the way there; if GadgetBridge could publish to web hooks, with ntfy you could get alerts from watch to partner's phone. I haven't yet looked through the GB issues to see if someone has already requested it, and I've only done light digging in the app itself; it may already support this.
It's worth investigating.
Edit looks like others have requested similar features (and this, and this); it hasn't been implemented yet.
Streamers sometimes use a heart rate monitor widget on stream. There might be multiple solutions here but checking out pulsoid.net it seems like a free solution can be made here if it is compatible with the smart watch used. Android app to webpage might be possible with setting up a local host server. Don't know what it'll do to the battery life of your watch and if the widget works without OBS integration. Maybe someone familiar with this can weigh in?
Excellent. I do this all the time, answer the wrong question. But yes, you are completely right, check pulse with your fingers. I feel very close to you right now.