I know this is ana alarm and not a sleep tracking app, but I’ve been looking for an app comparable to the sleep app ever since I left android. Key features for me being. Source: almost 2 years ago
Started using this app https://sleep.urbandroid.org/ combined with NFC tags (really cheap on amazon). Now when my alarm goes off, the only way to turn it off is to touch it to the NFC tag in the bathroom. And once you are actually standing up, it is way easier to not go back to sleep. Source: about 2 years ago
Without immediate access to at-home sleep test kits, could something like Sleep as Android [1] be used to find out, in a first approximation? [1] https://sleep.urbandroid.org. - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
I use Sleep as Android on my phone and really like it. Source: about 2 years ago
Try the Android app "Sleep as Android". It is free and it works very well to track your sleep, which can be the basis of making changes. It can use a phones accelerometer to track breathing rate, use the microphone to record snoring (and make noises when you snore to stop you from snoring), can integrate with a variety of fitness trackers or works with just the phone, and has a lot of other useful features:... - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
I use a sleep app on my phone (Sleep as Android) that 1) tries to wake you up at the end of an REM sleep cycle (instead of during) so you're less groggy and 2) has a number of "challenge" alarms that force you to do something in order to turn them off. Source: over 2 years ago
When this was worst for me I had the best results with Apps like Sleep As Android where you could set the alarm in a way that requires you to scan a QR-code, touch an NFC-tag or something similar and put that thing in the bathroom so that I had to manually stand up and walk to the bathroom in order to disable the alarm. Source: over 2 years ago
For example the Sleep as Android app, which I used before Garmin, has by default a 30 minute window in which it will try to wake up if it thinks the user is in a light sleep phase - if not, the alarm rings at the end of the window. Source: over 2 years ago
I use Sleep as Android nowadays, but both are really good and most likely much better than whatever garbage app this is promoting. Sadly neither of them are open source. Source: over 2 years ago
Enter Sleep as Android. This app with its Watch companion seems to provide more accurate results. With this, my deep sleep levels at about 40% of my night. I believe it causes a battery drain of about 15-20%, and you can't disable the native sleep tracking meanwhile, but the results seem better and more detailed. Plus you'll gain a few more features, like smart alarms based on when you're in a sleep phase we're... Source: almost 3 years ago
The app I use supports a device called the sleep phaser. It's basically a connected night light with an ultrasonic sensor in it. When you have two (one on each side of the bed) it can track both partners, or use data from one partner to cancel out movement so your data is more accurate. The night light is RGB and the app will use it to slowly wake you up with a simulated sunrise when it thinks you'll be in a light... Source: almost 3 years ago
I tried manually turning on sleep tracking in the app. That made it track two simultaneous sleep records, one detailed and one not. I'm currently running my 3rd party sleep app on my phone (Sleep as Android), and adding any missing sleep time to the Fitbit app later (e.g., if I woke up at 8 am, and Fitbit stopped tracking at 6:30, I edit the end time to be the full length). Source: almost 3 years ago
I use a cool alarm app called [Sleep as Android](https://sleep.urbandroid.org/) which does everything in its power to wake me up in the best possible way: it tracks my sleep and wakes me up just right out of deep sleep and offers captchas which you have to solve in order to turn off the alarm, like shaking the phone hard for 40 seconds or going QR code hunting around the house; I also:. Source: about 3 years ago
For android devices: Sleep as Android. Not sure if such a thing exist for IOS devices. Source: over 3 years ago
Coming from Android, I was eager to find an alternative to Sleep as Android. Sleep Cycle looked like the most sophisticated one, but one thing is bugging me: The Apple Watch app is entirely independent of the smartphone app. Source: over 3 years ago
I use Sleep as Android for my alarms. It has support for alarms that start out pretty quiet, and get louder the longer you ignore it. You can configure how long you want that interval to be. Source: over 3 years ago
I have never in my life been able to get up, and my experience seems to be the same as yours. If I don't wake up "enough", I'm just going right back to bed. I can recommend the alarm app Sleep as Android. As a setting, you can choose that an alarm only stops if you have scanned a QR-code. I have mine taped to my bathroom mirror. That means I have to get up, go to my bathroom, turn on the lights, and scan a code... Source: over 3 years ago
How does native tracking compare to Sleep as Android + watch companion? I've been using the latter with my Gear S3, and it seems to be at least somewhat accurate. Source: over 3 years ago
I used an app called SleepAsAndroid to track my sleep through my Samsung Gear S3 smartwatch. The app tracks from when I go to bed until when I wake up, and records motion, light level, heart rate, and audio. It has a notes/tag section as well that can be set up to track user specific things: for example, I have multiple bed partners and track where I sleep and who I sleep with, as well as when I did or did not... Source: almost 4 years ago
I'd love to have my sleep date presented the way Sleep As Android presents it or even Fitbit. I wanna see my sleep data compared against my demographic, I wanna be able to filter dates easire. It's kinda maddening. What can I do? Source: almost 4 years ago
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