Superb battery life, Built-in GPS works great, Light, Waterproof, can track swims, Fitbit OS is easy to use
Lack of third-party apps, Can't reply to notifications, Proprietary charging cable,
The Fitbit Ionic is a solid first effort from Fitbit in the smartwatch segment; one that brings together a fantastic display, a stylish design, in-built GPS, waterproofing, and superb battery life in as light a package as possible. The battery lasts for o...
Comfortable fit, Sleep tracker, 5 day battery life
The Fitbit Ionic has its fair share of pros and cons. It's comfortable to wear and boasts of an excellent battery life. However, the display's touchscreen could've been better. The sleep tracker, the Coach feature and the heart-rate monitor work seamlessl...
The Fitbit Ionic is a mediocre smartwatch and an excellent fitness tracker. That's not too surprising given the company's pedigree. The Ionic represents an excellent improvement over the Charge 2 and the Surge but falls short of expectations. Its a great...
Fitbit Ionic is a good upgrade for those who have been using other Fitbit for a while. However, for others, given that the price is very similar to older Apple Watches, the Ionic might appear a bit underwhelming. But then not everyone is on the Apple ecos...
Superb design, Great battery life, Flawless fitness, Sleep tracking
Limited features, Expensive, Not very smart
The Ionic is definitely a pricey gadget with price of Rs 22,990. So, I don't recommend it unequivocally. But if you need top notch fitness tracking, do go for it. I particularly like its design, and how well it tracks steps and sleep. And I absolutely lov...
The Ionic is Fitbit's best all-round tracker so far.The trouble is, it's a $380 fitness tracker with some smartwatch scaffolding around it.That is way too expensive for what it currently offers. Many of its best features (the sleep tracking, SmartTrack, h...
Great design with beautiful colour display, Waterproof, GPS, Excellent platform, Continuous heart-rate monitoring, Automatic exercise recognition, Multi-sport tracking, Comfortable, Decent battery life
Touchscreen not responsive enough, Expensive, It's not that smart as smartwatches go
The Fitbit Ionic not only brings a solid, lightweight design with a beautiful screen, it also adds built-in GPS and dedicated swim functionality that the earlier Blaze was lacking. Compared to the newer Versa, it also offers GPS for that more complete exp...
Abstract: If you're sick and tired of reaching into your pocket for your smartphone every time someone sends you a messange on WhatsApp, you might find the convenience of a smartwatch – which delivers notifications straight to your wrist over a Bluetooth connection...
Fitbit's app remains excellent, Good wrist cardio tracking, Good battery life for a smartwatch
Lacks smartwatch features, It still feels like a step-counter with knobs on rather than a truly useful running/gym companion, It really is not a sexy thing
The Ionic hasn't quite reached its goals: it's a mixture of the good, the bad and the ugly.The divisive design doesn't help (although Fitbit fans are used to it; the Blaze was divisive too), but the bigger concern is the sometimes sluggish performance and...
Published: 2018-03-12, Author: James , review by: wareable.com
Better strap, Guided workouts, Still a good sport watch
More expensive in the US, Poor value if paying more, Underwhelming Adidas input
The Fitbit Ionic Adidas Edition, much like the standard Ionic, is still a work in progress. It's a decent running watch, with accurate GPS tracking and good heart rate skills, and a brilliant health tracking ecosystem – just like the Ionic. The Adidas Edi...