Google wants you to 3D-print your own Fitbit Air bands

Google is opening up the Fitbit Air ecosystem in a surprising way, giving creators the tools needed to design and even 3D-print their own custom bands.

Luna is betting you’re tired of fitness subscriptions and offering its screenless band as the solution

Luna’s first screenless fitness band arrives in July without a subscription fee, with voice-based health logging, 10-day battery life, and LifeOS support for Siri and Gemini.

Whoop’s response to Fitbit Air and Google Health is real doctors, not just an AI chatbot.

Google trusts Gemini to coach your health; Whoop is putting a licensed doctor on your screen. Here’s what each approach actually means for your wallet and your wellbeing.

Google’s Fitbit Air is a screenless $99 Whoop rival, and its core features don’t need a subscription

The Fitbit Air weighs 5 grams without its strap, tracks heart rate, blood oxygen, skin temperature, and steps around the clock, lasts seven days on a charge, and costs $99.99.