Newsylist real-time news trend intelligence
▲ Peaking Technology

Google Health 5.03 rolling out: More Today stats, naps part of sleep total

Google Health version 5.03 is rolling out with expanded data visualization in the Today tab and updated sleep tracking functionality.

5sources
5articles
3velocity
+0%since first seen
9m agofirst detected

Velocity timeline

How fast coverage is spreading — measured hourly from article rate × source diversity. How this works →

3210Jul 9 14:29Jul 9 16:29 UTC

The brief

Google has released version 5.03 of the Google Health application. The update introduces changes to the user interface, specifically aimed at increasing the amount of health metrics displayed within the Today tab.

Coverage from 9to5Google, Android Police, Android Authority, Droid Life, and Gadgets & Wearables focuses on the integration of nap data into total sleep calculations. Outlets highlight these updates as a significant step in aligning the application's feature set with those previously found in Fitbit platforms.

Users may monitor the rollout of version 5.03 as it becomes available for their devices. Further updates regarding additional metric integrations or platform parity have not been specified in current reporting.

Synthesized by Newsylist from the headlines below under a strict no-invention contract. ✓ fact-checked: all claims supported by sources Updated 5m ago.

Quick answers

What is the primary change to sleep tracking?

The 5.03 update now includes nap duration as part of the total daily sleep calculation.

How does the update change the Today tab?

The update enables users to view more of their preferred health metrics at a single glance.

Which platforms are referenced in relation to these updates?

Coverage notes that these features close a functional gap between Google Health and Fitbit.

Coverage (5)

People, places & organizations

Topics

Related trends

▲ Peaking Technology 🔮 holds ✗

Samsung Messages Just Shutdown For Good

Samsung Messages has officially ended service in the United States, requiring users to transition to alternative messaging platforms.

4 sources 4 articles v 2 1d ago