For years, big tech has treated wearables with screens as an inevitability.
Every new fitness tracker became a little more like a smartwatch. And every smartwatch became a little more demanding of your regular attention, which, if we’re being honest, has felt like the industry’s true endgame for years.
But now, the pendulum might, just maybe, be swinging back towards its early roots, thanks, in part, to the brand that first made fitness trackers a thing nearly 20 years ago.

Google’s newly announced Fitbit Air is a fully modernized $99 screenless device that strips the hardware side of the fitness and health-tracking equation down to its essentials: health tracking, battery life, and subtle design.
It can’t show texts or emails. It doesn’t mirror notifications. It can’t file your taxes. And these hard nos aren’t design limitations. They’re the biggest selling point.











