Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of those things that I don’t care about at all.
Yet you took the time to open the thread, write that sentence, and post it....Your interest in performing a lack of interest is odd.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of those things that I don’t care about at all.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it looks weird.
I think this is one reason Apple Watches are so popular.
Anonymous wrote:I love wearing my Fitbit and counting steps, but I cannot read the time on it when I am outside. The display only works inside. (This may be due to my poor eyesight, I don't know) So I would like to get an analog watch to wear too. Do you think it would look odd to wear them together on the same wrist? Maybe with a bracelet in-between them? Would you do this?
Anonymous wrote:I love wearing my Fitbit and counting steps, but I cannot read the time on it when I am outside. The display only works inside. (This may be due to my poor eyesight, I don't know) So I would like to get an analog watch to wear too. Do you think it would look odd to wear them together on the same wrist? Maybe with a bracelet in-between them? Would you do this?[/quote
Do what works for you and don't care how it looks to others! I know someone who for years wore a fitness tracker on one wrist and an analog watch on the other. I don't know what brand fitness tracker it was, but it looked more like a thick black rubber bracelet than a tracker with a watch-type face. He loves watches and has quite a few so he wasn't going to give up wearing his good-looking old-school watches! But he never wore the tracker on the same arm. Just for me (again, you do what works for you), I'd wear them on different wrists which to me looks more "balanced" and reduces the tracker bumping the watch all the time, which isn't good for either, probably.