According to Amazon, how you speak is a useful indicator of your wellbeing, both emotionally and physically. Consequently, the Halo Band will monitor your tone to determine if you’re feeling positive enough to get through your day. Each morning, you’ll get a breakdown of your tonal patterns with tips on how to sound warmer, even when you’re having a teeth-gritting meeting with your boss.

It’s not clear in the announcement how the ideal tone has been modeled, and what sort of source material was gathered to make this conclusion. Every person’s voice is different after all, and it seems odd to suggest there’s a universal standard that everyone should aspire toward. That said, Amazon details that the speech samples are processed locally and never sent to the company’s cloud servers. It adds that you can block the Band’s listening by pressing a button on the watch for three seconds.

As for the app itself, it’s designed to help you identify and reduce your body fat percentage (BFP), which Amazon says is a better metric for health. Halo will apparently be able to produce a viable model of your body if you take a full-body selfie with your smartphone camera. The app will then create a 3D model to tell you your BFP, as well as a slider showing you what you’d look like if you lost, or gained, more weight. Amazon’s Maulik Majmudar, M.D says that its system is as accurate as a pricey examination at a doctors, something we look forward to testing.

Halo will also give you points to reward you for living well, and the more active you are, the more points you earn. So, for instance, if you walk everywhere you’ll get a certain quantity, but those who run everywhere will be earning several more points per day. You’ll also get sleep monitoring with a sleep score, and scientifically-backed challenges that’ll help you find a workout program that’s right for you.

Amazon isn’t doing this in isolation, either, and has teamed up with a number of partner companies including Headspace and Weight Watchers as well as John Hancock Vitality. Apparently, the Halo Band will be the wearable of choice for Vitality members, which is offering three years of membership to selected subscribers.

Amazon Halo is currently in a testing phase and users in the US can request to be part of the trial by signing up here. The hardware is, for early adopters, priced at $65, with the regular price expected to rise to $100, while the monthly subscription will set you back $4 after an initial six-month trial period expires. People buying the band can get it in three colors: Black, Blush and Silver, with additional band colors available for between $15 and $20 a pop.



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