To centralize health data from multiple devices, you need a platform that aggregates data from different wearable APIs into a unified dashboard—combining sleep from Oura, workouts from Garmin, heart rate from Apple Watch, and nutrition from your food tracker. Currently, no major wearable company offers this natively, but third-party platforms and manual export methods can bridge the gap.
If you’re wearing multiple devices or switching between health apps daily, you already know the problem: your health data is scattered everywhere, and none of it talks to each other.
Your Oura Ring knows your sleep. Your Apple Watch tracks workouts. Garmin has your runs. MyFitnessPal logs your food. And you’re left jumping between five different apps trying to piece together what’s actually affecting your health.
This fragmentation isn’t just annoying—it’s hiding patterns that could transform how you optimize your wellness.
The wearable industry has a structural problem: every company wants to own your data.
Oura builds excellent sleep tracking but has no GPS. Apple Watch dominates activity but oversimplifies sleep stages. Whoop excels at recovery metrics but requires a subscription and lacks nutrition integration. Garmin owns the endurance athlete space but doesn’t connect well with non-Garmin ecosystems.
how do you guys organize your digital logs for long-term review
another day in the books: macros were spot on and training was 10/10
does anyone else find that logging their mood helps with cycle side effects