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Samsung Unveils Ambitious Health Care Vision to Surpass Apple

Samsung and Apple Health Monitoring War

While Samsung and Apple are engaged in fierce battles for global supremacy on multiple different fronts of the larger tech industry, the health monitoring war between the two behemoths might be the most fascinating, evenly contested, and quite possibly the most consequential of them all.

It’s no big secret that both companies have incredibly ambitious plans for the future of wearable devices, looking not only to diversify the shapes and types of the products you’ve come to rely on for tracking your vitals and well-being day in and day out, but most importantly, aiming to vastly improve their capabilities, accuracy, reliability, and impact on your health.

Non-invasive glucose monitoring is coming (in some form) “within five years”

We’re talking about putting a blood sugar monitor on a consumer wearable without actually drawing blood, pricking your skin, or causing any user discomfort whatsoever. That’s clearly an incredibly difficult task for several reasons, but Samsung is confident the job can be done… at some point in the not-so-distant future, although the specifics on how all technical challenges will eventually be overcome remain a complete mystery.

Continuous blood pressure tracking is also in the works

But that’s still a start, and Samsung is unsurprisingly working tirelessly on taking the technology to the next level… sooner or later. The aim, of course, is to allow you to keep an eye on your blood pressure all day (and all night) long without ever needing anything other than a Galaxy Watch, Galaxy Ring, or Galaxy Buds.

That’s right, these vastly improved sensors could be coming to a wide range of Samsung products in the future, although something tells us they will probably be integrated first into one of the company’s upcoming smartwatches. Maybe even the Galaxy Watch 7 and Galaxy Watch 7 Classic later this year.

Unlike in the blood sugar monitoring field, Samsung’s early blood pressure technology start could allow it to push the functionality to a truly life-changing stage way before Apple can do the same. But of course, you can never know exactly how far the Cupertino-based tech giant has gotten with the internal development of a potentially groundbreaking technology until said tech is unveiled to the public.

What’s nice to hear is that both giants are looking at crucial ways to help their users live better and longer. That, our friends, is far more important than a new camera, RAM upgrade, and even all those massively advertised AI skills and features.

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