商品尺寸 | 5.84 x 2.29 x 4.06 cm; 18.14 克 |
---|---|
产品颜色 | Princess |
屏幕尺寸 | 0.61 英寸 |
型号 / 款式 | 010-01909-33 |
包装清单 | Vivofit jr. 2, Documentation |
GARMIN 佳明 vivofit jr. 3 儿童健身追踪器,电池寿命长达1年,Princess,Adjustable band
Garmin vívofit jr 2, Kids Fitness/Activity Tracker, Disney Princess, Pink, 1-Year Battery Life
页面含机器翻译,中文仅供参考,以原文为准
镇店之宝价: | ¥419.22¥419.22
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分期计划 | 手续费 | 总金额 |
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¥142.96×3期 | ¥9.64 (2.3%) | ¥428.86 |
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¥37.61×12期 | ¥31.44 (7.5%) | ¥450.66 |
提升您的购买力
- Disney Princess 儿童健身追踪器,带互动应用体验
- 游泳友好型表带具有可定制的彩色屏幕和用户可更换电池,可使用 1 年以上;无需充电。
- 家长可以在父母控制的应用程序上访问杂务管理和励工具
- 激励孩子们实现活跃的分钟目标,解锁迪士尼公主 Ariel、Belle、Jasmine、木兰和长发公主的冒险、游戏和图标
- 估计步数、和 60 分钟每日活动。提醒提醒和任务定时器让孩子们应对家庭作业、练习时间和刷牙等家务。
- Disney Princess kids fitness tracker with interactive app experience
- Swim-friendly band features a customizable color screen and user-replaceable battery that lasts 1+ year; no recharging needed
- Parents can access chore management and reward tools on the parent-controlled app
- Motivates kids to achieve active minute goals that unlock adventures, games and icons featuring Disney Princesses Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Mulan and Rapunzel
- Estimates steps, sleep and 60 minutes of daily recommended activity
- Reminder alerts and task timer keeps kids on top of chores such as homework, practice time and brushing teeth
亚马逊海外购
亚马逊海外购-Thermos
膳魔师品牌于1904年在德国创立,英文“THERMOS”源于希腊文,意为“热量、保温”,也代表了膳魔师产品最大的优点和特色。现今,因为膳魔师优越的保温性能,已成为保温瓶全球通用的称呼,实际意义即为THERMOS便是保温容器的始祖。 >>查看Thermos >>查看海外购厨具店
产品信息
技术细节
更多信息
ASIN | B07GLVFVBM |
---|---|
用户评分 |
4.6 颗星,最多 5 颗星 |
亚马逊热销商品排名 | 商品里排第11,679名运动户外休闲 (查看商品销售排行榜运动户外休闲) 商品里排第52名运动追踪设备 |
Amazon.cn上架时间 | 2018年10月16日 |
制造商 | Garmin |
我来补充
商品描述
Garmin Vivofit Jr. 2 Disney Princess::Children spend a lot of time staring at screens nowadays. Invest in something fun to get them moving and encourage responsibility. The Garmin Vivofit Jr. 2 Disney Princess isn't just a fitness tracker for kids. It's an interactive experience where activity unlocks adventure. The swim-friendly band features a 1+ year battery life - no recharging necessary. With vívofit jr. 2, kids can uncover Disney Princess adventures and games on the parent-controlled app by completing 60 minutes of daily activity. While kids explore magical kingdoms with Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Mulan and Rapunzel, parents can use the app to monitor activity, manage and assign chores and even give rewards to positively enforce good behavior. The vivofit jr. 2 is tough and durable enough to take on your child's roughest behavior. Make exercise, chores and daily tasks fun for your kids with vivofit jr.2 and encourage habits to drive success later in life.
Garmin Vivofit Jr. 2 Disney Princess::Children spend a lot of time staring at screens nowadays. Invest in something fun to get them moving and encourage responsibility. The Garmin Vivofit Jr. 2 Disney Princess isn't just a fitness tracker for kids. It's an interactive experience where activity unlocks adventure. The swim-friendly band features a 1+ year battery life - no recharging necessary. With vívofit jr. 2, kids can uncover Disney Princess adventures and games on the parent-controlled app by completing 60 minutes of daily activity. While kids explore magical kingdoms with Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Mulan and Rapunzel, parents can use the app to monitor activity, manage and assign chores and even give rewards to positively enforce good behavior. The vivofit jr. 2 is tough and durable enough to take on your child's roughest behavior. Make exercise, chores and daily tasks fun for your kids with vivofit jr.2 and encourage habits to drive success later in life.
Garmin Vívofit Jr. 2 活动追踪器::没有一个比孩子更多的鼓励 - 不只是需要额外的步骤或积极玩耍时间! 设计有一系列有趣的 Disney、Marvel Avengers 或 Star Wars 主题,旨在满足每个独特的个性和角色偏好,Vivofit 青少年 2 24/7 活动追踪器到达现场,及时提供重要的返校提醒,如家庭作业提醒和个性化通知,让您的孩子在轨道上行走,激励着一切事,包括刷牙他们的道德! 后部配有彩色、阳光可读的显示屏和自定义手表面,外加应用探险,每次孩子完成日常活动目标时,这些趣味活动追踪器只是为了改善*、学校成功和态度而无法使用的拼图!
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此商品在美国亚马逊上最有用的商品评论

1. Additional themes/adventures cost $30
2. I tested the watch on the wrist of an 11yo and it fits just fine.
3. The watch can be paired to multiple devices.
4. "Family Guardians" can be invited to help manage the child devices, chores and rewards.
5. You can freely adjust the child's earned points, adding or taking away, as needed.
6. A half-second press on the button activates the backlighting for a couple of seconds.
I have three of these Vivofit Jr 3 watches in different designs. My primary reason for buying these is for chore/reward tracking; fitness tracking was secondary. If you simply want a fitness tracker for your kids, and you don't already use a Garmin watch yourself, just go with the latest Fitbit Ace. Even though it has to be charged every ~5 days, I've found it to be a better fitness tracker.
For me, the best thing about these watches is the chore/reward tracking. You can create separate chores for each child/watch. Each chore can be a single event or recurring. You can set a time for when the chore is due. For example, you can set "Take Out Trash" for Monday and Thursday at 7p and recurs weekly. You can set a reminder to alert the watch. The reminder can be accompanied with a graphic (selection from maybe 20 images) and a short title/message. That's great and works like any calendar/task reminder alert would from a smartwatch.. but kiddified. Also, it's called "chores" in the system but you're not limited to typical household chore options. You can define your own title and so you can define your own task. The "chore" could be "10k Steps" or "30 minutes on trampoline" or "4 mi on the stationary bike".
How it becomes motivating is the fact that you can assign a point value (gold coins) to each chore. Feed the dog might be 1 point; taking out the trash might be 2 points. The child then checks in with you so you can verify and mark the chore as completed in the app. When you do, the points are then synced back to the watch. They can see their point bank on the watch at any time.
In the app, you can (and probably should) establish a rewards shop where the child can spend their points. This is the primary motivator for the kid. Setting up the watch itself takes just a few minutes. The reward shop took me quite a while to think the items through and balanced. This would look different for every family, it can look different for each child, and you can be as simple or complex/creative as you care to be. I have about 20 items in my shop from a "chore pass", extra bedtime book, choose the boardgame for game night... to outdoor experiences and outings... or app/game purchases of varying values, cash redemption, or matching for larger purchases that they may have been saving their cash for. It would be interesting to see other families reward shops to get ideas. I created my own, but you can find any allowance/rewards idea list and just recreate it as a digital shop here.
ANNOYANCES AND WISHLIST
Short screen wake time — Garmin boasts a battery life of 1yr but the experience takes a hit for that. While the screen is in its dimmed, power-saving state, you can still use it as normal as long as you are in a very brightly lit area. You can long-press on the button (0.5 second) to turn on the backlighting but that goes away in just a couple of seconds if you're not actively clicking/navigating. This results in constantly long-pressing to activate the backlighting. As of right now I don't see a way to extend this time. This is something the kid can get used to but it would've been nice to be able to set the backlight duration at the cost of shortening the 1yr battery life. Even if we're not able to define the exact time, having the ability to select a "suggested" or "extended" backlighting option would've been nice.
Only one button — Everything on this watch is controlled by one single button. The Fitbit Ace 2 has one button but it also has a touch screen; this does not. You short press to flip through the screens. You long press (0.5 second) to turn on the backlighting. You press and hold (2 seconds) to jump to your Menu where you can do things like manually sync with the app, start a step challenge or timed activity or use the timer and stopwatch. The press-and-hold is also how you select from the menu. It would've been nice to have 2 buttons. Personally, I would've liked a second button to control backlighting or be a mappable shortcut button to start a challenge, timed activity, or something.
Additional Adventures are expensive — Each watch design comes with one of 3 watch themes and app Adventure game: Disney Princess, Marvel Infinity Saga, or a generic World Tour adventure theme. The only difference in the two Marvel watches is the band as both watches have access to the same character options and watch faces. The Disney Princess watches are similar. The Camo, Floral, and Star watches come with the generic World Tour adventure and theme. The only way for you to switch themes/adventures is to buy a whole new band for $30... which comes with the code to unlock that theme. I find this to be extremely annoying and would've preferred to be able to purchase themes separately. As of the time of writing this, your only option is to buy the bands directly from Garmin. So if your kid prefers a green band and wants the Marvel theme, the only way you can get this is to buy the $80 watch plus a $30 band from Garmin.
No family chore calendar or unified organizer — As of right now, you have 2 chore views in the app. You can view what chores a specific child has for a specific day or you can view a list of all chore titles assigned to that child. So you can see that Child01 has "Take out Trash" and "Unload Dishwasher" in a list, but you can't see any details until you drill down into each. Some chores could be worth different points, some might have different recurrences, and some are likely due at different times in the day. The lack of a detailed overview makes organizing chores cumbersome... especially if you have multiple kids. If you don't create a lot of chores, it may be fine. Otherwise, you may still need to have a master calendar or chart elsewhere to keep things organized. It would be nice to be able to view a child and family calendar even if it's a week view. While we're at it, having the option to manage everything from browser (like through Garmin Connect) would be even better.
Cannot view chore list from the watch — The child can see only the number of chores they have that day and they can receive a notification for each chore at a designated time. They're not able to see a list of chores they have for the day on the watch; They'll need to access the app for that. Without being able to see the chores they have, they're unable to plan ahead, complete chores early, or review chores. If they get a notification to "Feed the Fish" at 5p and dismiss it, there's no way for them to see that chore again on the watch. Unless you change your chores around, the child will eventually learn what they have to do each day. Still, a daily chore list on the watch seems like it should've been an obvious function to me. As is, the system seems like it's designed more for children who have regular access to a phone/tablet. Those who don't might need to rely on a separate calendar/chart and the watch notifications would serve only as reminders.
Challenge options are limited — The "challenges" are categorized as "Family Challenges" and "Toe-to-Toe" challenges. With Family Challenges, you can set Step Count, Active Minutes, or Goal Completion challenges for select family members over a time span of at least 1 day. It's not possible to set a family challenge to say 15 minutes. Toe-to-Toe let's the child initiate a 2-minute Personal Best step challenge for themselves or a one-on-one 2-minute step challenge against one other watch. There's no way to set a toe-to-toe for longer than 2 minutes or for more than 2 kids. Even with both options, it's not possible to do something like a 10-Minute Family Step Challenge... something that seems like a missed opportunity.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Ever since the first Vivofit Jr came out, I've found it rather surprising that chore/reward tracking on kids watches didn't become more popular. Sure, it's essentially a fitness smartwatch with a slightly more robust task reminder function (and a widget to show points accumulated) but it works pretty well. It could definitely be improved for sure, but it's good enough.
I do wish that other companies would offer a chore/reward function because I feel that some would do it better than Garmin... or at least maybe competition would facilitate some improvements here. Garmin hasn't exactly been innovating on this front lately. Those with the Vivofit Jr 2 would find little reason to upgrade. The only real change from v2 to v3 is the screen. But while the larger size is nice, the upgrade from 8-colors to 64-colors sounds a lot better than it is in practice. The screen is quite dim and the added colors can't really be appreciated. While the Jr 3 appears to be a significant improvement over its predecessor, it ultimately feels more like a dot release. Some design and pricing choices make this iteration slightly disappointing... At least for someone who waited a year for this watch to be released.
That being said, it's still a decent watch in my opinion. If you don't own the Jr 2, and are looking for a way to motivate your child(ren) to do chores and stay active, this is a good option.

2020年11月20日 在美国审核
1. Additional themes/adventures cost $30
2. I tested the watch on the wrist of an 11yo and it fits just fine.
3. The watch can be paired to multiple devices.
4. "Family Guardians" can be invited to help manage the child devices, chores and rewards.
5. You can freely adjust the child's earned points, adding or taking away, as needed.
6. A half-second press on the button activates the backlighting for a couple of seconds.
I have three of these Vivofit Jr 3 watches in different designs. My primary reason for buying these is for chore/reward tracking; fitness tracking was secondary. If you simply want a fitness tracker for your kids, and you don't already use a Garmin watch yourself, just go with the latest Fitbit Ace. Even though it has to be charged every ~5 days, I've found it to be a better fitness tracker.
For me, the best thing about these watches is the chore/reward tracking. You can create separate chores for each child/watch. Each chore can be a single event or recurring. You can set a time for when the chore is due. For example, you can set "Take Out Trash" for Monday and Thursday at 7p and recurs weekly. You can set a reminder to alert the watch. The reminder can be accompanied with a graphic (selection from maybe 20 images) and a short title/message. That's great and works like any calendar/task reminder alert would from a smartwatch.. but kiddified. Also, it's called "chores" in the system but you're not limited to typical household chore options. You can define your own title and so you can define your own task. The "chore" could be "10k Steps" or "30 minutes on trampoline" or "4 mi on the stationary bike".
How it becomes motivating is the fact that you can assign a point value (gold coins) to each chore. Feed the dog might be 1 point; taking out the trash might be 2 points. The child then checks in with you so you can verify and mark the chore as completed in the app. When you do, the points are then synced back to the watch. They can see their point bank on the watch at any time.
In the app, you can (and probably should) establish a rewards shop where the child can spend their points. This is the primary motivator for the kid. Setting up the watch itself takes just a few minutes. The reward shop took me quite a while to think the items through and balanced. This would look different for every family, it can look different for each child, and you can be as simple or complex/creative as you care to be. I have about 20 items in my shop from a "chore pass", extra bedtime book, choose the boardgame for game night... to outdoor experiences and outings... or app/game purchases of varying values, cash redemption, or matching for larger purchases that they may have been saving their cash for. It would be interesting to see other families reward shops to get ideas. I created my own, but you can find any allowance/rewards idea list and just recreate it as a digital shop here.
ANNOYANCES AND WISHLIST
Short screen wake time — Garmin boasts a battery life of 1yr but the experience takes a hit for that. While the screen is in its dimmed, power-saving state, you can still use it as normal as long as you are in a very brightly lit area. You can long-press on the button (0.5 second) to turn on the backlighting but that goes away in just a couple of seconds if you're not actively clicking/navigating. This results in constantly long-pressing to activate the backlighting. As of right now I don't see a way to extend this time. This is something the kid can get used to but it would've been nice to be able to set the backlight duration at the cost of shortening the 1yr battery life. Even if we're not able to define the exact time, having the ability to select a "suggested" or "extended" backlighting option would've been nice.
Only one button — Everything on this watch is controlled by one single button. The Fitbit Ace 2 has one button but it also has a touch screen; this does not. You short press to flip through the screens. You long press (0.5 second) to turn on the backlighting. You press and hold (2 seconds) to jump to your Menu where you can do things like manually sync with the app, start a step challenge or timed activity or use the timer and stopwatch. The press-and-hold is also how you select from the menu. It would've been nice to have 2 buttons. Personally, I would've liked a second button to control backlighting or be a mappable shortcut button to start a challenge, timed activity, or something.
Additional Adventures are expensive — Each watch design comes with one of 3 watch themes and app Adventure game: Disney Princess, Marvel Infinity Saga, or a generic World Tour adventure theme. The only difference in the two Marvel watches is the band as both watches have access to the same character options and watch faces. The Disney Princess watches are similar. The Camo, Floral, and Star watches come with the generic World Tour adventure and theme. The only way for you to switch themes/adventures is to buy a whole new band for $30... which comes with the code to unlock that theme. I find this to be extremely annoying and would've preferred to be able to purchase themes separately. As of the time of writing this, your only option is to buy the bands directly from Garmin. So if your kid prefers a green band and wants the Marvel theme, the only way you can get this is to buy the $80 watch plus a $30 band from Garmin.
No family chore calendar or unified organizer — As of right now, you have 2 chore views in the app. You can view what chores a specific child has for a specific day or you can view a list of all chore titles assigned to that child. So you can see that Child01 has "Take out Trash" and "Unload Dishwasher" in a list, but you can't see any details until you drill down into each. Some chores could be worth different points, some might have different recurrences, and some are likely due at different times in the day. The lack of a detailed overview makes organizing chores cumbersome... especially if you have multiple kids. If you don't create a lot of chores, it may be fine. Otherwise, you may still need to have a master calendar or chart elsewhere to keep things organized. It would be nice to be able to view a child and family calendar even if it's a week view. While we're at it, having the option to manage everything from browser (like through Garmin Connect) would be even better.
Cannot view chore list from the watch — The child can see only the number of chores they have that day and they can receive a notification for each chore at a designated time. They're not able to see a list of chores they have for the day on the watch; They'll need to access the app for that. Without being able to see the chores they have, they're unable to plan ahead, complete chores early, or review chores. If they get a notification to "Feed the Fish" at 5p and dismiss it, there's no way for them to see that chore again on the watch. Unless you change your chores around, the child will eventually learn what they have to do each day. Still, a daily chore list on the watch seems like it should've been an obvious function to me. As is, the system seems like it's designed more for children who have regular access to a phone/tablet. Those who don't might need to rely on a separate calendar/chart and the watch notifications would serve only as reminders.
Challenge options are limited — The "challenges" are categorized as "Family Challenges" and "Toe-to-Toe" challenges. With Family Challenges, you can set Step Count, Active Minutes, or Goal Completion challenges for select family members over a time span of at least 1 day. It's not possible to set a family challenge to say 15 minutes. Toe-to-Toe let's the child initiate a 2-minute Personal Best step challenge for themselves or a one-on-one 2-minute step challenge against one other watch. There's no way to set a toe-to-toe for longer than 2 minutes or for more than 2 kids. Even with both options, it's not possible to do something like a 10-Minute Family Step Challenge... something that seems like a missed opportunity.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Ever since the first Vivofit Jr came out, I've found it rather surprising that chore/reward tracking on kids watches didn't become more popular. Sure, it's essentially a fitness smartwatch with a slightly more robust task reminder function (and a widget to show points accumulated) but it works pretty well. It could definitely be improved for sure, but it's good enough.
I do wish that other companies would offer a chore/reward function because I feel that some would do it better than Garmin... or at least maybe competition would facilitate some improvements here. Garmin hasn't exactly been innovating on this front lately. Those with the Vivofit Jr 2 would find little reason to upgrade. The only real change from v2 to v3 is the screen. But while the larger size is nice, the upgrade from 8-colors to 64-colors sounds a lot better than it is in practice. The screen is quite dim and the added colors can't really be appreciated. While the Jr 3 appears to be a significant improvement over its predecessor, it ultimately feels more like a dot release. Some design and pricing choices make this iteration slightly disappointing... At least for someone who waited a year for this watch to be released.
That being said, it's still a decent watch in my opinion. If you don't own the Jr 2, and are looking for a way to motivate your child(ren) to do chores and stay active, this is a good option.








Until he woke up with severe burns around his wrist . The blisters and burn marks lasted almost 2 weeks! This came after weeks of no issues wearing it so we have no idea what happened. Very upset that this was an issue.

2021年1月26日 在美国审核
Until he woke up with severe burns around his wrist . The blisters and burn marks lasted almost 2 weeks! This came after weeks of no issues wearing it so we have no idea what happened. Very upset that this was an issue.




- Child proof in terms of shock. well covered, it will last
- Not need to recharge. battery can be replaced every year
- Color screen is a plus
- Being waterproof is critical to avoid kids taking it out
- Interesting approach of rewards for activities for the kids. my kid is not using it a lot anyway
- Alarm is a plus, so my kid will wake up alone for school
Cons:
- App does not sync automatically. you need to press the button to put the watch in sync mode.
- Child proof, water proof... but not sand proof. the sand of the beach/ park goes inside the button and once it s there you are done
- Screen is very small. I guess this partially helps to have a battery that last for a year

Do not recommend. My 7 year old is so disappointed.

2020年11月20日 在美国审核
Do not recommend. My 7 year old is so disappointed.


I don’t really understand how just having an app to mark off chores and redeem electronic time is so much better than me telling the kids they can play on their devices after doing their chores. But it works and I’m not complaining!
As far as what the watch should be doing, I appreciate being able to check on their sleep and steps completed. As a family we all have watches to count steps and so the kids frequently like to check their count to make sure they are still beating us.
Update: 8 months later, they are not really using the coins/chores part of the watch but they still watch their steps because they're only allowed dessert if they get at least 10k steps, so they are highly motivated to move around. I've had to buy many watch band replacements as they've ripped them - and in one case, a guinea pig chewed on a band. I ended up buying a 10 pack of bands so they change out the colors almost daily. I appreciate them even wearing a watch so they know the time (they had refused to wear one before). So all in all, very happy with the watches still.