If you’ve been thinking about buying your first (or next) smartwatch, there’s even more incentive: advanced health tracking.

Sure, today’s wrist-mounted computers can do so much already — display customized watch faces, vibrate to remind you of something, show notifications (like text messages and social media updates), stream music, and even be used to pay for something at retail — but increasingly, today’s smartwatches can monitor what’s happening in your body, while awake or asleep.

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And of course, fall detection is a great feature, too, especially for aging Canadians who may live alone, which then calls emergency services and/or pre-selected contacts in the event it senses a sudden drop.

But all the biggest players today — Apple Watch, Samsung’s Galaxy Watch, and

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