- Messages
- 7
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
I am trying to link my ticwatch with Libre 2. Please can anyone help me with this in very simple wording. It worked great with Libre 1. PLEASR HELP ME IF YOU CAN. It's driving me insane.
I am trying to link my ticwatch with Libre 2. Please can anyone help me with this in very simple wording. It worked great with Libre 1. PLEASR HELP ME IF YOU CAN. It's driving me insane.
How did you use it with the Libre1? Did you use a device on top of the sensor, like Bubble or MiaoMiao?It worked great with Libre 1
Yes I am.Hi,
I don't use the tick watch. But are you using the XDrip app on your phone?
I used a miaomiao 2How did you use it with the Libre1? Did you use a device on top of the sensor, like Bubble or MiaoMiao?
Yes pleaseWould you like me (or another mod) to change your thread title to add in some more info?
eg PLEASE HELP - libre 2 and smartwatch
Yes I am.
There is now a new Freestyle Libre 2 app at google play called Juggluco. It displays the glucose values received via Bluetooth immediately on the screen.
There is a special watch app only for Garmin. But every smartwatch can receive android notifications. This means that when you turn it on, with every new value a notification is sent to your Smartphone. Because the watch vibrates every time a new value arrives (every minute) and because you have to look at your watch at that moment to see the value, it is not ideal, but useful during physical activity.From what I've found this app is very, very new, so if you want to try this app I'd expect there aren't many people who can answer questions on it, I couldn't for instance find a Facebook group on the app, like there are for xDrip or DiaBox.
If I understand correctly it only works with certain Garmin smartwatches (correct me if I'm wrong) so it won't be of use with your Ticwatch.
I'll stick to DiaBox, which sends your numbers to your phone as well, and which can be used with a smartwatch without the notifications (which I don't because I don't have a smartwatch).Juggluco is not widely tested, but you can see yourself that the values it generates are the same as the ones shown at the Librelink app.
I don’t understand. Juggluco is an android app, which mainly represents the glucose values on the phone. The advantage is that it doesn’t need a Freestyle Libre extender like DiaBox and gives the same value as the Librelink app. If these values are wrong for you, that is naturally no advantage.When I set the low glucose alarm at 4 mmol/L at night, the alarm also goes off a lot when in reality it isn’t that low. The difference is not large, but around 4 it means a lot. Mostly it is because the glucose readings fluctuate; so that it is now and then lower then 4, although the general trend is higher.I'll stick to DiaBox, which sends your numbers to your phone as well....
DiaBox is an app as well, no need anymore for add on devices like Bubble, MiaoMiao or BluCon, the app is enough.The advantage is that it doesn’t need a Freestyle Libre extender like DiaBox
There is a special watch app only for Garmin. But every smartwatch can receive android notifications. This means that when you turn it on, with every new value a notification is sent to your Smartphone. Because the watch vibrates every time a new value arrives (every minute) and because you have to look at your watch at that moment to see the value, it is not ideal, but useful during physical activity.
Juggluco is not widely tested, but you can see yourself that the values it generates are the same as the ones shown at the Librelink app. You don't need to uninstall Librelink.
Except that Juggluco has to take over the Bluetooth connection with the sensor and the alarm function of Librelink will not function anymore.
Juggluco is obviously developed by someone who hates the portrait only mode of Librelink. If you want that glucose curve to be displayed with 6 hours in one centimetre, you should use Librelink or so. It is meant get a better picture of glucose values than is possible with Librelink, Freestyle reader or Libreview which are all the same concept. For the same reason the screen is not taken up with a menubar or icons. The content of the menu you can see by pressing a certain part of the screen, which also doesn't use the terribly slow material design animated menu of android.Hello,
I've actually found & gave the Juggluco app a bit of a "test drive."
To my mind it needs a little more refinement to be a player against Diabox or xDrip?
For starters there doesn't seem to be a home screen widget option with the Juggluco app.
The veiw of the app when open only seemed to be in "panoramic" mode? Though there was a settings option to turn the panaramic screen up the other way?
The user interface on my Android device was also a little buggy. With no clear icons determining what did what.
Alas, looking for the setting & other options was like "pinning the tail on the donkey?"
Though i sincerely applaud whoever developed this for 'avin a go.
It still has a little way to go just yet, before I would consider this particular app as a day to day diabetes assistant on my device.