The new year is around the corner, but before we start thinking about all the technology that will emerge in 2025, let’s take a look back and remember this year’s greatest hits.
I spend 40 hours a week testing products, writing reviews, and curating best lists (like the one you’re about to read). To compile a list of the best products released in 2024, I considered a few things. The first is my pure enjoyment of the product; that is, how badly did I want to continue using it — even after testing ended?
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The second is how transformative or innovative the product is in its respective space — like sleep tech, health tech, or audio tech. The third is how value-packed the product is for its price. Sure, a few of these products might be expensive, but I’m including them because this product is the crème de la crème for its price point.
This was a big year for wearable health tech, from sleep earbuds that actually put me to sleep to smart rings that track my activity. But other products, like a great pair of earbuds for working out and a stellar portable speaker, also made the list.
Oura Ring 4
When the Oura Ring 4<!–> came out this fall, the only smart ring it needed to beat was its predecessor, the Oura Ring 3–>. It did so with a flatter and more comfortable form factor, an additional day of battery life, and software upgrades that continued to demonstrate the Finnish smart ring brand is steps ahead of every competitor.
The smart ring is around your finger all day as you exercise, work, and sleep, and provides a complete picture of your data on a daily, weekly, and longitudinal basis. You get scores for sleep, readiness, and activity, but also information about your cardio capacity, cardiovascular age, daytime stress, and historical resilience (how well your body bounces back from stress and activity).
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I’ve covered Oura all year long, and have yet to find a smart ring competitor that delivers such an accurate reading on overall health and churns out new features around the clock.
Wearable health tech made major strides in 2024. Oura rolled out a Symptom Radar feature this month that notifies ring wearers ahead of illness. Because the smart ring monitors your vitals, it can detect data fluctuations in body temperature, heart rate, heart rate variability, and breathing rate, often before the ring-wearer begins experiencing symptoms of illness. This personalized approach to healthcare puts the ring-wearer and all of that data front and center, to provide health insights that cater specifically to them.
Even before the feature rolled out, Oura’s smart ring had a tendency to wave the red flag ahead of strain or illness. It warned Oura’s VP of science that something was off and to take it easy, as his heart rate was 10 beats per minute higher than his baseline; that warning came two days before he went in for emergency dental surgery. I’ve read stories on Reddit of Oura providing users with the data they take to the doctor to receive diagnoses for autoimmune diseases.
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This use case — employing wearable tech to get a medical professional’s diagnosis — seems to be the future of healthcare and health technology. Just this year, the FDA approved Apple’s AirPods Pro 2<!–> to be used as hearing aids that can not only help listeners hear their surroundings more clearly but also provide users with a hearing test, with results they can take to the doctor for a hearing loss diagnosis. Apple also developed a new sleep apnea detection feature on the Apple Watch Series 10 that monitors a user’s breathing disturbances throughout the night and brings that data to a doctor for a diagnosis.