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The best fitness tech of 2016.
The best fitness tech of 2016. (Inga Hendrickson)

The Best Running Tech of 2016

On your mark, get set, track!

Published: 
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(Photo: Inga Hendrickson)

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Whether you want a simple training companion or the sophisticated tracker of the true wired athlete, we've got your wrist—and your feet—covered.

(Timex)

Timex Ironman Run x20 GPS

Best For: Minimalists
Like its more expensive siblings, the accurately tracks pace and distance, counts laps, and sets intervals. And that’s it. It can’t sync with a heart-rate monitor or third-party apps. But what it lacks in bells and whistles it more than makes up for with its attractive, comfortable design and easy-to-read display. 

Price $103
(Polar)

ʴDZ400

Best For: Newbies
This is the here. The GPS tracks flawlessly, the display graphics are clear, and you can choose from several data screens (think lap time, speed, and heart rate). All that in one of the smallest GPS-enabled watches out there. Bummer: syncing with third-party apps is frustratingly tricky. 

Price $250
(Sensoria Fitness)

Sensoria Fitness Smart Socks

Best For: Fixing Your Form
By embedding electronic threads and thin, surprisingly comfortable anklets into socks, helps improve your stride by measuring step count, cadence, and foot strike. The socks send data to a phone, where you can view the metrics and analyze your form. 

Price $199
(Epson)

DzܲԲԲ-810

Best For: Data Geeks
If you’re addicted to fitness data, is your watch. It happily syncs with third-party apps via a nifty online tool, offers some of the best GPS tracking we’ve ever tested, and boasts an astonishing 20 hours of battery life—with the GPS on. The only caveat: the wrist-based LED heart-rate monitor isn’t quite as accurate as those on other top-flight watches. 

Price $350
(Garmin)

Garmin Forerunner 225

Best For: Serious Training
Combine the ’s superb built-in heart-rate monitor—which proved as accurate as a chest strap—with Garmin’s precise navigation and ten-hour battery life in GPS mode, and you have the perfect wearable for long days in the woods sans phone. The native apps track activity, but we found the 225 too clunky for daily wear. 

Price $300
(Suunto)

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Best For: Triathletes 
The has a sleek display and a stable of cool features. We especially like the midrun access to lap comparisons and the recovery advice based on metrics. Multisport athletes will appreciate its ability to measure cycling speed and cadence. Even better, it can share that data with many popular apps. 

Price $299
From Winter 2016 Buyer’s Guide Lead Photo: Inga Hendrickson

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