Skip to main content

Victoria Song

Victoria Song

Senior Reviewer, Wearable Tech

Senior Reviewer, Wearable Tech

Victoria Song writes about all things wearables, health, and fitness tech for The Verge. Before coming to The Verge, she’d been yammering on about this space—and other consumer tech—for Gizmodo and PC Magazine. In another life, she worked on the business and breaking news desk for The Yomiuri Shimbun. When not nerding out, she can be found swearing while running or on the couch binging the latest K-dramas. You can reach her on Signal: @vicmsong.14

More From Victoria Song

Oakley Meta HSTN Limited Edition review: a polarizing choice

6

Verge Score

Great for outdoorsy folks. Everyone else, get the Ray-Bans.

Victoria SongCommentsComment Icon Bubble
V
External Link
Victoria Song
Garmin isn’t rushing to make smart glasses.

In its Q2 2025 earnings call, Garmin CEO Cliff Pemble says, “Glasses have come and gone once, and the utility and concerns around the use of those have always come up in the context.” He went on to say it’s a “wait and see thing.”

He’s not wrong. Privacy is still a major concern with smart glasses. But frankly, Garmin is probably happy enough with another gangbusters quarter in fitness, logging a 41 percent increase year-over-year.

The Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 is stuck in a familiar orbit

7

Verge Score

I’m at peace with the squircle. Gemini is promising. But the sum of the parts doesn’t add up to a must-have upgrade.

Victoria SongCommentsComment Icon Bubble
The dangerously blurry line between wellness and medical tech

Whoop’s FDA notice is a reminder that it’s harder to tell what’s a medical feature and what’s “just for fun.”

Victoria SongCommentsComment Icon Bubble
V
External Link
Victoria Song
Your Fitbit Charge 6 can connect to more gym equipment now.

Specifically, Google says it now works with the Hydrow and Hydrow Wave rowers, the latest models of Echelon machines, and the confusingly named Spinning bikes and the accompanying mobile app. The Strava app is also confirmed to work. Sadly, the official list of compatible devices and apps says the device will definitely not work with Garmin, Life Fitness and TechnoGym. Oh, and there’s a handful of new clock faces too.

The Fitbit Community

[community.fitbit.com]

watchOS 26 preview: a subtler take on AI

Workout Buddy is Apple’s foray into fitness AI, but the real stars of watchOS 26 are Wrist Flick and Smart Stack.

Victoria SongCommentsComment Icon Bubble
V
External Link
Victoria Song
A closer look at Meta’s wristband for controlling devices.

Meta’s hinted at this kind of wristband before, but The New York Times just published a deeper dive based on a research paper published in Nature. The neat thing is it can “predict” what you’re going to do based on electrical signals sent from your brain through your muscles. This isn’t a new concept. Third-party straps like the Mudra Band do similar things. But according to my colleague Alex Heath, this particular band will launch at Connect with Meta’s Hypernova glasses.