With Group Tracking, you can view your friends' current location and real-time activity data directly in the COROS app or on COROS DURA, making sure no one gets left behind. View more details about group tracking here.
With Safety Alerts enabled, emergency contacts will be automatically emailed when you begin an outdoor activity. If you need assistance, easily trigger a Safety Alert text message containing both your current GPS coordinates and the live tracking link for your real-time location. View more details about setting up and using Safety Alerts here.
Create cycling workouts with power zones based on your FTP to better train at the appropriate intensity. Your FTP will initially be automatically calculated based on your riding, and it will update over time based on your riding patterns with power and heart rate data or from performing the FTP Test. Learn more about the FTP Test here and how to receive and update power zones.
Improved design for the Explore page, with more intuitive button layout and easier access to route creation tools. Slide your finger along the elevation profile to preview elevation details while building new routes.
Previously, Training Load for cycling activities did not utilize power data. Now, if you have connected a power meter to your COROS device, EvoLab will utilize this power data for the Training Load calculation. If no power meter is connected, heart rate data will be used.
When creating routes in the Explore page, you can now change your map source from Mapbox to Google Maps, depending on your preferences. Click the hamburger icon on the right hand side of the Explore page to toggle between options.
You can now view an exhaustive list of all app integrations currently supported by COROS, whether or not the apps are installed locally on your phone. You can view this list by going to the COROS app > Profile page > Settings > 3rd Party Apps and clicking the link at the bottom of this page.
Easily swap your speed setting and slope setting in Indoor Run mode by simply pausing your activity, then scrolling down to "Speed" or "Slope."
"Running Performance" will be reclassified as "Efficiency", and be included with eligible cycling activities as well now. This metric describes the relationship between your pace and heart rate on a run, or power and heart rate for a ride, and how it lines up with expectation for your fitness level. Your efficiency on any given activity can be impacted by external or internal factors (such as heat, elevation, or fatigue), and your Efficiency score will help make you aware of when your workout was completed under more difficult conditions, or if you were operating at normal or high efficiency on it. Your performance is not being scored, but rather how efficiently you were functioning, and this knowledge can help you better prepare for future workouts.
By starting a route from the Navigation widget instead of the activity menu, you will be prompted to choose from a list of supported activity modes. This means trail run routes can be followed on your mountain bike, or a cycling route can be followed in run mode.
The new Activity Control Center replaces the Activity Settings widget in the toolbox menu (accessible by long pressing the back button during an activity). Within the Activity Control Center, you can customize Do Not Disturb, Night Mode, the satellite mode, touchscreen, and activity alerts.
When performing a time based structured workout with Auto-Start “off”, which requires you to manually hit the lap button to advance each stage, your watch will now tell you how far past the training stage you have gone if you don’t advance it at the planned time.
When designing a climbing workout, the workout builder defaults to number of Routes instead of Time when adding new workout stages.