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And others are looking at creating replacement tech. I have no idea if that product is related to your original question about Philipp Kalwies statements … there does not seem to be any further information about his “prototype” and what the “hardware hack” is.Ī) it is quite possible to keep a Zeo Mobile or a Zeo Clock system going for a long time by just replacing the sensor pads (either DIY or by buying someone’s replacements). However it is considerably more expensive than the $40 for the recently sold Zeo Mobiles. One group is developing a new complete sleep monitoring system (focused more on lucid dreaming) that could replace the Zeo. There is an individual that was thinking of making and selling re-padded headbands. The cost of the DIY project is only around US$35. Thus you can make your own replacement headbands rather than buy them.
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#Sleepyhead cpap app how to
There have been several blog posts showing step-by-step instructions on how to replace the silver sensor pads on the older and newer headbands. About 2,600 of these Zeo Mobile units (sealed headband, sensor module, charger) were sold in Jan thru Mar of 2016 for only $40 each by a surplus supply reseller.
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#Sleepyhead cpap app for android
The latest Zeo Mobile for Android and iOS does NOT have such a mode, though there were indications in their code that a “Test mode” was available that could have sent that waveform to the Android and iOS Apps via bluetooth no means via postmortem was found to activate that mode. They are still available, but sellers want a lot of money for them, and its not likely their headbands have remaining usable life but can be re-padded (see below). The original Zeo Sleep Alarm clock had a mode that allowed anyone direct access to the sleep waveform itself, so perhaps others could develop separate sleep algorithms (say for specific sleep issues or for lucid dreaming). So to summarize some information that you can glean from plenty of browsing:Ī company rumored to be ResMed bought all the Zeo Inc’s intellectual property, including the sleep algorithms, trademarks, and copyrights, but has never released any new product that utilized that information. I had not thought of a feature to allow end-users to migrate their data off mulitple devices into one device. I have worked with iOS SQLite databases before on some iOS Apps I wrote. The author did build a database file import mechanism, but I have no idea if it works with iOS-type SQLite database files.Īlso, if you did get the iOS Zeo App databases downloaded off the devices, I could certainly add an import function if you sent me those database files to test with.
#Sleepyhead cpap app mac
If you DID get them off the iOS App, its possible you could use the Zeo Viewer Windows and Mac App ( to import those databases. I have no experience with the iOS App, so I don’t know if you can pull those database files off the iOS devices or not.
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On Android, the Zeo App databases are locked down tight if you are using a 4.x device or later. The first problem is getting the Zeo App database’s off the iOS devices. I’m not quite sure if it would be possible.
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