Two weeks ago, Garmin announced it was launching a new subscription. Where the Garmin Connect app had previously offered everything from in-depth metrics and training plans for free, the beloved fitness tech company was now adding premium AI summaries, among other features, behind a paywall. In The Verge comments, my social media mentions, and the r/Garmin subreddit, cries about enshittification ensued.
Then, earlier this week, Garmin-competitor Polar announced that it, too, was launching a premium subscription called Polar Fitness Plan. There was no AI component, but in a nutshell, Polar is now asking long-time users to pay for training plans that it had previously, in some capacity, offered for free.
The march toward subscriptions, particularly in the wearable space, didnât crop up overnight. You could trace it back to Appleâs infamous services event in 2019 (if not earlier), when the company made a marked shift from hardware to services. But Garmin and Polarâs examples stand out. In the world of premium rugged smartwatches, long-time fans often accepted the several hundreds â sometimes thousands â of dollars for their hardware because they didnât paywall features …