As GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic boom, ShapeScale’s 3D body scanner claims DXA-level accuracy—revealing whether patients are truly losing fat or critical muscle. Losing weight isn’t the problem. Losing ...
Jeff is CNET Editor at Large and a host for CNET video. He's regularly featured on CBS and CBSN. He founded the site's longest-running podcast, The 404 Show, which ran for 10 years. He's currently ...
You may not want to buy the ShapeScale 3D body scanner unless you’re comfortable in your own skin. Using infrared depth sensors and a high-res camera, ShapeScale can create an amazingly accurate 3D ...
When you hop on a bathroom scale, all you get is one number describing the weight of your entire body. That number doesn’t account for muscle, but rallies you behind the goal of dropping that number ...
Fitness trackers may help the wearer monitor their weight overtime, but these devices fall short in showing exactly where the pounds have been packed on or lost. Now, a new innovation uses 3D body ...
When trying to lose weight or gain muscle, most people try to target certain areas like the stomach, biceps, or legs. A new scale called ShapeScale recently hit the market, and it tells you exactly ...
When it comes to isolating weight loss or weight gain on different parts of your body, it’s a lot more complex than just tracking a single number. ShapeScale, competing today on the TechCrunch CES ...
For decades, the bathroom scale has been the default tool for tracking progress. It delivers a single number—up or down—and little else. But as technology reshapes health and wellness, that simple ...
When you hop on a bathroom scale, all you get is one number describing the weight of your entire body. That number doesn't account for muscle, but rallies you behind the goal of dropping that number ...