She thought she slept great. Her Oura ring said otherwise

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Taylor Poindexter slipped on her Oura ring about five years ago, a wearable device that promised to, among other metrics, track her sleep patterns. Now it collects dust in a storage unit, probably at the bottom of a random box.

“I’m not the type of person that’s going to overly go out of my way to be healthy,” says the 35-year-old of Arlington, Virginia, “but I find sleep to be one of the things that I can really pour into and have a good impact on my body. So the idea of having something that helped me sleep better and just

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