It is increasingly common for mobile phone manufacturing companies to decide to expand their product ecosystem with new devices and even cover new fields where technology has more and more room, such as health.

This has been the case of Oppo, which yesterday announced within the framework of its annual technology event, Oppo Inno Day 2022, the creation of a new smart health sub-brand, OHealth. The firm already made its intentions in this segment clear in 2021, when it created the Oppo Health Lab that would help promote the adoption of healthy lifestyles among users. But this year it has gone one step further with the launch of its first product from this sub-brand, the OHealth H1 family health monitor.

This monitor combines six health data monitoring functions designed for family use into a single device, including blood oxygen measurement, electrocardiogram, heart and lung auscultation, heart rate, body temperature, and sleep monitoring.

Also, unlike the industrial designs of traditional medical equipment, the OHealth H1 is a super lightweight device at 95g and features aesthetically rounded edges and a concentric oval design for easy portability.

Together with its first connected health equipment, the Asian company presented a new model of assisted reality glasses, Oppo Air Glass 2. Weighing approximately 38 g, these lenses look like normal glasses, mainly thanks to the size and weight of the LED microprojectors have been considerably reduced compared to the previous model, in addition to adding microphones and speakers.

Specifically, the Oppo Air Glass 2 works as a teleprompter and music player and allows you to make phone calls and translate other languages ​​in real time.

To complete, Oppo presented at its Inno Day 2022 the new generation of the MariSilicom X processor, the photography-focused chip with which the Chinese company equips its high-end mobiles. In this case, the company has chosen to launch a processor designed to achieve the best possible Bluetooth audio. MariSilicom Y is capable of streaming ultra-clear, lossless 24-bit/192kHz audio over Bluetooth for the first time ever.