Trying to learn a golf swing? This app and the Bluetooth-connected device you must buy and plug into the butt end of a golf club handle won't accomplish that goal on their own. What you get instead is data: angles and movement results for each captured swing and an animation of said swing. You also get a brief written summary defining each of the data points. What do you do with this data to improve your golf swing? That will depend on either your self-teaching skills or the services of a person who can translate your data into actual swing changes. Because the app does little to integrate the various measurements of club face, club path and other angles of a golf swing, you will be hard-pressed to use the data to rebuild your swing without expert help, unless you have enough theoretical knowledge to turn such esoteric data as "Angle to Path" into targeted practice drills for your particular swing. The "talk" feature here is simply an audio announcement of swing speed and tempo; nice but not especially useful if what you actually want to know is your swing path. For that, you must dig into data details that are tough to read on an iPhone on an outdoor driving range. What an app such as this needs in order to help the everyday golfer is a complete rewrite to analyze the captured data and deliver instructions on how to fix evidenced swing faults. Until then, you'll have to be your own golf guru, which reminds me of the expression: "He who represents himself has a fool for a client."
Show less