

It’s the same folder this entire post is about down below in each section, so you can just follow those steps and simply remove the older activities (which have undoubtedly synced long ago).

To remedy this, simply move a chunk (or all) of the files in the ‘Activities’ folder to your computer. But with that piece not online, the garbage man didn’t clear it out. and it turns out that behind the scenes Garmin Connect was clearing out the older activities to make room for the next one when it synced. Essentially the pattern is all those people had 199 activities on their units. This is both related and unrelated to the outage issue. Update: Unrelated to this post (but in case people are ending up here looking for a solution), some people have reported issues where their Garmin won’t save activities anymore. There’s a few variants of how you can do this, none of which is hard. See this comment here in the comments section, which outlines the steps. Note: For those with much older FR310XT, FR910XT, and some of the FR405/410 models, you can still do things locally, but you need slightly different instructions. In any case, like, that’s neither here nor there.

I’ve never really understood why wearable companies are so against it, whereas bike computer companies do it just fine. Whereas most bike computers do (including Wahoo, Lezyne, Stages, Sigma, and Hammerhead). In fact, surprisingly few do (such as not Polar, Suunto, Fitbit, COROS, and more). I note this because not all wearables actually support using a computer during an outage.
Garmin ant agent workout transfer failed how to#
And, if you were around this block a few years ago before Bluetooth in watches – you might even still remember how to do it. Be it Strava, TrainingPeaks, Myspace, or even MapMyRun. The good news though is that if there’s one thing to give Garmin credit for here, it’s that *EVERY* Garmin wearable, bike computer, hiking handheld, and so on, can be plugged into any computer and easily uploaded to any site you want. No matter how big or small, it eventually happens. Ultimately, every company out there has their ‘Oh snap’ sized outage. Totally unresponsive like your legs the day after a marathon. What is concrete though is the fact that Garmin and the entire platform is down. Now of course, there’s rumors and speculation out there on the cause of Garmin’s outage, none of it is concrete (and none of it from Garmin, except to say they’re down – totally down). So, I’m here to help you get the Kudos you deserve. And, if we know anything about endurance sports – it’s that if a workout isn’t uploaded to Strava, it definitely didn’t happen. For the last 18 or so hours, has been unavailable.
