Android
SmartWatch works with iOS, but it doesn't actually run Android (hands-on)
Here it is, at long last...an
Android watch that works with iOS. Well, on a technicality. The
all-too-cleverly-named Android SmartWatch is not, actually, a watch that runs
Android. Android is the name of the watch company, which has held the rights to
call its products "Android" since before Google ever made its mobile
operating system. Unlike the Omate TrueSmart, which is an actual Android OS watch,
the Android SmartWatch is just another smartwatch with design ambitions.
Android previously made traditional watches, but this is the
company's first smartwatch. Based on pure features, it's pretty packed: music
control, a speaker/microphone for dialing and answering calls via your wrist,
voice memo, pedometer, calculator, stopwatch, notifications, incoming calls --
maybe this is the superwatch? Most features apparently work when paired to both
Android or iOS phones, except for text messages on iOS (which is weird, because
other watches like the Pebble have achieved this).
At $200, the Android SmartWatch is
competitively priced with the rest of the smartwatch market -- it's even a bit
lower-priced than some recent arrivals. A variety of bright colors and a
leather band don't help draw attention away from how boxy and square the design
is, though, or how the color TFT touch display doesn't have nearly as much pop
as the Samsung Gear's AMOLED
technology.
I'm mildly
curious to try one, but I'm skeptical as to how its battery life will perform
and how well it will accomplish everything it's supposed to. But at least it
proves that some traditional watch manufacturers are getting into the
smartwatch game early.
DON'T MISS
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