A great geek gift, especially for someone with Android
development skills, Sony's new SmartWatch is a little
screen on your wrist with infinite possibilities. It's cute,
well-designed, and certainly the least embarrassing tech watch I've
seen, and I reviewed the gigantic Fossil Palm watch in 2005. So I know from big, ugly tech watches.
The SmartWatch is
still more tech than watch, though. It's definitely in beta. It's open.
It's absolutely begging you to write apps for it, and to enhance and
fix the ones that are there. For some people, this will be really
exciting. Others should probably get a timepiece that isn't dependent on
Bluetooth pairing.
Physical Design and FunctionalityThe
Sony SmartWatch is actually a clip, a cheerful little 1.4 by 1.4 by 0.3
inch (HWD), .55-ounce square of white plastic with chromed edges and a
button on the side. You could clip it to a bag strap and forget the
whole wrist thing if you want. But it comes with a perfectly nice,
durable, comfortable rubber watchband in one of six fun colors. It'll fit on many other standard
watch bands, too. Clipped onto the band, it's secure, and it looks far
more watch than smart. It practically looks like a Swatch.
I've been wearing the SmartWatch for a week around town,
and I've been getting positive comments about it. A guy at a coffee shop
pronounced it cool. My six-year-old daughter thought for a while and
said slyly, "your watch…is like a phone." She considered that to be pretty deep.
The watch's face, alas, is its one big miss. It's a dim
128-by-128, 1.3-inch OLED panel that is frustratingly difficult to read
in sunlight. It's fine indoors, the natural habitat of this watch's core
clientele, and I've managed to live with it on for an entire weekend
out when I got the most awful farmer's tan, complete with watchband
stripe. But it sure ain't bright.
The little face is a multi-touch screen, and that's how
you operate the SmartWatch. The SmartWatch works with a wide range of
Android phones, linking up via Bluetooth 2.0 (or higher) to display
different kinds of information on the screen. I tested the SmartWatch
with a T-Mobile HTC Sensation. No, it doesn't work with iPhones.
Unlike Motorola's MotoActv , the SmartWatch is not running Android itself and
doesn't have any user-accessible, onboard storage. It's a terminal
rather than a computer. Your Android phone runs a free app called
LiveWare Manager and downloads other plug-ins from the Android Market. I
was able to get 12 up and running: Text Messages, Phone Book, Facebook,
Twitter, Find Phone, Music Player Remote, Calendar Reminders, Weather,
Missed Call Notification, Call Handling, Phone Battery/Signal Status,
and Gmail Notifier. In the most extreme possible world, you can load up
to 255 widgets at once.
Tap twice, sharply, on the watch's face, and it'll display
the time. Swipe up and you'll get the most recent notification: for
instance, "New Gmail 21 Minutes Ago" (although unlike with text
messages, it wouldn't tell me what the Gmail said). Swipe up again for a
menu of widgets to access your various apps. The music player remote
control, for example, lets you fast forward, rewind, or pause your
phone's music player. There's an Endomondo widget for fitness buffs,
showing data from the installed app running on your phone.
If you keep your phone in a bag, the watch becomes
especially useful, since you can screen your calls and text messages
using the watch before deciding whether to go digging for your
phone. You can't actually answer calls with the SmartWatch, though. It
isn't a headset, it doesn't have a mic, and it doesn't have a touch
keyboard. The best you can do is ask it to make your phone beam a
pre-programmed text message back to whomever is calling or texting you.
Everything's configurable. You can hide or display various
widgets, or tell the Facebook and Twitter widgets to only bother you if
direct messages or mentions arrive. Intriguingly, there's an open SDK,
so anyone can write a SmartWatch widget. They're starting to proliferate
in the Android Market, although a bunch of the third-party ones are
primarily in Japanese. This platform looks fairly easy to write for, and
the possibilities are pretty endless.
Bluetooth Pains and Battery LifeMy
top gripe with the SmartWatch is the crankiness of Bluetooth
disconnecting and reconnecting. I turn off my phone occasionally.
Sometimes I'll turn Bluetooth off to save battery, and running Bluetooth
all the time to support the SmartWatch knocked at least a few hours off
my Sensation's standby time.
Reconnecting the SmartWatch to my phone was always touch
and go. Sometimes it would happen effortlessly. Sometimes it would take a
while. Three separate times, I had to unpair the SmartWatch and re-pair
it from scratch. The SmartWatch doesn't lose the time when it isn't
connected to a phone, but it loses pretty much all of its other
abilities.
There are newer Bluetooth technologies which could extend
battery life and simplify pairing, but not many phones currently support
them, so I suspect Sony decided to aim at a broader market.
During testing, I got four days of battery life, just as
Sony promised, but new devices that support Bluetooth 4.0 can go for two
weeks without a charge. The SmartWatch recharges using a proprietary
USB cable that clips into it.
Conclusions
The SmartWatch is, for now, unique in the market as a stylish, consumer-centered tech watch. The MotoActv is bigger, more expensive, and bulkier, and very fitness-focused. The WIMM One watch, which also runs a full version of Android, is even more expensive at $300, and it's less fashionable and is targeted at developers. Just remember that you need to have your phone with you when using the Sony SmartWatch.
On the other hand, the SmartWatch solves a problem many
people have: burying their phones so deep in their bags that it takes
James Cameron to fish them out. The SmartWatch tells you who's calling
or texting, so you can decide whether or not to go spelunking. But until
Bluetooth is a little more bulletproof, prepare to have to fiddle more
to keep it linked up. If you're a geek, or you love an Android-centric
geek, the SmartWatch makes a great gift. I want to see people write
their own widgets for this thing. That would be cool.Recent News say that The Sony SmartWatch, available in the U.S. since April , would be launched in India by the end of June 2012 priced at around Rs. 6299.Who's Interested ???
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