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Hardware

Android Wear Hopefuls Call Timeout On Smartwatches (cnet.com) 117

Things are not looking good for Google's Android Wear. Three of the top Android Wear smartwatches maker have confirmed that they won't be releasing a smartwatch in the waning months of the year. From a CNET report:While LG launched a watch in the first half, it'll have been more than a year since Huawei and Motorola offered an update on their wearables. That marks a reversal from last year, when all three companies launched Android Wear smartwatches at the early September IFA trade show in Berlin in what was supposed to be a resurgence of the platform. At this year's show, Chinese maker Asus was the only major tech company to return with a new Android Wear watch. The poor showing underscores the general lack of enthusiasm for smartwatches, which the industry has touted as the next hot trend in tech. Consumers, however, continue to question the usefulness of these gadgets. Even Apple, which leads the market for smartwatches, saw its shipments fall 55 percent from a year ago in the second quarter, according to IDC. "Smartwatches still have yet to make a significant impression on consumers as a must-have device," said Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC. Time stands still for some in the smartwatch market.
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Android Wear Hopefuls Call Timeout On Smartwatches

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 15, 2016 @10:24AM (#52893281)

    Consumers, however, continue to question the usefulness of these gadgets.

    Not optimism in the smartwatch market, optimism about humanity in general.

    • Look around - how many kids have a phone and no watch? They've never gotten into the habit of wearing a watch - when they want to know the time, they pull out their phone (and you don't even have to unlock it to tell the time). As for reminding them to check their phone, most of these kids check them compulsively anyway every time thet ding.
  • Smartwatches are mostly useful for looking at notifications and deciding whether I need to act upon that information or if I can just make a mental note and swipe right. It saves me time picking up and/or unlocking my phone to see a notification. There's not really any compelling smartwatch apps that wouldn't be more useful as a fullscreen smartphone app.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      As someone who has been wearing and using a smartwatch for well over a year, you're absolutely correct. That's exactly what I use it for all the time and it's what I love about it. Screw apps, I only use a dashboard for turning WiFi on and off and sometimes tethering.
      Also since it's a Pebble it lasts well over a week. No way I'd plug that thing in every second day or so.
      It also feels like it saves a bit of battery life since the display isn't turned on as much.

    • by Striek ( 1811980 )

      The only smartwatch app I've ever really used (well, it's not really an app) is the vibrate functionality on them.

      Noisy environments such as datacentres, construction or forestry sites where you can't hear your phone ring are prime uses for the smartwatch vibrate. It means you no longer need to have you phone on your person to to catch incoming messages - important in areas where the phone is subject to physical damage in your pocket or to external forces such as when working in forestry. Hell, I've even da

      • where you can't hear your phone ring are prime uses for the smartwatch vibrate.

        My wife's fitbit does that. She doesn't use it for fitbitting, but it buzzes and tells her to fish her phone out of her bag.

    • Smartwatches are mostly useful for looking at notifications and deciding whether I need to act upon that information or if I can just make a mental note and swipe right. It saves me time picking up and/or unlocking my phone to see a notification. There's not really any compelling smartwatch apps that wouldn't be more useful as a fullscreen smartphone app.

      I feel the same way. I've been using the same original Moto 360 and it does what I need it to just fine. The most complicated thing I might use it for is for control Spotify without picking up my phone or for showing me real-time directions while navigating. Other than that there doesn't seem to be much that can be improved on to justify an expensive upgrade.

    • Smartwatches are mostly useful for looking at notifications and deciding whether I need to act upon that information or if I can just make a mental note and swipe right. It saves me time picking up and/or unlocking my phone to see a notification. There's not really any compelling smartwatch apps that wouldn't be more useful as a fullscreen smartphone app.

      The watch can control a presentation being played from your smartphone. This allows you to travel real light.

      The tap on the wrist during turn-by-turn directions is nice. You don't have to turn down the stereo for fear of not hearing a reminder on the phone.

      When thinking about what could be compelling I'd start with what is unique for the watch. The first thing that comes to mind is that the watch has a heart rate sensor, so something utilizing that would go beyond "I don't have to reach for the phone"

    • so you pay $200 or $300 or more to save the one second from picking up your phone. i was going to get a fitbit or an apple watch to run with but i'll be taking my phone with me anyway in case i need to call for help, so i don't see the point.

      and i'm not that OCD or senile yet to care about my exact heart rate when i run. i have a few routes and try to beat my last time, and i only need a phone for that

  • You just need big pockets.

    Try rebranding the "smartwatch" into the "SmartBracelet". Then the entire band can be the display.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The only major smart watch that works is Galaxy Gear with the twist dial, always on display, and 3-4 day battery life. The rest seem clueless. Who wants a watch that they can't just look at the read the time. Who wants a watch that would be dead after a long flight. Apple's watch I bet isn't selling the way it should, given the fanboy nature. I don't like the bubble interface and square face. They should copy ideas from Samsung and improve on them.

    *However*, have you noticed that only mid range and low end

    • by tsqr ( 808554 )

      *However*, have you noticed that only mid range and low end Android tablets are getting updates? The latest to get an update is the Galaxy Tab A 10 inch. It's not just Android Wear that's struggling, Android is too.

      My 3 year old 8.4" Tab S surprised me a couple of days ago with an update to Marshmallow. I really didn't think that was ever going to happen.

    • by I4ko ( 695382 )
      It is not struggling, it is reaching maturity, there is only so much new and shiny that you can do with a technology. Having said that, my iPad solely sits next to my kitchen counter and is used solely for myfitnesspal food tracking. My HP touchpad running android solely sits on a wireless charging station and is used for pictureframe in a room that I don't spend time in. My surface is lately solely used for Skype video calls. Two other android tablets (one nook hd, one Samsung) are turned off and solely us
    • "isn't selling like it should"? now there's a signpost you can never pass.

      especially when Apple went from 0 to the #2 watch seller in the world in 1.5 years.

  • Pebble (Score:3, Informative)

    by mu51c10rd ( 187182 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @10:37AM (#52893377)

    Meanwhile, Pebble looks to be doing just fine with their smartwatches. However, they use color e-ink (better battery life), are much cheaper, and don't need a new line of service activated. They connect to the internet via Bluetooth on your phone. Perhaps the other manufacturers should strip their watches down and focus on what consumers would want: a durable watch, with battery life past a day or two, and doesn't cost extra with phone service.

    • "Well sure - but if it doesn't increase the monthly bill, what's the point in even making the things?"
      -Generic Executive
    • Re:Pebble (Score:5, Informative)

      by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @11:10AM (#52893641)

      Looks like you have no idea about Android Wear watches, but really really wanted to write something. They connect over Bluetooth as well, although some have WiFi so the user can still get notification even if the mobile phone is not in the proximity. And as for the price, the monochrome Pebble costs the same as a LG W100. Pebble Time Round has about the same price as LG W150 or the first generation Motorola Moto360 but both can do more than the Pebble watch.
      Still, the good old MOTOACTV is a better smartwatch than the modern ones.

    • I think Pebble got this right. I don't think of mine as a "smart watch". It is an auxiliary display for some apps on my phone, with some buttons to send some basic commands back to the apps. It does this very well, and that is all I need it to do. If you still have to carry a phone anyway, there is not much point in making the watch any smarter.

    • by dublin ( 31215 )

      Of course, you can do what I do and wear one of the excellent Seiko 5 watches (https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=seiko+5 ), generally regarded as the best watch value on the planet, and frequently making lists of best watches under $500, even though they're an order of magnitude cheaper than that! On top of that, it will still be a good, fully functional device many years from now, which is definitely not true of ANY smartwatch. (Let's see you try to get rep

  • Apple got this right, and it's showing.

    Very few products appeal to my wife in the technology sphere, and the Apple Watch was done of them.

    Android watches remind me of the 80's digital watches.

    Taking a time-out, ha ha, is probably a good idea.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Really? Because Android Wear watches tend to look like actual watches people would wear, while the Apple Watch looks like a miniature iPhone prop someone decided to strap to their wrist for some reason.

      But you might be right - by making the Apple Watch distinctive, instead of functional, Apple has made it into a piece of jewelry people wear to show off that they're the type of asshole who owns an iPhone. Being ugly but identifying is probably more important to Apple than being stylish and functional.

      • Because Android Wear watches tend to look like actual watches people would wear

        You should probably tell that to consumers then, because they don't seem to be buying and wearing very many of them, hence this article.

        The OP was right, most consumers wanted a fashion accessory that could do some smart things.

    • No they didn't. Apple charges too much. That's why smartwatches aren't selling well
      • by tomhath ( 637240 )
        Style is all about overpriced stuff people can't or won't buy because of the price tag. That's the whole pint of designer labels.
    • Watches are about style, not function

      As a scuba diver and a private pilot I disagree. :-)

    • by dublin ( 31215 )

      To each his own, but I think the Apple Watch is butt-ugly, and one of the clumsiest of Ives' designs.

  • by wardrich86 ( 4092007 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @10:50AM (#52893475)
    Smartwatches are awesome. I'd love to have one... but the cost just doesn't justify what you get. It falls into the same pit as the Apple products. Spend a lot, get a little. If they could manage to make a good watch for say $100 or so, I'd be all over it.
    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      I'm in a similar situation. My limit is $200, but I want the battery of the bigger ones in the size of the smaller, and the stylings of the nicer ones.

      I'd pay $200 for a 2nd gen moto 360 of the smaller size if it had the battery.

      But they're both $300 and I'm not confident of the battery.

      Just adding that I'm less concerned about the price than you, but still too expensive.

      • The 2nd gen Moto 360's are like $400+ in Canada.
      • If you're worried about the battery, buy a Pebble. The battery lasts a good week. Even more if you shut it off at night like I do. It's also significantly less expensive and is very open to developers.

        • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

          I'm skeptical that the e-ink will be satisfying on the interactivity with my cards.

          Also, I don't need a weak's battery, I need 20 hours.

          And last I looked, the pebble steel wasn't under $200 either.

    • I have too many, so I could sell you a lightly used LG W100 for, say, 50 euros, but the shipping cost is probably prohibitive.

  • I don't see the point of a smartwatch that requires you to carry your phone around all the time. If a smartwatch could operate independently then I think it would be much more useful. While I don't think a watch would need 4G service, the addition of free 3G, like Amazon has for the Kindle, would be a game changer.

    • If you are such a Luddite that you don't have a smartphone on your person at all times, then a smartwatch probably isn't for you.

      • Yeah, I'm a Luddite because I see no point in buying a smartwatch so I can save the 5 seconds it would take to look at my phone instead of the watch.

    • by d0rp ( 888607 )
      There are actually some "smartwatches" out there that are in fact standalone phones, which makes much more sense to me than something that has to be paired to your existing phone, though they all appear to be of dubious quality. Here is one example: https://www.amazon.com/Eversho... [amazon.com]
    • Well,, they still function as a watch when not connected, so you aren't totally tethered if you are interested in what time it is.

  • by danbob999 ( 2490674 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @10:57AM (#52893527)

    I still don't get why I should want one. I still have to carry my phone anyways. And it can show me the time just fine, so I don't even need a watch.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Notifications and fitness tracking. If you are the kind of person who doesn't like their notification sound going off at high volume* then they are a good alternative. If someone can invent a good heart rate monitor with good battery life that would be nice too, for people managing illness and weight as well as fitness buffs.

      * Why can't they make it so that the notification/ring sound volume is proportional to ambient noise?

      • There is already the vibrating and the silent mode (with LED notification). I don't need a second device. Fitness tracking, maybe. But they already sell heart rate monitor watches without Android and they run just fine, with longer battery.

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @11:02AM (#52893569)

    "Smartwatches still have yet to make a significant impression on consumers as a must-have device," said Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC.

    They mostly are a solution looking for a problem. Smartwatches are useful in some very particular circumstances, mostly where it is inconvenient or ill-advised to carry a smartphone. Those circumstances are not widely applicable in most people's every day lives and therefore there is limited market need for smartwatches. Relatively few people of my generation and those younger wear a watch routinely. People want to wear fewer devices, not more so at best it tends to replace a watch for those who were already prone to carrying one. For the rest of us it actually ADDS a device to carry when the trend it actually to carry less. My smartphone replaced my point-and-shoot camera, my PDA, my calendar, my MP3 player, my laptop in some circumstances and oh yeah it makes calls. Plus it can do everything a smartwatch can do except be small.

    • Smartwatches also have heart rate sensors. So that is probably the first area to explore where they go beyond a smartphone. The second area may be when you are separated from your phone.

      Haptic feedback is another partial differentiator, it can tap you on the wrist to get your attention. Partial because a vibrating phone in your pocket is also haptic. But if the phone is say mounted on the dash for turn-by-turn directions then that watch haptic feedback is nice, you don't have to turn down the stereo to a
      • Smartwatches also have heart rate sensors.

        There are a few corner cases where smartwatches are advantageous but these have been insufficiently explored to date. Smartwatches have two primary uses. 1) a highly portable data-logging sensor suite and 2) a compact display for compact messages. These are useful things but for most use cases a smartphone can serve the same purpose AND have a lot more capabilities besides. The corner cases where a smartwatch makes a big different don't apply to most people most of the time and so it should surprise no

        • I am not claiming any compelling uses, merely useful ones. I am however arguing that compelling cases are likely to come out of areas where the watch has sensors a phone does not (heart rate), or when a phone is not immediately accessible (remote control of phone, various sporting activities, etc).

          Today the only reason I feel justified in owning a smartwatch is that I am a developer.
        • There are a few corner cases where smartwatches are advantageous but these have been insufficiently explored to date.

          FitBit disagrees with you.

          You may think of a smartwatch as something that has to have a display with time, but why?

          The real name should be something more along the line of "TechBracelet" and humanity has explored them and already find them very useful.

          Why do you doubt that over time the fields in which they have already found to be generally useful, will expand further...

          Can't believe I am re

          • by dublin ( 31215 )

            Not to slam fitness wearables, but the market research shows that 2/3 of them wind up living in a drawer within six months. They're just not all that compelling for most people (yet?)...

    • They mostly are a solution looking for a problem. Smartwatches are useful in some very particular circumstances, mostly where it is inconvenient or ill-advised to carry a smartphone.

      Wait, what? If it's inconvenient, I get that. But ill-advised? If it's ill-advised to carry a cellphone, it's just as ill-advised to wear a smartwatch. If it's a clearance issue, it has all the same issues. If it's a theft issue, it's on display on your wrist and it's actually more of an issue.

      My smartphone replaced my point-and-shoot camera, my PDA, my calendar, my MP3 player, my laptop in some circumstances and oh yeah it makes calls. Plus it can do everything a smartwatch can do except be small.

      That is the real problem. If you already have a smartphone, the only thing it can't do that a smartwatch does is signal to other people that you have too much money so you waste it.

      • Wait, what? If it's inconvenient, I get that. But ill-advised? If it's ill-advised to carry a cellphone, it's just as ill-advised to wear a smartwatch

        You can swim with a lot of smartwatches. Not so much of a good idea with smartphones - even IPXX rated ones. There also are places where smartphones are prohibited for security reasons or where they might prove socially problematic but where smartwatches would be acceptable.

        If it's a theft issue, it's on display on your wrist and it's actually more of an issue.

        A smartwatch is generally a LOT less conspicuous than most people's smartphones. Less valuable too.

        • A smartwatch is generally a LOT less conspicuous than most people's smartphones.

          Most people's smartphones are in their pocket when they're not using them, not waving around at the end of their arm. That makes it conspicuous at all times, when the phone isn't.

          Less valuable too.

          However, thieves aren't necessarily stupid; they can know that most smartwatches are communicating with a phone in someone's pocket, implying a potential two-fer. Also, a stolen phone may be IMEI-disabled after theft, decreasing its value. This is less of a concern with smartwatches.

        • by tsqr ( 808554 )

          There also are places where smartphones are prohibited for security reasons or where they might prove socially problematic but where smartwatches would be acceptable.

          Any place a smartphone is a security issue, a smartwatch is probably a security issue as well, unless you're referring to a generic non-DoD "no cameras allowed" policy and the watch doesn't have a camera. It's the ability to communicate wirelessly that's the problem, not just the camera. The DoD made my company remove a clock from one of our SCIFs because it used WiFi to get time sync.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Smartwatches are useful in some very particular circumstances, mostly where it is inconvenient or ill-advised to carry a smartphone

      No, smartwatches are not where it is ill-advised to carry a smartphone.

      They're because the user bought the WRONG smartphone for their lifestyle. As in, they got awed by the massive 8" screen that they went out and bought it, then realized that it was completely useless to them - they can't stuff it in their pocket in easy reach, so it goes in their bag. THey can't carry it in o

      • by tsqr ( 808554 )

        wah wah I must have my 8" screen!

        Somebody makes a phone with an 8" screen? Can you cite the make/model? According to this [phonearena.com], the largest smartphone on the planet has a 7" screen, but then the list is over a year old.

    • by ickpoo ( 454860 )

      I thought pretty much the same: smart watch is stupid, doesn't offer anything I don't already have, ... Then I received an Android Wear watch for my birthday, I really like it, I really like that notifications appears on my wrist and that my phone doesn't do anything at all, and, I really like have the time right there on my wrist. I'll definitely replace my current Android Wear watch with another when this one either fails, or the state of the art has moved far enough ahead that it would be worth it. I'

  • So, I have a Garmin Vivoactive gps watch which I use for tracking running and biking. Aside from sports functions, it's waterproof, I get about 2 weeks from a charge and fits my wrist perfectly. More importantly, it does the only two things I need from a smartwatch: 1) It allows me to put my phone on silent and vibrates and displays any notifications coming in. A silent phone is a golden phone, and I don't have to pull out my phone in a meeting if a text or call comes in. A quick glance at the wrist is
  • Smartwatches still have yet to make a significant impression on consumers as a must-have device,"

    Correction:

    Smartwatches have yet to be anything more than grossly overpriced novelties with stupidly poor battery life.

    I'm actually interested in the Pebble, cause you can get up to 10 days of use out of it per charge, which is 9 days more than pretty much everything out there, short of actual normal watches.

    • Pebble is very nice... very useful, very open, very extendable, and much cheaper as well!

      • LOL I got modded flamebait.

        Someone either hates their Pebble, or disagrees that watches should have more than a day of battery life. :P

  • Yet another market Apple has won. Cheaper watches will sell but Apple will get the lion's share of the profits, just like they do in the phone market.
  • I use moto360 religiously. Some places where it shines:
    - You can ignore notifications and phone calls much faster. Don't have to shuffle with your phone.
    - Weather/pedometer information are great.
    - More sticky calendar reminders.

    Some things that are lacking:
    - Dedicated gps. I know that the new apple watch has it, but I'm not sure how good the battery life is. I use a Garmin watch for running, but the battery sucks for longer runs. Not sure if Apple has nailed it.
    - Pricepoint: Make these watches sub $150 and

  • The title does not appear to be English. The words are all English words, but the title makes no sense at all.

  • Someone gave my a Galaxy S2 Smartwatch. It was neat for a few days. Once the novelty wore off, it seemed like nothing more than a solution looking for problem. I don't think smartwatches any sort of critical mass appeal. They are really nothing more than an overpriced status symbol. Smartwatches will be remembered as a failed innovation after something new and actually useful comes along.

    Oh, my S2 ended up on Craigslist.
  • I love my second gen Motorola 360. Having used it daily for a year, I don't think I could go back to not having one. It's just so convenient to have it buzz on your wrist when you have a notification, and to be able to glance down at it and see what it is. Honestly that's mostly what I use it for. I don't use any apps on it or anything, it's really just for notifications. The heart rate monitoring is neat, but I rarely look at the data in Google Fit.

    It's also stylish (I have the black one with black metal b

    • by dublin ( 31215 )

      Let me know when the batteries last a week or a month and I'll think about being mildly interested... (Another reason we need full color e-ink!)

  • Smart watches are a bit lame. People who wear them are a bit lame as well and generally fit into the
    1 I'm a fanboy/girl
    2 I'm trying to look smart
    3 I'm trying to look like a newage technical person
    4 All of the above.
    Whereas something like Google glasses might actually be useful.

  • Three of the top Android Wear smartwatches maker

    Garbage.

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