Gus7
506
Nice picture of you!
And a good write up. I too tried this yesterday. Having been a sworn enemy of smart watches in all forms I can see a certain appeal in this (being charitable!). It may even persuade me to dip my toes in the water...However, it is still large, it is provocative to owners of the 1858 for sure and inevitably will be redundant within a year....it's interesting to see how Tag have approached this issue. My wife's apple watch sits lonely and unloved and is only ever used for exercise where I suppose it has some purpose. I'm not sure I could wear this as an exercise watch when I have my Suunto for that purpose. Still....ambivalent? yes. Interested? more so than perhaps I might have expected!
Dark screen
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-05:47
Screen functionality can be controlled from separate apps. It's an AMOLED display, and on these, usally the screen stays on until battery is below 15% or so. It dims down, though. IMO dark colored screens look better than light colored ones. Some watches ...
Nice picture of you!
By: Gus7 : March 17th, 2017-22:08
And a good write up. I too tried this yesterday. Having been a sworn enemy of smart watches in all forms I can see a certain appeal in this (being charitable!). It may even persuade me to dip my toes in the water...However, it is still large, it is provoc...
The redundancy cycle
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-04:59
I think you pinpoint an important aspect of smartwatches, they become redunant within a certain time frame. I'd say 2-3 years, not one. It's dependent on whether it they receive the software OS updates or not. So, they're consumables. The thing is, once g...
Great review of the Summit!
By: KMII : March 18th, 2017-00:34
I agree with you that the size is a main aspect of smartwatches that needs to be addressed somehow, ensuring that they are wearable for a large proportion of the population. The power reserve is another one - maybe not tragic when compared to phones nowad...
Power reserve
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-05:08
Some Android Wear smartwatches, despite being more powerful computers than my first portable Windows PC in the mid 1990s, have up to 1 month power reserve for the time function. Most today can last 1,5-2 days, depending on usage. Go for a run, or a workou...