Smartwatches are the converse of the avenue at present and for
very excellent reason. They are cool, capable and unfussy. At the IFA 2013
expo, both Samsung and Qualcomm introduced their smartwatch respectively: the
Galaxy Gear and Toq.
You may be thinking that
smartwatches aren’t really our scope, but remember that while we are
professional phone reviewers, we are also geeks. This puts the smartwatch
product category right in our alley.
Okay, what makes a smartwatch tick and what is its purpose in
life? It may sound a bit philosophical, but without a purpose this product
niche doesn’t make any sense. Happily, those little fellas are really smart,
hence their name. They are very well connected — the Sony Smartwatch 2 even
boasts NFC connectivity — and all of them can connect to your mobile phone via
Bluetooth.
And here’s where their wizardry kicks in. The Samsung Galaxy
Gear for example can make calls on its own thanks to its built-in microphone,
while its 1.9MP camera can snap 10-second 720p videos and make photos that get
automatically uploaded to its accompanying Samsung Galaxy smartphone or tablet.
However, announcement of the Qualcomm Toq was a surprise – as a result you don’t get to see a chipset manufacturer dip its toe into a niche that’s outside
its main reach. This means that the smartwatch market is a lucrative one, and
that’s hardly a surprise considering their coolness factor at the moment.
Anyway, we’ve prepared a comparison table including the Samsung
Galaxy Gear, Qualcomm Toq and Sony Smartwatch 2. Mind you, not all of
specifications are available at the moment, so you have to bear with us as we
hunt them down.
Samsung Galaxy Gear
|
Qualcomm Toq
|
Sony Smartwatch 2
|
|
Display
|
1.63" Super AMOLED
|
1.55" Mirasol color display
|
1.6" Transreflexive LCD
|
Resolution
|
320 x 320
(277 ppi) |
288 x 192
(223 ppi) |
220 x 176
(176 ppi) |
Weight
|
73.8 grams
|
90.7 grams
|
122.5 grams
|
Processor
|
800 MHz
Exynos chipset |
200MHz
ARM Cortex M3 |
200MHz
ARM Cortex M3 |
RAM
|
512MB
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Water resistant
|
No
|
No
|
Yes, IP57 certified
|
Scratch resistant
|
No
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Camera
|
1.9MP, up to 10 seconds HD video recording
|
No
|
No
|
Battery
|
315mAh
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Estimated battery life
|
1 day
|
3 days
|
3 days
|
Wi-Fi
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
Bluetooth
|
Yes, v4.0 LE
|
Yes, v4.0
|
Yes, v3.0
|
NFC
|
No
|
No
|
Yes
|
Speakers
|
Yes
|
No
|
No
|
Compatability
|
Samsung Galaxy devices running Android 4.3
|
Android 4.0.3 and up
(any device) |
Android 4.0 and up
(any device) |
Availability
|
September
|
October
|
September
|
This technology enables to use your watch for a lot more than just checking the time and date. All of those three have made an appearance at IFA 2013 and all promise to be readily available at your disposal for call making, music controlling, weather checking, social network updating and what else not. Heck, the Samsung Galaxy Gear can even take pictures.
And you know what? None of this matters and here’s why. Not any
of these three smartwatches can enter in a beauty contest against an
old-fashioned, regular wrist watch. Yes, they are smarter and have more
functionality, but their displays can’t match the mechanical, precision work of
a regular watch. Not to mention their overall design. They just look juvenile,
especially the Toq and Smartwatch 2. Samsung as per to their reputation made Galaxy
Gear look a bit more stylish with its metal face.
Then there’s the battery life. The Sony Smartwach 2 and
processor, Toq can go from 3 to 5 days of low usage with their screen
constantly on, but the Galaxy Gear would last even less at just 1 day. That’s
the compromise needed for the fast prow annoying has to take your watch off
every single night just to charge it up? That’s neither practical, nor
intuitive unless they come up with some wireless charging solution which can
sit by your bed and double as an alarm clock. We’ve accepted the need for
charging our smartphones frequently, but who pampers their wrist watch.
Smartwatches may just have their evolution kick started by the
potential they hold. Running apps and doing the aforementioned features is cool
and useful, but the battery life and display quality just hasn’t caught up yet.
Not to mention their performance, this sometimes can get you out of your skin.
As in everything, this is a matter of which aspects you are willing to
trade off. If you value rich connectivity features and running apps on your
watch more than having a stylish, durable and enduring accessory on your hand,
then get either one of those three.
No comments:
Post a Comment