Skip to content

Posts tagged ‘Android Wear’

6
Aug

BBC News app gets Android Wear support for top stories and alerts


bbc newsThe Android BBC News app has just received a minor update that brings support for our favorite smartwatch platform, Android Wear. Now you’ll be able to get notified about top stories and custom alerts right from your wrist without having to unlock your phone. Pretty useful for staying up to date on the latest news, so hopefully you’ll learn about stories before they’re plastered all over your Twitter timeline.

While Android Wear is still a pretty young platform, there’s no doubt that it’s growing quickly. Major apps and services are jumping on board to support the wearable, and that’s likely to continue as the available watches keep improving.

Hit the link below to download the update.

Play Store Download Link

Come comment on this article: BBC News app gets Android Wear support for top stories and alerts

5
Aug

ASUS ZenWatch now on sale for $129.99 through Best Buy and Amazon


asus-zenwatch-official_02

The ASUS ZenWatch is now on sale for $129.99 through Best Buy and Amazon. While the ASUS ZenWatch 2 is available, the original ZenWatch is still a great performer, especially at this price point.

While it’s always fun to have the latest and greatest, the ZenWatch is perfect for those that still aren’t sure about smartwatches. It works well and it’s cheap, making it a low-risk for those that want to take Android Wear for a test.

As a quick refresher, the ASUS ZenWatch features a 320 x 320 AMOLED display, a Snapdragon 400 CPU, 512MB of RAM, 4GB of internal storage, and it’s running Android Wear 5.1.1.

The device previously went through a short and similar sale like this on the Google Store.

Even though it has a successor, it’s still a premium looking smartwatch and has a classy feel to it. However, if you’re looking for something for style, it might be best to hold off and wait for the Huawei Watch.

Either way, if you want to pick yourself up a ZenWatch, be sure to hit one of the source links below.

source: Amazon, Best Buy

Come comment on this article: ASUS ZenWatch now on sale for $129.99 through Best Buy and Amazon

4
Aug

Asus ZenWatch on sale for $130 at Best Buy


If you’ve been waiting for current Android smartwatches to become more affordable before jumping on board, you may now want to consider the Asus ZenWatch.  It is currently listed at Best Buy online for $129.99, down $70 from the regular price.

zenwatch_sale

There’s no word on how long this deal will last, so better decide if you think this might be the one for you.

To recap the specs, we’re looking at:

  • Display:  1.63″ 320×320 AMOLED
  • SoC:  Snapdragon 400 (1.2 GHz)
  • Memory:  512 MB of RAM
  • Storage:  4GB
  • Features:  2.5D curved Gorilla Glass 3, Water resistance with IP55 rating
  • Color:  Silver and rose gold, with brown leather strap
  • OS:  Android Wear

For reference, the price is at $173 on Amazon, so Best Buy has a good deal going here.

Source: Best Buy

The post Asus ZenWatch on sale for $130 at Best Buy appeared first on AndroidGuys.

3
Aug

Sony’s IFA 2015 Press Conference is on September 2nd


Sony_Xperia_Z3v_Front_Lower_Sony_Logo_TA

Sony may have just announced its ‘super mid-range’ Xperia M5 and gargantuan C5 Ultra smartphones, but that doesn’t mean the Japanese electronics company is anywhere near finished updating its line-up of devices. While we believe that the Xperia Z5 will be unveiled at the IFA in Berlin next month, Sony has confirmed its presence at the trade show via a tweet sent by its Italian subsidiary.

According to the tweet, Sony will be holding a press conference at the IFA on September 2nd to announce ‘many new features.’ It’s thought that besides announcing its latest Xperia Z flagship, that Sony could also unveil a new smartwatch. Until then, it’s just a case of sitting back and waiting for the inevitable stream of leaks to appear. Besides the Xperia Z5, what would you like to see Sony unveil at the IFA next month?

 

Source: Sony Italia (Twitter)
Via: XperiaBlog

Come comment on this article: Sony’s IFA 2015 Press Conference is on September 2nd

1
Aug

Google updates Google Maps for Android Wear to keep your eyes on the road


Google has updated Google Maps for Android Wear to provide a better navigation experience for everyone. The purpose of this update is to make it easier to navigate to where you need to go, without ever taking your phone out of your pocket. The latest update also has integrations with a few different popular apps that work with Google Maps.

As you stroll through a neighborhood, Foursquare will make sure you won’t walk by and miss a restaurant’s legendary burrito. And TripAdvisor will tell you about the city’s best comedy club that you should visit now (or save for tomorrow night, directly from your watch). You’ll blend right in with the locals as you expertly navigate a new city’s public transport with Citymapper’s step-by-step directions right on your wrist.

No matter how caught up you get in your adventures, be sure to take the time to check-in with your loved ones. With Glympse on Android Wear, you won’t even need to take out your phone! And should your vacation inspire bigger life changes, use Trulia or Zillow to glance at all the home sale listings in your new, beloved neighborhood.

Google Maps Android Wear Update

With Google ramping up integration for Google Maps with Android Wear, you should never really have to remove your phone from your pocket. Therefore, your eyes will stay where they need to be, the road, which makes you a safer driver to everyone.

From “Ok Google..”, to being able to glance quickly at your notifications, Android Wear is becoming increasingly more useful than it was in its’ early days. Let us know what you think about these updates that Google is bringing to everyone’s wrists.

Source: Official Android Blog

The post Google updates Google Maps for Android Wear to keep your eyes on the road appeared first on AndroidGuys.

25
Jul

ICYMI: Power-ballad singing tech, foldable bridge and more


ICYMI: Power-Ballad Singing Tech, Foldable Bridge and More

Today on In Case You Missed It: A computer-like display, singing power ballads from the ’90s, simply must be seen; Japanese engineers unveiled an emergency bridge that can unfold in five minutes; and the game Half-Life gets hacked to work on an Android Wear watch.

We also run through the biggest headlines of the week but think this Stephen Hawking goes searching for ET story is the most shared over brunch worth (after you’ve already touched on Chrysler).

And from the whatever you do, don’t miss this files: A new kitten app “Cat Shake” gives you an endless stream of cats. Guess I just found what I’m doing for the weekend.

If you come across any interesting videos, we’d love to see them. Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.

Filed under: Misc, Gaming, Meta, Robots, Transportation, Science, Internet, LG

Comments

24
Jul

You can play Half-Life on your smartwatch, just about


half life Android Wear

Technology has come a long way in the past decade or so but there are still limitations, as Dave Bennett found out while trying to run Half-Life on his first generation LG G Watch. While the beloved game surprisingly actually boots up and runs, it’s not exactly the sort of experience that will keep you entertained on the bus ride home.

Aside from trying to control the game with your finger covering the entire 1.65-inch screen, the frame rate is also apparently rather hit and miss. It can range anywhere from a moderately smooth 30fps to a 2fps slide show. The game is also prone to crashing, but that shouldn’t be surprising. There’s only so much that can be accomplished with a low power Snapdragon 400 SoC and 512MB of RAM.

To get the game up and running, Bennett makes use of the SDLash app, which can be used to emulate old titles that run on Valve’s Source Engine. If you want to try it out for yourself, just following the steps in the source link.

While this is not really a viable way to replay a classic, getting Half-Life to run on Android Wear at all seems like an accomplishment in itself.

24
Jul

The Watch just made Apple over $1 billion. Why hasn’t Android Wear been as successful?


Gold Apple Watch Edition

As good as gold: the Apple Watch has earned its maker as much as $1,000,000,000 in the span of three months.

It’s official: Apple has a license to print money. In what may be the most unprecedented financial return ever for a new product category, the company’s quarterly guidance report has numerous analysts concluding it may have sold over $1 billion worth of Apple Watch devices in the three months the wearable has been on sale.

Despite what some might call success, the figure is ironically well below the almost $2 billion+ that some had expected, a issue that was likely fostered by supply shortages or long waits. Still, this approximated figure means the wearable earned more money than either the iPad did, or the original iPhone, when they first launched.

The earnings come at a period of absolute prosperity for Apple, which for Q1 2015 reported the most profitable financial earnings in history for a publicly traded company. More recently, The Wall Street Journal published a piece that took a deeper look into those results and found that, while Apple sells only 20% of the world’s smartphones, in Q1 2015, it managed to earn 92% of the profits.

_____________________________62__1024 The Verge

All about Apple (and Google)

Android-Wear-Vs-Apple-Watch-10-710x473

Watch out not to fall: Investors will no doubt be eager to see how the Apple Watch performs in Q3.

Apple itself is not giving specifics. The figure everyone is throwing around has been deduced from reported earnings on “Other Products” sold, and assumes there was no growth with respect to iPod, Beats, or other items. Additionally, because Apple has deliberately chosen not to provide any information about which models of the Apple Watch sold what numbers, we can only speculate. For reference, some had initially predicted the wearable would have sold 3 or 4 million units by this point.

For the sake of argument, if Apple sold nothing but Watch Sport devices (each roughly $400), that would mean approximately 2.5 million units were sold. In reality there are countless factors involved given that the device comes in two sizes (each having a slightly different price) and arguably the more desirable of the “cheaper” two versions (“Apple Watch”) does, itself, come in several different band offerings that separate the price in terms of hundreds of dollars. And then of course the Apple Watch Edition is present, for those customers which ASUS has determined must be insane.

For the sake of argument, if Apple sold nothing but Watch Sport devices, that would be approximately 2,500,000 units, far FAR more than the meager 750,000 Android Wear saw in all of 2014.

For the sake of this piece, and for the sentiment it seeks to share on the whole, it ultimately doesn’t matter how many of which model Apple sold. Any way you run the figures, Tim Cook & Co. have indisputably eclipsed the roughly 720,000 Android Wear devices that estimates say Google managed to ship in all of 2015. For reference, Android Wear launched on June 25th, which means that figure takes into account 6 months and six different products: the Samsung Gear Live, the LG G Watch, the Sony Smartwartch 3, the Motorola Moto 360, the Asus ZenWatch, and the LG G Watch R. And Samsung’s Tizen-based Gear S for reference? First day sales were just 10,000 units whereas Apple managed to net over 1,000,000 for its Watch on the first day of pre-orders, a number that didn’t even take into account non-US based figures.

Android Wear

.rvs_wrapper
width: 350px;

.rvs_wrapper.align_left
float: left;

.rvs_wrapper.align_right
float: right;

.rvs_wrapper.align_center,
.rvs_wrapper.align_none
width: 100%;

.rvs_wrapper.align_center
text-align: center;

.rvs_wrapper.align_center.cbc-latest-videos ul li
float: none;
display: inline-block;
vertical-align: top;

.rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos:not(.align_none) ul li:nth-child(2n+1)
clear: both;

.rvs_title
font-weight: 600 !important;
margin: 0 !important;
font-size: 24px !important;

.rvs_wrapper.align_right .rvs_title
padding-left: 20px;

.rvs_title a
font-family: ‘Roboto Condensed’;
color: #3a3a3a;

.rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul
padding-top: 10px;

.rvs_wrapper.align_left.cbc-latest-videos ul li,
.rvs_wrapper.align_none.cbc-latest-videos ul li
padding: 0 15px 0 0;

.rvs_wrapper.align_right.cbc-latest-videos ul li
padding: 0 0 0 15px;
float: right;

.rvs_wrapper.align_center.cbc-latest-videos ul li
padding: 0 7px;

.rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li > a
font-weight: 400;

.rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li > a .yt-thumbnail
margin-bottom: 0;

@media only screen and (min-width : 480px)
body #page .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul
width: 100% !important;

@media only screen and (max-width : 480px)
body #page .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos
width: 100%;
float: none !important;
overflow-x: auto;
overflow-y: hidden;

body #page .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul
overflow: auto;
max-height: none;

body .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li
float: left !important;
clear: none !important;

Apple’s offensive

Apple Tim Cook

The Apple Watch represents Tim Cook’s first big initiative, and he must be quite happy that it has proven successful.

To understand why the Apple Watch has been seemingly so successful, naturally it has less to do with the product itself than it does the lifestyle it represents. To understand the sentiment, one need only to look at the endless number of professional reviews of the Apple Watch, very few of which were actually glowing or implying the device – as it stands today – is somehow going to change one’s existence. Even with a novel user interface and creative use of the “digital crown” to achieve zoom functionality, there is very little the Apple Watch does that existing Android-compatible products didn’t already offer. Granted as more apps become available this has the potential to change, as it does with software updates, but looking at even Samsung’s Tizen-based Gear S, it has several novel features that are impossible on the Apple Watch, the most obvious being SIM card support.

Apple sold its Watch in no small part because its user base responds well to marketing, to cachet, to social factors, and to image. As is often argued, Apple customers tend to have more money, or are willing to spend more of it, hence the large profits the company enjoys and greater app-generated revenue than Google’s Android. These customers are more likely to want to show off their new trinket, and more likely to want it to begin with even if they don’t know how or why they would use it. Apple is, in a sense, “cool”, and most everyone wants to be cool. Apple esentially found a way to get people to buy a time piece for wrist, even when their phone already serves the same purpose.

Google’s main problem is… Google

Lollipop statue Android Google logo close

Unfortunately Android Wear is nowhere near as “sweet” on open source as its big brother (seen here, with Lollipop in hand).

Indeed the problem here, if one exists, is really one of Google’s subdued, almost apathetic consideration of the wearable market as a whole. Given how much brouhaha was made about Glass when it was first announced, it’s all the more surprising, though it’s also likely the ultimate fate of the expensive wearable also served as a wake up call: general consumer interest is hardly present at best, and even among the more tech-oriented price is still a factor for a product that is still “unfinished.” These days, talk of its successor refer to a product that will have a much more niche, much more focused use rather than the mainstream consumer device that was once envisioned.

When Android first stepped into the market, arguably the biggest need Google had was getting vendors and OEMs alike to accept  the fledgling OS while the world was smitten with a certain Cupertino-cropped crop. Android has certainly taken off, but the same can not be said about Android Wear, a platform that has seen substantial improvements in the year since its release, yet severely lacks the momentum and attention that Apple has garnished. Google has, in a sense, failed to “sell” the idea that consumers need to wear a watch to complete their lives whereas Apple has.

There are many reasons for such a conundrum, though arguably decisions to lock down the wearable OS in a manner (and fashion) that couldn’t be further from the mainstay Android device ecosystem is certainly at the top of the list.

Instead of allowing for choice and creativity, Google has opted for a divisive strategy not unlike that which Microsoft attempted with Windows Phone 7. WP7 phones were unable to include things such as fast CPUs, or even large or high resolution displays, a feature that wasn’t added until Windows Phone 8 Update 3. One of the core mistakes Microsoft eventually realized was that it couldn’t keep up the charade, and one need only look at the non-existent line-up of Windows Phone 10 launch devices to see what’s become of this sordid situation.

The man with the iron fist

LG Watch Urbane LTE 9

Regardless of how many people actually want the extra features, products like the LG Watch Urbane LTE (seen here) or the Samsung Gear S have key functions that Android Wear can never hope to compete with as it currently exists today.

Perhaps the largest reason Android Wear has truly failed to excite or take off with the mainstream is due to the way Google has exerted complete control over its functionality and form. No cameras. No cellular modems. No modifications. You can literally buy any random Android Wear product and be met with the same experience across the board.

What’s the end result then? Maybe one has a few extra watch faces. That’s about the limit to which OEMs can “work their magic” and instead are confronted with making the most out of the outside. First we had square faces, now round is sound. But just how different does the Huawei Watch actually look from the LG Watch Urbane? There are only so many ways you can make a watch, and due to the way Google has stymied development the choices are even fewer.

The point really hits home when taking a look at just why it is customers needs are better met when there are choices. If someone wants a smartphone with a great camera, Sony is usually mentioned among the top choices. If someone wants a smartphone with a beautiful, vibrant display, Samsung is usually the first choice. If someone wants a low price, perhaps Huawei or ZTE. With the sheer diversity among Android devices, there is truly something for everyone. With Android Wear however, there is not.

Variety is the zest that’s missing

Asus on Apple Watch Edition

ASUS is quick to diagnose insanity yet can’t see the “madness” in Android Wear’s current condition.

Those customers who want to make calls on their wrist a la Dick Tracy must run to Samsung. People who want a robust fitness experience might look to Fitbit. And what about design; time pieces are all about design, and what then, for those customers on Android who do have cash to burn, and who would be willing to pay “Apple Watch money”? Well at the moment, they are flat out of luck. This is truly bizarre when considering just how outlandish some of the Android devices of the past have been: Google the company that once encouraged thinking outside the box is now living in it?

With the sheer diversity among Android devices, there is truly something for everyone. With Android Wear however, there is not.

It makes sense why a company like Samsung has made dedicated efforts to provide Gear wearables that offer experiences which can not be had with Android Wear. Take the Gear Fit, which has a curved, rectangular display. Doesn’t meet Google’s requirements. What about the Gear S which has an embedded cellular antenna for voice calls? No go for Android Wear. And what of its upcoming Gear A, once known as “Project Orbis“? It’s allegedly going to use a ring-based navigational system and that is definitely not kosher with Google.

Still, trouble is abound when you look around: to date Samsung has six different Gear Watches, only one of which uses Android Wear. LG has three that support it, but has already released the Urbane LTE which runs WebOS instead, and has far more form and functionality with three working hard buttons on the side and an embedded cellular radio. Perhaps most importantly, it doesn’t require formatting the device to pair it with another phone. Are these devices making a killing? Obviously not, but they indicate their respective OEMs are willing to make concerted efforts to break out of Google’s shadow.

Price competition

Another issue to consider is that of Android at-large, namely the lack of profitability for basically anyone but Samsung and Google itself:

BT-AD014_SMARTP_16U_20150712190305-840x1504

Last week’s report by The Wall Street Journal pointed out just how profitable Apple is, and how irrelevant 99% of Android OEMs are when it comes to profits.

As mentioned earlier in this piece, and as covered last week, Apple is the undisputed winner when it comes to earning money. Despite selling just 20% of the world’s smartphones in Q1 of this year, it managed to capture 92% of the profits. Samsung, in turn, the largest Android OEM, had but 15% (because the research takes losses into account, the total of the shares is higher than 100%).

Of course, there is a company who is making cash hand-over-fist with Android: Google. Every single one of the billions of Android products in the market that have access to Google Play Services means that Google earns money from ad revenue and data mining framework. Of course Android OEMs are keen on using the OS because it alleviates them from having to create their own mobile OS and fuss around with developers and support. Samsung is no stranger to this problem, as can be readily seen with the trials and tribulations associated with its Tizen platform.

At the end of the day, this lack of profits means potentially less resources to actually develop and release Android Wear devices. HTC for example, has been having financial troubles off-and-on for years now, and the fact that budget-friendly products are selling so well means it will continue to in the future. If said company is having enough trouble as is selling flagships like the One M9, where is it supposed to find the cash to spare on a wrist-worn-wearable? The sheer amount of money needed for a project like this, even on a small budget, is immense: the R&D costs, the labor costs, the manufacturing costs, the marketing costs… when dealing with products that are aimed at developed countries and markets where you have Apple or Samsung to contend with, it’s just not possible to go small, you just don’t go at all.

Fragmentation, perhaps in part

To an extent, the tired-and-true claim of fragmentation can be addressed, though the true nature of its fostering this situation is arguably a small one at best. Android Wear is only compatible with Jelly Bean 4.3 and up, and unfortunately there is still a large minority of the population that is unable to use it, even if they wanted to. Consider the following:

スクリーンショット (52)

As added emphasis, consider this as well:

スクリーンショット (53)

Android Jelly Bean (4.3) launched on July 24, 2013 and it – or any build released after – is required for Android Wear compatibility. As the first visual mentions, at the time of the wearable platform’s launch on June 25, 2014, “only 24% of Android devices were compatible”. This is a major limiting factor, especially when compared to the 50% of iOS phones that were compatible a week before Apple Watch hit stores.

The second visual would serve to indicate Jelly Bean itself is running on almost half of all Android smartphones, but with respect to Android Wear the situation is more complicated. Jelly Bean was the name given to three different builds: 4.1, 4.2, and 4.3, and as the first visual indicates, 33.7% of JB’s 39.2% share is not compatible. When you combine this with percentages running even earlier versions of Android, you arrive at 45%. Of the billions of devices running Android in the world today, 45% of them can not, and arguably will never be able to, run Android Wear. In the case of Gingerbread in particular, it has been almost half a decade since the OS became outdated yet lo and behold 5.7% of the world is still using it.

While it is easy to argue that customers who want wearables would be the same ones who have the latest-and-greatest devices at all times, this is not necessarily the case. Consider the situation with the LG G Flex and Japan, for example, wherein the one carrier that sold it, KDDI au, utterly failed to update the device past Android 4.2 despite LG itself having long since made 4.4 KitKat available for the model elsewhere. Thus for anyone who bought this phone, which released about less than 18 months ago, they are squat out of luck. Consider this situation on a global scale and it becomes quite clear just why so many devices are still running pre-4.3 builds of Android.

Going back to the Microsoft/Windows parallel discussed earlier, this parrots the very same conundrum that existed with Windows 8’s native “Metro” apps: There was, and has never been, any incentive for developers to make “Modern UI” programs simply because only those running Windows 8 or 8.1 can even use them. What’s the point when the vast majority of the world is still on Windows 7, XP, or even Vista? This is arguably the exact reason Apple has never deemed it worthwhile to make a “modern” iTunes.

Let’s reason it out

While it’s easy to attack Google for “heavy-handedly” managing Android Wear, there are a number of very clear reasons why it has chosen to.

Fragmentation

android-fragmentation-visual

This. Is. Literally. Fragmentation: a visual look at just why Google doesn’t want Android Wear to be open source.

Arguably the largest reason Google doesn’t want Android Wear to be an open free-for-all lies in the very nature of what Android-proper is: a teeming, tangled mess of fragmentation, though ironically almost none of it is Google’s doing. The very core of Android’s existence allowed for companies like Samsung, HTC, LG or Motorola to skin everything in the old days. It is the issue that allows the new wave of OEMs, Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and others to continue to “mess with” the user experience even now, as companies like Samsung finally got the hint.

By holding the keys to the castle, Google is able to exercise total control over what goes on in its courtyard, and in doing so can make sure that certain standards are adhered to. While Google has more recently taken to moving functionality to the Play Services framework, instead of relying on OS updates – which may never come depending on the OEM –  the same can’t be said about third party developers. Truth be told it is a major burden for software engineers, to manually check each and every build and possible configuration of Android to ensure their software will work on the device of your choice. This has become even more pronounced given that budget products might still be running on Jelly Bean, Ice Cream Sandwich, or even Gingerbread.

This chart shows Samsung's 47.5% share of Android.

Open Signal This chart shows Samsung’s 47.5% share of Android.

By locking down Android Wear to Google’s Android and not AOSP, it also ensures that all wearables make full use of Google Play Services, something that cannot be said of smartphones released in China. Android Wear is heavily dependent on Google Now, and thus by requiring KitKat, it thereby ensures all compatible handsets will support it.

China trouble

china android

The very fact that Google Play Services are still banned in China is another reason to lock down Android Wear. As we saw with the Chinese Galaxy Note 4, products designed for China ship without Google apps installed and are unable to use any of the framework that makes them run. Of course there are ways around this, but for the general public who will never miss their presence, it only furthers China’s agenda.

If Android Wear were to be open, and if it were to catch on in China’s rapidly expanding mobile market, it would mean that countless local OEMs could be creating products, and that is downright infuriating for Google, who is thus not able to earn any money from use of its infrastructure, services, and advertising models. China has over a billion people, and yet as things stand now, Google is – in theory – not getting a single yuan from any of them. In a sense, it would be tantamount to thousands of Kindle Fire variants. Google worked hard to create the OS, and it definitely wants to get something back in return.

 Quality control

Another key benefit, Google can ensure quality control standards, even if only indirectly. Think for a moment just how many Android devices there are. Consider all the budget ones that are sold at extremely low prices. There is no guarantee of anything whatsoever. Apple, paradoxically, is able to justify it’s high price point for the Apple Watch in part because consumers trust Apple, and because Apple itself has brand value. When one considers the current crop of Android Wear offerings, they are all sold by legitimate, established companies that have their own sense of trust among consumers. Just imagine what would happen if “random brand x” were to start selling an Android Wear smartwatch.

With Android you can put the OS on everything, from a price-defiant Vertu to a bottom-barrel budget product, and the differences couldn’t be more astounding. One phone might have support for a specific sensor, yet another doesn’t. One device might have insufficient RAM to properly run its skin, yet the other has too much. Apple has never had to deal with qualms about consistency and cohesiveness with its devices, but Google (inadvertently) has. By standardizing everything and specifying the exact requirements, Google is therefore ensuring all users regardless of price or product, that the experience will be uniform. Think of it as a Starbucks that must adhere to a specific company-wide recipe for mocha coffee as opposed to hundreds of different restaurants that may blend the beverage differently.

Conclusion: mad money to be made

dollars money 401(K) 2012

While Apple’s success might be good news for the folks over in Cupertino, it’s of a far more mixed blessing to those working with Android. Google’s own wearable OS has been available for over a year now, yet there is not a shred of evidence from the company’s own PR team to suggest it’s even successful.

Google is essentially taking a very careful, leisurely approach to Android Wear. This might be in part because the market for wearables is in and of itself limited in scope. It might be a result of the general consensus that Glass was a failed experiment. It might be a desire to keep things under stricter control to prevent OEMs from going crazy with the functionality. Whatever the true reason is, be it one, several, or all of the possibilities above, Google is once again going to play second fiddle to Apple, something that is decidedly uncomfortable, given that Android Wear launched almost an entire year before Apple Watch. Google should be calling the shots, not dodging the bullets.

The Bad

In one sense, Google’s wearable OS can be considered a failure as far as widespread adoption goes. Unlike its smartphone and tablet platform which has devices of all shapes, sizes, and prices from almost a thousand OEMs, Android Wear has been a platform key manufacturers have either deliberately ignored (see Samsung’s Gear S), chosen to start ignoring (see LG’s “test” device the Urbane LTE), or else ignore entirely (see HTC for example). Meanwhile, Motorola drew attention last year with the Moto 360 but has yet to announce a followup, and Huawei’s eye catching offering has yet to materialize months after it was announced.

The Good

Despite the general malaise confronting Android Wear, there is a potential silver lining: if Apple can sell over $1 billion worth of smartwatches in a scant three months, there is an untold amount of money it can make within a year, or with a new, updated product. By that reasoning, Google itself, along with partner OEMs, are also poised to earn major money with Android Wear. Despite the rather humble beginnings, now that the cash cow is out in the field, one would hope that Team Android gets its act together and starts putting some serious effort into the wearable platform.

Now that we have weighed in, we want to hear from you! What’s your take on the whole Android Wear situation? Is Google doing enough? Is the wearable platform just not worth the effort? Leave your comments below!// <![CDATA[ (function () var opst = document.createElement('script'); var os_host = document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https:" : "http:"; opst.type = 'text/javascript'; opst.async = true; opst.src = os_host + '//' + 'www.opinionstage.com/polls/2284393/embed.js'; (document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0] ()); // ]]>

23
Jul

[Deal] Sony’s SmartWatch 3 drops under $150 on Amazon


sony_smartwatch_3_amazon_072315_discount

Smartwatches that launched last year to assist with Android Wear’s debut are starting to drop in price. For example, the Google Store has the Moto 360 for $149 and the ZenWatch for $129, a considerable savings compared to when they launched. And right now, the Sony Smartwatch 3 will only cost you $147. That is, if you want it in white. The smartwatch also comes in black and lime green color options that will command more money. The black model will set you back $170 and lime green costs $159. These prices are down from the original $299.

If you’re looking for an Android Wear smartwatch that has built-in GPS and can be exposed to dust and water, you might want to take advantage of this deal.

[Amazon]

Come comment on this article: [Deal] Sony’s SmartWatch 3 drops under $150 on Amazon

23
Jul

Packaging for the Huawei Watch is anything but cheap


huawei_watch_packaging_hd_blog_072215_1

The Huawei Watch remains one of the most talked about Android Wear devices because it has yet to be released after debuting at MWC 2015 in March. Huawei has yet to provide a firm release date or price, but consumers are eagerly awaiting an arrival that should come this fall. Why are people so eager? The Huawei Watch features a premium design unrivaled (so far) by any other Android Wear device. With that premium device, will likely come a high price tag. So Huawei should really be all-in to make it a splashy product.

huawei_watch_packaging_hd_blog_072215_3
huawei_watch_packaging_hd_blog_072215_4
huawei_watch_packaging_hd_blog_072215_2

Going along with the Huawei Watch’s premium design will be packaging of the same caliber. The box’s black exterior is textured, in addition to the embossed company logo, with a gold trim where the top and bottom pieces meet. Upon opening the box, you will see the Huawei Watch elevated above the white interior. There are gold pegs on the left and right sides of the watch. And the interior of the top piece reads “Huawei design. Smart within.”

This very well could be the packaging not meant for the base model that will cost less than $1,000.

Source: HD Blog
Via: Droid Life

Come comment on this article: Packaging for the Huawei Watch is anything but cheap