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Posts tagged ‘SmartWatch’

9
Jun

Pebble pubs its activity-tracking algorithms and Happiness app


Pebble has a few health-related updates to share following the launch of its crowdfunding campaign for three new fitness-focused smartwatches. In particular, it has revealed how its first native fitness-tracking app works by publishing the algorithms behind it, launched a mood-tracking app and published the results of a sleep study. Nathaniel Stockham, a Stanford U Ph.D. student in Neuroscience and the person who developed the app’s algorithms, wrote about their details in a blog post. He explained that one of them detects and measures motion while the other counts steps and can distinguish if you’re walking or running.

According to Pebble, algorithms “are the missing piece in making wearables useful to developers and relevant to healthcare researchers,” but other manufacturers aren’t as forthcoming with their secrets. The company believes that making its own available to the public will allow third parties to expand upon its offerings.

The smartwatch-maker has also released a mood tracker called the Happiness app, which asks you how you’re feeling every hour you’re awake. It also asks you what you’re doing, what you’ve just done and who you’re with, so you can get a bigger picture of what affects your moods. Pebble Head of Data Susan Holcomb talked about her personal experience with the app in a post. She said it helped her see that her mood gets better when she interacts with other people. One tester found out he’s happiest after mealtimes, while another realized he’s not drinking enough water, thanks to the app’s questions. While it may sound like a hassle to answer random Q’s throughout the day, the app was designed to bug you only for a week. It will send you an email with your results after that week is over.

Finally, Pebble has published the results of a sleep study, where it confirmed that night owls tend to be more social than early birds. The company says its results can help you make informed decisions on how to spend your day, such as when to tackle work and challenging issues and when to spend time with loved ones.

Source: Kickstarter, Pebble (1), (2), (3)

4
Jun

Microsoft Outlook has an Android Wear watch face


Microsoft Outlook made its debut on current wearables with an Apple Watch app last year, before launching an Android Wear app in April. Now Microsoft has gone a step further, by updating its app with an Android Wear watchface. Outlook users with a Wear device get details on their day’s schedule, next upcoming meeting or unread messages right on their initial screen, without needing to dive into an app or wait for a notification. If your work setup is centered around Outlook instead of Gmail, it should make dealing with scheduling and messages far easier — grab the latest update from the Play Store and sync apps on your Android watch to get the latest version.

Source: Microsoft Office Blog, Play Store

25
May

Samsung denies giving up on Android Wear for smartwatches


Hold your horses, folks: Samsung hasn’t officially broken with up Android Wear just yet. A recent report from Fast Company cited unnamed Samsung executives who said the hardware giant wasn’t working on any Android Wear smartwatches, and didn’t plan to develop any new ones either. Sounds like a pretty emphatic answer, but Samsung disagreed when asked for comment:

“We disagree with Fast Company’s interpretation. Samsung has not made any announcement concerning Android Wear and we have not changed our commitment to any of our platforms.”

Yeah, not exactly the most compelling response, is it? Still, it adds a little color to what seemed like a black-and-white situation — Samsung hasn’t officially given up on Android Wear yet, but it might not make another Wear watch, either. The future, as they say, is still unwritten.

Of course, what made Fast Company’s report so compelling is just how plausible it was. After all, if you’ve been keeping tabs on the rise of Android Wear, Samsung bailing on the platform wouldn’t be a stretch. The company launched its first (and only) Wear watch at Google I/O two years ago, and it immediately failed to capture people’s imaginations the way wearables like the Moto 360 did. Even when it was brand new, the Gear Live felt more like an experiment than anything else — Samsung launched three Tizen-powered watches before it, and went full speed with Tizen after. Hell, the relatively recent Gear S2 actually wound up being pretty impressive. Didn’t see that one coming.

Tizen offers its share of advantages — those unnamed Samsung execs said it was more power-efficient, and would bring some cohesiveness to the company’s wearables lineup. More importantly, though, Tizen gives Samsung something it lacks with Android Wear: control. While the Android Wear 2.0 update packs some long-awaited improvements, device makers still can’t customize a Wear watch’s software as extensively as they can Android on a smartphone. That means Android Wear’s core aesthetic remains out of their reach, making hardware design and component choice the main differentiators between models. With Tizen, Samsung has fuller control over hardware and software, and it’s that unity that might — might — give Samsung something of an edge as the wearable war rages on. Then again, Android Wear enjoys much more popularity as a platform, and Samsung might not be done trying to capitalize on that yet. We’ll just have to wait and see.

23
May

This is what Samsung’s Gear Fit 2 (probably) looks like


As much as it’s possible to know anything about a company before it’s had the press conference, we know Samsung’s got wearable ambitions. In addition to a pair of Bragi-like wireless earbuds, the firm is putting the finishing touches to an updated version of the Gear Fit smartwatch it released in 2014. If this leaked publicity shot is to be believed, then the Gear Fit 2 will look smaller and sleeker than its predecessor. It chimes with earlier rumors that claimed the device would pack a 1.84-inch AMOLED screen, integrated GPS and 4GB of built-in storage. As for a release date, it’s pegged for June, but take everything written above with the traditional pinch of salt.

[ #타이젠 카페 ] 기어핏2 사진 모음 6월 부터 판매 시작 #기어핏 #기어S2 #스마트밴드 #스마트워치 #기어핏2 pic.twitter.com/DOvDIkR5pV

— 타이젠 카페 (TIZEN CAFE) (@esse1000k) May 23, 2016

Via: The Verge, SamMobile

Source: Tizen Cafe (Twitter)

19
May

Android Wear is getting a massive overhaul this fall


It’s been over two years since Android Wear was introduced, but smartwatches are still very much an unproven commodity. But Google has been making plenty of tweaks and refinements to its watch-based OS to hone the features owners find most useful. Today at its annual I/O developer conference, Google is announcing what Android Wear VP David Singleton is calling its “biggest platform update yet”: Android Wear 2.0. It’s a visual and functional overhaul organized around the three things Google has found to be most important for Android Wear users.

The core uses for Wear so far are glanceable information, messaging and fitness. Each of those parts of the OS have been improved, but the changes actually reach far beyond just that. “For the very first time, we’ve been able to take a holistic pass across the design of the entire system and UI to really hone and tune the interactions around key things that people want to do,” Singleton says.

Some of the most profound changes to Wear come under messaging, so let’s start there. Many of the changes Singleton outlined go far beyond messaging apps, most notably notifications in general. Gone are the white cards that you’d swipe through to see what info Android Wear is pushing to your watch. Now each card has a dark but colored background as a visual cue to what app wants your attention. Hangouts is dark green, Gmail is red, and so forth.

The bigger change is that notifications no longer take up the bottom 10 percent of your watch face. Instead, if you receive a notification, the next time you raise your watch to your eyeline, you’ll see the card slide up into the display as a visual cue. It then recedes and gives you a clean view of the watch face. “It’s an obvious but also quite subtle cue that there’s something to take action on in the stream of cards, but then it goes away again,” Singleton explains.

Of course, you can still swipe up from the bottom of the watch face to go through your various notifications and cards — and there’s a host of new features if you want to reply to a message. You can already reply by voice or with the emoji-sketching feature introduced last year, but now Google’s gone mad and added a full keyboard, handwriting recognition and smart replies to Wear. All are available to third-party apps, as well.

All three of these new reply features are powered in large part by Google’s machine learning. Smart reply works like the same feature in Inbox: After reading your message, the app will suggest salient possible replies that you can just tap to send. If those smart replies don’t say what you want, you can sketch letters on the watch screen or use a tiny keyboard to swipe out a message. You can hunt and peck if you want, but swipe seems like a much better experience on such a small screen.

“We’ve worked really hard to make this work well for small screen devices,” Singleton says about handwriting recognition. “Our machine learning techniques recognize both the strokes that I draw, but also if I draw multiple strokes it can actually adapt the word that’s being recognized based on the context of what went before.” And once you type or swipe a single word with the on-screen keyboard, Wear will start suggesting words to follow it, again based on machine learning. In a lot of cases, you should be able to type or swipe out a couple words and then tap the suggested options to complete your message. I was extremely skeptical of a watch-sized keyboard, but in the brief demo I saw, it worked far better than I would have expected.

There are a few other UI changes, as well. Across the entire system, Google is using swipe-up-and-down gestures to hide navigation and actions. If you pull from the top of the screen, you’ll get the “wearable navigation drawer,” which lets you move through the various screens in an app. Pulling from the bottom brings up the “action drawer,” which is where you’ll find buttons to perform specific functions. “Having to give over a lot of real estate to moving between screens or taking actions means that the user has to do more scrolling,” Singleton says. “It’s harder for apps to just show at a glance the information that you care about.”

The next major change to Android Wear was introduced as a fitness feature — but the implications go far beyond fitness. Any app for Wear can now operate in a “stand-alone” mode, running on the watch itself with unfettered network access. Whether pulling data from your phone’s connection, a WiFi network or a built-in LTE connection, these apps can now operate fully untethered from your phone. If you want to go running with just your watch, for example, this means you can stream music from Spotify without having to sync songs in offline mode first.

Furthermore, stand-alone apps mean you’ll be able to find and install apps directly from your watch. Previously you had to go through your phone to add new apps. Perhaps the most notable thing about this change is that iPhone users with an Android Wear watch will have access to far more apps. Right now Wear is extremely limited if you’re pairing it with an iPhone. But with 2.0, you’ll be able to browse and install stand-alone apps straight to your watch, regardless of what phone you pair it with. So far it’s been hard to recommend Wear devices to iPhone users, but that may change when Wear 2.0 arrives.

The big fitness-focused change here is a new API called the activity recognition API. As you might expect, this lets the watch better identify what your body is doing at any given moment and launch the appropriate app to track your activity. “If I just start running, within about 10 seconds [fitness app] Strava can launch and show my time, my distance and my pace for my run,” Singleton says. “It just launched itself, in the right context.” Unfortunately, it sounds like the API only recognizes walking, running and biking, at least for now.

As for glanceable information, Google has built a new complications API that’ll let any third-party app display whatever it wants on any watch face. The watch face has to support complications, but once it does, any app can plug into it and share information there. The app developer decides what (if any) data it wants to make available. But if you’re building a watch face, as long as it’s designed to support complications, any app will work with it.

That’s a big change from how things have worked: Developers needed to design and build their own custom faces to share data from their app. And there was no way to have a variety of complications from different apps. Now end users will have a lot more options for customizing their watch to show the info they want to see.

Ultimately, Android Wear 2.0 doesn’t radically change the OS: It’s still based primarily on your notifications and Google Now cards, with richer app experiences becoming more common. That said, Google is definitely improving what it sees as Wear’s most important features. That should benefit all users. The updated UI, notifications and complications will be useful to everyone with a Wear device, and compatibility with the iPhone should take a big step forward. Unfortunately, you’ll need to wait a bit to get your hands on version 2.0. Google is seeding it to developers today, but consumers won’t get to try it until later this year.

For all the latest news and updates from Google I/O 2016, follow along here.

15
May

Samsung smartwatch concept projects an interface on your hand


Smartwatch makers have tried a few ways to overcome the limitations of a tiny wrist-worn screen, such as gestures, pressure sensitivty or voice commands. Samsung thinks there might be a better way, though: moving the display beyond the watch. It’s applying for a patent on a concept that would project a wearable’s interface on to everything from your hand to the wall. It’d use sensors to detect those outside-of-the-wrist interactions, and it could even detect the geometry of your hand to adapt the interface to that area. You might see extra buttons on your fingers if your palm is open.

Don’t be too quick to toss out your existing smartwatch. Like any other patent, this is more of an idea than a product roadmap. There’s no certainty that Samsung will decide to implement this, or that it even has the technology necessary to make this a reality. Even so, it’s good to see companies still exploring watch input ideas that involve more than just a touchscreen. It’s still a young category, and the chances are that there’s plenty of room for interface breakthroughs.

Via: PhoneArena, The Verge

Source: USPTO

6
May

Navigate your smartwatch by touching your skin


Smartwatches walk a fine line between functionality and fashion, but new SkinTrack technology from Carnegie Mellon University’s Future Interfaces Group makes the size of the screen a moot point. The SkinTrack system consists of a ring that emits a continuous high-frequency AC signal and a sensing wristband that goes under the watch. The wristband tracks the finger wearing the ring and senses whether the digit is hovering or actually making contact with your arm or hand, turning your skin into an extension of the touchscreen.

The tech is so precise that you’re able to use the back of your hand to dial a phone number, draw letters for navigation shortcuts, scroll through apps, play Angry Birds or select an item from a list. Researchers at the Future Interfaces Group say the tech is 99 percent accurate when it comes to touch.

“As our approach is compact, non-invasive, low-cost and low-powered, we envision the technology being integrated into future smartwatches, supporting rich touch interactions beyond the confines of the small touchscreen,” the creators write in a YouTube description.

This isn’t the first iteration of touch-skin technology, but it’s by far the most stylish and streamlined. We can already imagine the customizable “Apple Watch + SkinTrack ring” bundles.

Via: The Verge

11
Feb

Qualcomm’s new chips will power up smartwatches, mid-range phones


Look inside just about any Android Wear smartwatch (plus a few running alternative OSes, no less) and you’ll find one of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 400-series chips thrumming away inside. The company’s stranglehold on wearable gadget processors is pretty damned thorough, and it just might stay that way thanks to a new chip — the Snapdragon Wear 2100 — that was announced earlier today.

Perhaps the biggest change here is how much smaller the new chip than its prolific predecessor; Qualcomm says it’s a full 30 percent tinier than a 400-series chipset, and that power consumption has been slashed by about 25 percent to boot. That goes for both versions of the chip, too: there’s a “tethered” model with support for 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.1 links, while the “connected” version folds in an LTE modem for all-in-on wearables like Samsung’s Gear S2. The biggest pain point for most people living with (or even contemplating living with) wearables is how frequently they need to be recharged, but with any luck we’ll soon be able wear these things for more than a few days without making a power outlet pitstop.

Qualcomm’s chipset cavalcade doesn’t stop there, either. We’ve also got three new Snapdragons for phones — the 425, 435 and 625. That first chip is clearly the least ambitious of the trio with its four Cortex-A53 cores and old-school Adreno 308 GPU. The 435 seems like a big leap by comparison — it corrals eight of those same cores that top out at a clock speed of 1.4GHz, and packs a new Adreno 505 CPU that plays nice with 1080p/60FPS screens. Throw in support for QuickCharge and a LTE Cat 7 300Mbps down, 100Mbps up and you’ve got a potent little chipset for all those low-cost devices connected developing markets.

The 625, on the other hand, is clearly the chip to beat in this pack. It’s built on a 14nm process that allows its eight Cortex-A53 cores to hit speeds in excess of 2GHz. While we’re talking speeds, the 625’s connectivity game is pretty strong — there’s support for LTE Cat 7 and 802.11ac WiFi to boot. The ability to record and process 4K video is icing on the mid-range phone cake; it’s too bad the chip’s Adreno 506 GPU means display resolutions top out at 1,900 x 1,200.

Source: Qualcomm

8
Feb

Smart strap brings payments to your Pebble smartwatch


Right now, you have slim pickings if you want to pay for things from your wrist: there’s the Apple Watch, an upcoming Swatch model, eventual Samsung Gear S2 support and… that’s about it. However, Fit Pay might just widen the field a bit. It’s crowdfunding the Pagaré smart strap, which brings NFC-based tap-to-pay support to any Pebble Time smartwatch — yes, including the Round. It should work at most shops that accept Apple Pay or Android Pay (it uses a similar, token-based system), and it shares familiar security measures, such as disabling access when you remove your timepiece. You don’t even need to bring your phone once you’ve set things up.

If you’re interested, you’ll want to get in early. It takes a relatively modest $49 pledge to get a strap if you’re part of the first wave, but that price will go up to $69 if you’re late, or $89 if you wait until the official release. That’s a lot to shell out to add one feature to a smartwatch, especially when you won’t get the Pagaré until July at the earliest. With that said, this could be the ticket if you either have a smartphone that doesn’t do tap-to-pay (hi, OnePlus 2) or simply prefer Pebble’s lower-priced, longer-lasting smartwatches over the alternatives.

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/fitpay/pagare-contactless-payment-smartstraps-for-pebble/widget/video.html

Via: The Verge

Source: Kickstarter, Fit Pay

4
Feb

Pebble offers Health app improvements, expanded messaging


Pebble_Health_new_app_1

Pebble has released a series of updates for every smartwatch in the Pebble family, including additions to the Health app that make it better than ever.

Late last year, Pebble unveiled Pebble Health to the world, an app for its range of wearables that aims to help users keep fit and stay active. Pebble Health works hand-in-hand with Pebble Timeline and is able to offer personalized advice on improving sleeping patterns and general health based entirely on movement.

Pebble Health can also be integrated with Google Fit and Apple Health, two more big players in the wearable health app sector.

The application’s latest update to Firmware 3.9 means that Pebble smartwatches now support Health-enabled watch faces, set to arrive on the Pebble app store. On top of that, Health’s makers say the app is now ‘more accurate overall’ and supports the option to show step distance in kilometers.

Pebble_Health_Update_February

Away from the Pebble Health side of things, the group has also announced updates to other features. Incoming MMS messages now show descriptive icons and any text included, and the Pebble Time and Time Steel have been treated to some speed improvements.

An improved Watch-Only mode keeps Pebble’s smartwatches chugging along for longer when the battery is running low and ‘under-the-hood fixes and stability improvements’ are bundled in too.

The Pebble Time app for Android now stars a new Reply to call with SMS feature, which means smartwatch owners can reply quickly to texts with a voice note, emoji or custom message.

Play Store Download Link

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