
Cellphones liberated many of us from the need to wear a wristwatch â they could tell you the time and let you check your friendâs Facebook status. But now the watch is poised to make an unexpected comeback in the shape of âsmartwatchesâ, which let you check your messages and social media without having to fish your phone out of your pocket.
Not convinced? Many still arenât, but big tech is banking on smartwatches being the next big thing. The first of the big name smartwatches was unveiled yesterday at the International Radio Exhibition in Berlin, Germany. Called the Galaxy Gear, this $299 Android-powered smartwatch has been developed by Samsung to communicate wirelessly with the firmâs phones. While other firms have launched similar gadgets in the past, it is Samsungâs launch that has really fired the gun on the race to corner the coming smartwatch market.
The idea is that smartwatches will liberate us from the hassle caused by the cellphone itself â sparing us the bother of retrieving our smartphones from our pockets to see who has called, tweeted, texted or emailed. Instead a flick of your wrist could tell your smartwatch to get wireless updates of texts from your phone. Other âmicro interactionsâ could also be programmed, such as voice commands to check Facebook messages or call your best friend.
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Such watches could also take on the traditional role of a phone. Holding the Galaxy Gear to your ear lets you answer a call, Dick Tracy style, for example. âFor everyday moments you donât have to take out your smartphone anymore,â Samsung research director Pranav Mistry says.
Fitness first
But it doesnât end with less fiddly phoning: as they are in contact with your skin, smartwatches offer the perfect wearable platform for âquantified selfâ fitness apps. Developers could build in dedicated workout tracking devices like the FitBit or Nike FuelBand.
Samsung isnât the only company developing such tech. Apple is readying an iWatch to connect wirelessly with iPhones, while others hatching smartwatches include Googleâs Motorola Mobility operation, LG of South Korea and Qualcomm of San Diego, California. Then thereâs the host of crowdfunded start-ups typified by Pebble of Silicon Valley.
Competition comes in the form of Google Glass, which also controls a smartphone via micro interactions: the voice command âOK Glassâ gets the systemâs attention before you tell it to, say, reply to a message or share a picture.
Early days
, head of Googleâs Glass project, believes itâs early days and that there will be many ways to interact. âWristwatches are certainly another way to do micro interactions. Simple features like displaying caller ID can be very powerful. I suspect weâll see a suite of devices in the future from which a user can choose what suits them best.â
Robert Milner, who works on smart devices at UK-based Cambridge Consultants, agrees. âIt is users that will drive the form these devices eventually take. Smartwatches could be a stepping stone to Google Glass, for instance, but in sports, glasses could get in the way. The watch is perhaps a better platform for adding multiple features. It is far from obvious which way this is all going to go.â
Whatever happens, it is ease of use that will win out, says Starner. âThe difficulty is in creating interfaces that provide the maximum utility for the minimum visual or manual attention on the part of the user,â he says. âCreating the right set of features is where the magic is.â