
foversta provides a hands-on review of the Montblanc Summit, Montblanc's connected smartwatch. This article explores the brand's entry into the smartwatch market, evaluating the Summit's design, features, and overall user experience. foversta offers a critical perspective on its wearability and market positioning.






The people who like mechanical watches or the tech guys and girls. It seems like a hard place to be when you can end up alienating both groups. It does not really look to high tech while at the same time nothing mechanical. I know some people jumped on the apple wagon but it was limited to the trendy status adpect of all apple products. While many start ups are left for dead. Unless is is "health" oriented. Alot to ponder. Thanks for the great review. Bill
Basically it's for those that want the Montblanc look. The tech inside is last generation, as it doesn't have NFC or GPS, for example. Furthermore they haven't used the crown for all the purposes it could address on Android Wear 2.0, such as scrolling.
I already lamented enough in the Pre-Post, but seeing it in action I have only one question: "Are you happy to see me, or is that just a huge neon screen on your wrist"??? And speaking of which - does it turn off to save battery, leaving you walking around with a black dark screen (with the style and shic of a Ford Pinto)?
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 have a dim function, whereby hands and numbers get lumed, whereas the rest goes dark. In Montblanc's case the screen inverts and goes black with the hands and numbers countoured in white. In addition, usually the seconds counter on a smartwatch
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 i
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 gotten used to all the functionality, it's hard to turn back, because it's just so convenient. This means those who crave a MontBlanc watch will update and get a new watch every 2-3 years. Take TAG, who sold 56,000 in just one year. They'll sell
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