Yanir
171
Great review. The watch itself however...
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)?
Dark screen
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-05:47
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 ...
Nice picture of you!
By: Gus7 : March 17th, 2017-22:08
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 provoc...
The redundancy cycle
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-04:59
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 g...
Great review of the Summit!
By: KMII : March 18th, 2017-00:34
I agree with you that the size is a main aspect of smartwatches that needs to be addressed somehow, ensuring that they are wearable for a large proportion of the population. The power reserve is another one - maybe not tragic when compared to phones nowad...
Power reserve
By: gadgety : March 25th, 2017-05:08
Some Android Wear smartwatches, despite being more powerful computers than my first portable Windows PC in the mid 1990s, have up to 1 month power reserve for the time function. Most today can last 1,5-2 days, depending on usage. Go for a run, or a workou...