Samsung’s New Smartwatch Lets You Make Calls from Your Wrist
Samsung has added a new entry to its growing catalog of smartwatches
with the debut of its Gear S. Unlike its previous smartwatches,
however, this one packs its own 3G data connection, which means it
doesn’t have to be tied to your smartphone at all times. That’s a big
deal for smartwatches.
Sporting a curved 2-inch
display that wraps around your wrist, the Gear S looks more comfortable
to wear — and more stylish — than Samsung’s rectangular watches. Still,
with a larger display size than its stablemates, the Gear S is fairly
bulky. The Gear S is thicker and taller than other Samsung smartwatches,
which are already fairly thick and tall.
The big innovation here,
though, is that you’ll be able to use the Gear S independently of your
smartphone. You can send messages and receive and reply to notifications
from their social networks and other apps via the watch’s S Voice
controls or its onscreen keyboard, though we’re not sure how easy this
will be to use. (Samsung has announced the new watch, but reporters have
not yet used it.)
What’s more, you can make
and receive calls from the watch. Samsung hasn’t announced which of the
Big Four U.S. carriers will support the Gear S’s 3G connection, but
we’ll update you when we find out more. If you don’t want to use the
watch’s 3G connection, you can pair it with your smartphone via
Bluetooth or jump on an available WiFi connection.
It will be interesting to
see how long the Gear S’s battery lasts while connected to 3G. Most
smartwatches, which do not feature cellular connections, last about a
day; adding a 3G connection may drain that further.
The Gear S also includes turn-by-turn pedestrian navigation through HERE, news updates from the Financial Times’
fastFT, a heart-rate monitor, and Nike+ Running app integration. Unlike
Samsung’s Gear Live, the Gear S doesn’t run on Google’s Android Wear
operating system. Instead it runs on Samsung’s own Tizen-based OS, which
means it won’t be able to run the same apps.
The Gear S is part of
Samsung’s apparent strategy to blanket the market with smartwatches. The
S is the company’s sixth such device to hit the market, behind the
Galaxy Gear, Gear 2, Gear 2 Neo, Gear Live, and Gear Fit.
Samsung’s announcement coincides with the unveiling of LG’s circular G Watch R
that, in press images at least, looks like the most attractive
smartwatch yet. In the coming weeks, we expect a slew of other companies
to debut their own smartwatches, including Motorola and its Moto 360,
ASUS and its ZenWatch, and, of course, Apple’s iWatch.
Samsung hasn’t announced pricing for the Gear S yet, but the company did say it will begin selling the watch in October.
Email Daniel at dhowley@yahoo-inc.com; follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley or on Google+ here.
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